The History of England, from the First Invasion by the Romans to the Accession of William and Mary in 1688, Volumen5

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J. Grant, 1902
 

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Página 207 - WHAT THIS IMPORTETH. If a man say these words, ' If the King die, who should have the rule of the Prince, but my father, or I,
Página 318 - ... to suffer and wink at it for a time « might be borne, so all haste possible were used».
Página 480 - do not you take it so. Always since I lived hitherto, I have been a hater of falsehood, and a lover of simplicity, and never before this time have I dissembled :" and in saying this, all the tears that remained in his body appeared in his eyes.
Página 320 - Majesty good; but rather than she will agree to use any other service than was used at the death of the late King her father, she would lay her head on a block and suffer death.
Página 464 - ... and after a respite of sixteen days should, if they continued obstinate, be delivered to the civil magistrate, to suffer the punishment provided by law. Fortunately for the professors of the ancient faith, Edward died before this code had obtained the sanction of the legislature. By the accession of Mary the power of the sword passed from the hands of one religious party to those of the other; and within a short time Cranmer and his associates perished in the flames which they had prepared to...
Página 110 - ... by the Bishop of Rome as the champion of his usurped authority, the King's Majesty thought it expedient to declare to his loving subjects that he was no saint, but rather a rebel and traitor to his Prince, and therefore strictly charged and commanded that he should not be esteemed or called...
Página 480 - I renounce, and refuse, as things written with my Hand, contrary to the Truth, which I thought in my Heart...
Página 222 - Audeley declared before his face, that God had anointed him with the oil of wisdom above his fellows, above the other kings of the earth, above all his predecessors ; had given him a perfect knowledge of the scriptures, with which he had prostrated the Roman Goliath ; a perfect knowledge of the art of war> by which he had gained the most brilliant victories at the same time in remote places; and a perfect knowledge of the art of government, by which he had for thirty years secured to his own realm...
Página 308 - the rebels in Devonshire, Cornwall, and Norfolk, did not only deserve death as traitors, but accumulated to themselves eternal damnation, even to be in the burning fire of hell, with Lucifer, the father and first author of rebellion:
Página 266 - Church, should draw and make one convenient and meet order, rite and fashion of common and open prayer and administration of the sacraments...

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