Oliver Cromwell's Letters and Speeches: Including the Supplement to the Past Edition : with Elucidations, Volume 2Harper & Brothers, 1859 - Great Britain |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 100
Page 8
... thought , especially on his deathbed , * Commons Journals , 17 September , 1651 . · † 49 to 47 ; Commons Journals , 14 November , 1651 : Lord General and Lord Chief Justice , ' Cromwell and St. John , are Tellers for the Yea to have ...
... thought , especially on his deathbed , * Commons Journals , 17 September , 1651 . · † 49 to 47 ; Commons Journals , 14 November , 1651 : Lord General and Lord Chief Justice , ' Cromwell and St. John , are Tellers for the Yea to have ...
Page 13
... thought fit , and agreeable both to our Civil and Spiritual liberties , a Settle ment may be made with them . ' CROMWELL . That will be a business of more than ordinary difficulty ! But really I think , if it may be done with safety ...
... thought fit , and agreeable both to our Civil and Spiritual liberties , a Settle ment may be made with them . ' CROMWELL . That will be a business of more than ordinary difficulty ! But really I think , if it may be done with safety ...
Page 22
... thought this kind of Petition dangerous ; and counselled my Lord General to put a stop to the like but he seemed to make light of it , ' says Bul- strode . In fact , my Lord General does not disapprove of it : my Lord General , after ...
... thought this kind of Petition dangerous ; and counselled my Lord General to put a stop to the like but he seemed to make light of it , ' says Bul- strode . In fact , my Lord General does not disapprove of it : my Lord General , after ...
Page 25
... thought of the courses men were getting into Bulstrode and Widdrington were the most eager for sitting ; Chief Justice St. John , strange thing in a Constitutional gentleman . declared that there could be no sitting for us any longer ...
... thought of the courses men were getting into Bulstrode and Widdrington were the most eager for sitting ; Chief Justice St. John , strange thing in a Constitutional gentleman . declared that there could be no sitting for us any longer ...
Page 26
... thought would have been passed that day , the Lord General Cromwell came into the House , clad in plain black clothes and grey worsted stockings , and sat down , as he used to do , in an ordinary place . ' For some time he listens to ...
... thought would have been passed that day , the Lord General Cromwell came into the House , clad in plain black clothes and grey worsted stockings , and sat down , as he used to do , in an ordinary place . ' For some time he listens to ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
affairs Anabaptist answer Army believe blessing Bulstrode called cause Charles Stuart Christ Colonel Commons Journals Commonwealth Commonwealth of England concerning conscience consideration Council Cromwelliana desire divers doth endeavor Enemy England faith farther Fleet Gentlemen give godly Gospel Government hands hath hear heart Henry Cromwell Highness Highness's hither honest honorable hope Horse House Instrument of Government interest Ireland Jamaica James Nayler judge King Letter liberty London Long Parliament look Lord Protector loving friend Ludlow Major-General matter means ment mercy Nation never occasion Officers OLIVER CROMWELL Oliver's orig Painted Chamber peace persons Petition poor present Puritan rest Royalist satisfaction Scotland sent settled Settlement ships Spaniard speak Speech spirit tell thereof things thou thought Thurloe tion truly truth unto Unton Crook wherein Whitehall Whitlocke William Lenthall witness word