The History and Proceedings of the House of Lords, from the Restoration in 1660, to the Present Time ... With an Account of the Promotions of the Several Peers, and the State of the Peerage in Every Reign: Connected with the Transactions of the Commons, and History of the Times, And Illustrated with Historical Notes and Observations. Together with the Debates in the Parliament of Scotland Relating to the Union. To Each Volume are Added Proper Indexes ...E. Timberland, 1742 |
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Results 1-5 of 87
Page 2
... should , by the Ri- gour of the Letter , be to him the Caufe of the greateft Wrong : and that for his Wife's Fault he fhould be deprived of the common Privilege of every Freeman in the World , to have an Heir of his own Body , to ...
... should , by the Ri- gour of the Letter , be to him the Caufe of the greateft Wrong : and that for his Wife's Fault he fhould be deprived of the common Privilege of every Freeman in the World , to have an Heir of his own Body , to ...
Page 3
... should be rewarded out of the fame Wife's Fortune . This Affair occafioned great Debates in the Upper Houfe ; fome Peers reprefenting the Danger of granting Divorces , and others , amongst whom Dr. Burnet , Bishop of Salif- Bishop of ...
... should be rewarded out of the fame Wife's Fortune . This Affair occafioned great Debates in the Upper Houfe ; fome Peers reprefenting the Danger of granting Divorces , and others , amongst whom Dr. Burnet , Bishop of Salif- Bishop of ...
Page 5
... should ap- pear not profitable to the King or this Realm ; and the Bill granting likewife a Supply of two Millions , in which the Commons pretended the House of Lords ought not to make any Alteration ; we are of Opinion their Lordships ...
... should ap- pear not profitable to the King or this Realm ; and the Bill granting likewife a Supply of two Millions , in which the Commons pretended the House of Lords ought not to make any Alteration ; we are of Opinion their Lordships ...
Page 6
... should be , upon every Occafion , the perpetual Care and Study of that C House , with the moft zealous Duty , and the most grateful " Affections imaginable , to make his Majefty all fuitable Re- " turns within their Power . And at this ...
... should be , upon every Occafion , the perpetual Care and Study of that C House , with the moft zealous Duty , and the most grateful " Affections imaginable , to make his Majefty all fuitable Re- " turns within their Power . And at this ...
Page 9
... should not endeavour , by any Interpofition of theirs , to defeat the Hopes the Scots might ftill entertain of recovering thefe Loffes by ' their further engaging in that Defign , but that they judged ' fuch a Prosecution on their Parts ...
... should not endeavour , by any Interpofition of theirs , to defeat the Hopes the Scots might ftill entertain of recovering thefe Loffes by ' their further engaging in that Defign , but that they judged ' fuch a Prosecution on their Parts ...
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Common terms and phrases
Addrefs affembled affure againſt alfo Anna Anno 11 Anno 9 Annæ Anſwer Battle of Almanza becauſe Bill Bishop Cafe Caufe Church Commiffioners Committee Confequence Confideration Convoy Council Court Cuftody Debate Defign defired Diffentient Duke Duke of Savoy Earl of Galway Earl of Peterborough Enemy England fafe faid fame fecond fecure feems fent feveral fhall fhew fhould fince firft fome fpiritual and temporal French fuch fufficient guilty hath himſelf Honour Houfe of Commons Houſe humbly Juftice King Kingdom laft Lord Cowper Lord Galway Lord Hallifax Lords fpiritual Lordships Majefty Majefty's Matter Meaſures Merchants Minifters moft moſt muſt neceffary Number obferved Occafion Opinion Order paffed Parliament Peers Perfons pleafed pleaſed prefent Prifon Prince's Council Proteft thereon Purpoſe Queen Queſtion Reaſon Refolution refolved Right Scotland Seffion Serjeant at Arms ſhall Ships Spain Speech Succeffion thefe themſelves theſe thofe thoſe Thoulon tion Treaty Troops uſed Vote Writ
Popular passages
Page 161 - GOD, the FATHER of our LORD JESUS CHRIST, our only SAVIOUR, the Prince of Peace : give us grace seriously to lay to heart the great dangers we are in by our unhappy divisions. Take away all hatred and prejudice, and whatsoever else may hinder us from godly Union and Concord ; that as there is but one Body and one Spirit, and one Hope of our Calling, one LORD, one Faith, one Baptism, one GOD and FATHER of us all, so we may henceforth be all of one heart and of...
Page 69 - ... in other manner than according to the liturgy and practice of the church of England...
Page 182 - Your fleet, and your trade, have so near a relation, and such mutual influence upon each other, they cannot well be separated; your trade is the mother and nurse of your seamen; your seamen are the life of your fleet, and your fleet is the security and protection of your trade, and both together are the wealth, strength, security and glory of Britain.
Page 69 - Corporations, or having accepted any office, civil or military, or any place of trust under the Crown, to receive the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper according to the Rites of the Church of England.
Page 171 - would carry the neceflary confequence of a (landing power " and force, to keep us from falling afunder, and breaking ** in pieces every moment. For, as my lord Bacon well ob«' ferves (whom I take to be a very great man, tho...
Page 357 - That no person dissenting from the church of England in holy orders, or pretended holy orders, or pretending to holy orders, nor any preacher or teacher of any congregation of dissenting protestants...
Page 406 - I imagine a person of quality prevailed on to marry a woman much his inferior, and without a groat to her fortune, and her friends arguing she was as good as her husband, because she brought him as numerous a family of relations and servants as she found in his house.
Page 244 - An aft for the further limitation of the crown, and better fecuring the rights and liberties of the fubjeft...
Page 68 - Lord's Supper, according to the Ufage of the Church of England, within...
Page 426 - children, and I know not whether God Almighty " will vouchsafe to let me live to give them the " education I could wish they had. Therefore, " my Lords, I own I tremble when I think that a " certain divine, who is hardly suspected of being " a Christian, is in a fair way of being a bishop, and