Oliver Cromwell's Letters and Speeches: In Five VolumesChapman and Hall - Great Britain |
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Page iii
... favour of the Title . Not of ne- cessity ; at best only of expediency or advantage . John Hampden and the Ironsides . Leaves the matter un- decided : Conference to be renewed . XII . Third Conference with the same , 20 April 1657 · · 21 ...
... favour of the Title . Not of ne- cessity ; at best only of expediency or advantage . John Hampden and the Ironsides . Leaves the matter un- decided : Conference to be renewed . XII . Third Conference with the same , 20 April 1657 · · 21 ...
Page 6
... favour to me , I think these argu- ments from the Law are all not as of necessity , but are to be understood as of conveniency . It is in your power to dis- pose and settle ; and beforehand we can have confidence that what you do settle ...
... favour to me , I think these argu- ments from the Law are all not as of necessity , but are to be understood as of conveniency . It is in your power to dis- pose and settle ; and beforehand we can have confidence that what you do settle ...
Page 7
... favour ) , and is known to you all in the fact of it ( under favour ) [ A damnable iteration ; but too characteristic to be omitted ] : That the Supreme Authority going by another Name and under another Title than that of King hath been ...
... favour ) , and is known to you all in the fact of it ( under favour ) [ A damnable iteration ; but too characteristic to be omitted ] : That the Supreme Authority going by another Name and under another Title than that of King hath been ...
Page 8
... favour , - [ His Highness gets more em- phatic ] -that the Laws had a freer exercise , more uninter- rupted by any hand of Power , in those years than now ; or that the Judge has been less solicited by letters or private interpositions ...
... favour , - [ His Highness gets more em- phatic ] -that the Laws had a freer exercise , more uninter- rupted by any hand of Power , in those years than now ; or that the Judge has been less solicited by letters or private interpositions ...
Page 24
... favour , I think I deserve less blame than any of them would have done , if I cannot so well comply with this Title , and ' with ' the desire of Parliament in regard to it , as these others might do . For they when they were in , would ...
... favour , I think I deserve less blame than any of them would have done , if I cannot so well comply with this Title , and ' with ' the desire of Parliament in regard to it , as these others might do . For they when they were in , would ...
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Common terms and phrases
affairs answer antea Army Arthur Haselrig Battle of Naseby beseech blessing Cambridge Captain Castle cause Colonel Committee Commons Journals Commonwealth Commonwealth of England Cromwell's desire divers doth Dunkirk endeavour Enemy England Esquire faithful farther favour Foot GENTLEMEN give godly Government Hampton Court hand hath Haverfordwest heart Highness Highness's Honourable William Lenthall hope Horse House humble servant Ireland John judge justice King Kingship Letter liberty London Long Parliament look Lord Protector Lordships loving friend March Mayor ment mercy Naseby Nation Officers OLIVER CROMWELL Oliver's Parlia Parliament Parliament of England Peace persons Petition and Advice poor present Protestants Puritan Regiment rest Royalist Scotland sent Settlement Soldiers speak Speaker Speech spirit Tanner MSS thereof things thought Thurloe tion Town Troops truly trust University of Oxford unto Waterford wherein Whitehall Whitlocke William Lenthall word