Bishop Burnet's History of His Own Time: With the Suppressed Passages of the First Volume, and Notes by the Earls of Dartmouth and Hardwicke, and Speaker Onslow, Hitherto Unpublished, Volume 2Clarendon Press, 1823 - Great Britain |
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Page 50
... prison , where I might perhaps lie too long . This I looked on as a very high obligation : so I resigned my employment , and resolved to stay in England . I preached in many of the churches of London ; and was so well received , that it ...
... prison , where I might perhaps lie too long . This I looked on as a very high obligation : so I resigned my employment , and resolved to stay in England . I preached in many of the churches of London ; and was so well received , that it ...
Page 56
... prison , and ruined by it . He had a sort of a character from one of the princes of Ger- many , upon which he insisted . But the States thought , that his coming into their service was the Jealousies throwing up of that character . Upon ...
... prison , and ruined by it . He had a sort of a character from one of the princes of Ger- many , upon which he insisted . But the States thought , that his coming into their service was the Jealousies throwing up of that character . Upon ...
Page 57
... prison . to many , who , though innocent , yet hating restraint , went out of the way , and were proceeded against in an outlawry : but an act of parliament had been made , condemning that method for the future . Yet duke Lauderdale ...
... prison . to many , who , though innocent , yet hating restraint , went out of the way , and were proceeded against in an outlawry : but an act of parliament had been made , condemning that method for the future . Yet duke Lauderdale ...
Page 67
... prison , because he would not pay the loan - money . Thus both his family and his wife's were zealous for the interest of their country . In the beginning of the long parliament he was a great asserter of the laws ; and inveighed ...
... prison , because he would not pay the loan - money . Thus both his family and his wife's were zealous for the interest of their country . In the beginning of the long parliament he was a great asserter of the laws ; and inveighed ...
Page 103
... prison till his innocence should ap- pear . Carstairs really had no warrant : but , as was afterwards discovered , he had often taken this me- thod , and had got money by it . So he went out to procure a warrant , and left Kirkton ...
... prison till his innocence should ap- pear . Carstairs really had no warrant : but , as was afterwards discovered , he had often taken this me- thod , and had got money by it . So he went out to procure a warrant , and left Kirkton ...
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affairs afterwards answered army believed bill bishop brought carried charged church clergy confession council court death declared denied desired discourse duchess duchess of Portsmouth duke Lauderdale duke of Monmouth duke's earl of Danby earl of Shaftsbury engaged England evidence favour French gave hands heard house of commons house of lords Jesuits jury king of France king's knew lady laid letter lived London looked lord Arlington lord Danby lord Essex lord Halifax lord Russel lord Shaftsbury matter ment Mountague nation never Oates oath occasion offered papists pardon parlia parliament party person plot popery popish pressed pretended prince prince of Orange prison prorogation protestant queen raised religion resolved Scotland seemed sent session sheriffs shewed sion soon spoke swore sworn temper thing thought tion told took treason trial vote whole witnesses words writ