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Passages of the First Volume, and Notes by the Earls of Dartmouth and Hardwicke, and Speaker Onslow, Hitherto Unpublished, Volume 2Clarendon Press, 1823 - Great Britain |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 64
... treason . They pressed me long : and I would give them no other answer . So they all concluded , that I knew great matters ; and reported this spe- cially to the house . Upon that I was sent for , and brought before the house . I stood ...
... treason . They pressed me long : and I would give them no other answer . So they all concluded , that I knew great matters ; and reported this spe- cially to the house . Upon that I was sent for , and brought before the house . I stood ...
Page 145
... treason . So I went to Dr. Lloyd , and sent him to the secretary's office with an account of that dis- course of Tonge's , since I would not be guilty of misprision of treason . He found at the office , that Tonge was making discoveries ...
... treason . So I went to Dr. Lloyd , and sent him to the secretary's office with an account of that dis- course of Tonge's , since I would not be guilty of misprision of treason . He found at the office , that Tonge was making discoveries ...
Page 172
... treason sworn against him . After some hours spent in the debate , during which Moun- tague sat silent very long ; at last , when the box was brought to him from the person to whom he had trusted it , he opened it , and took out two of ...
... treason sworn against him . After some hours spent in the debate , during which Moun- tague sat silent very long ; at last , when the box was brought to him from the person to whom he had trusted it , he opened it , and took out two of ...
Page 173
... treason . Upon which he moved , that lord Danby should be impeached of high treason . The earl of Danby's party was much confounded . They could neither deny nor justify his letters . But they argued , that they could not be high ...
... treason . Upon which he moved , that lord Danby should be impeached of high treason . The earl of Danby's party was much confounded . They could neither deny nor justify his letters . But they argued , that they could not be high ...
Page 174
... treason , which was a device to con- demn a man for a fact against which no law did lie . Mainard , an ancient and ... treason , in king Henry VIII.'s time : and though by the statute it was only treason to conspire against the prince of ...
... treason , which was a device to con- demn a man for a fact against which no law did lie . Mainard , an ancient and ... treason , in king Henry VIII.'s time : and though by the statute it was only treason to conspire against the prince of ...
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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