... look equally on both, weave, twist these two together in all their counsels ; study, labour, to preserve each without diminishing or enlarging either ; and by running in the worn wonted channels, treading the ancient bounds, cut off early all disputes... Prose Life of Strafford - Page 292by Robert Browning - 1892 - 319 pagesFull view - About this book
| James Daly - Political Science - 1979 - 46 pages
...strive to avoid it : "For whatever he be which ravels forth into questions the right of a King and a people, shall never be able to wrap them up again into the comeliness and order he found them." 43 It was a very real and practical danger which lay behind the harmonist rhetoric, and of course that... | |
| Samuel Rawson Gardiner - Great Britain - 1877 - 406 pages
...treading the ancient bounds, cut off early all disputes from betwixt them. For whatever he be which ravels forth into questions the right of a King and of a...again into the comeliness and order he found them." Had he not himself ravelled forth these rights into Had questions? In his heart doubtless he believed... | |
| Samuel Rawson Gardiner - Great Britain - 1884 - 434 pages
...treading the ancient bounds, cut off early all disputes from betwixt them. For whatever he be which ravels forth into questions the right of a king and of a...again into the comeliness and order he found them." Had he not himself ravelled forth these rights into questions ? In his heart doubtless he believed... | |
| Samuel Rawson Gardiner - Great Britain - 1886 - 414 pages
...treading the ancient bounds, cut off early all disputes from betwixt them. For whatever he be which ravels forth into questions the right of a king and of a...again into the comeliness and order he found them." Had he not himself ravelled forth these rights into questions ? In his heart doubtless he believed... | |
| Robert Browning, John Forster - 1892 - 410 pages
...channells, treading the ancient bounds, cutt off early all disputes from betwixt them. For whatever he be which ravells forth into questions the right of a...bed for continuance, for lasting, but acquisitivi positus too, gain'ly, commodiously seated for the service both of king and people. 1 I take God to... | |
| Samuel Rawson Gardiner - Great Britain - 1899 - 476 pages
...treading the ancient bounds, cut off early all disputes from betwixt them. For whatever he be which ravels forth into questions the right of a king and of a...again into the comeliness and order he found them." Had he not himself ravelled forth these rights into questions ? In his heart doubtless he believed... | |
| Sir William Searle Holdsworth - Law - 1924 - 758 pages
...confused heap of foundation and battlement, of strength and beauty. . . . Whatever he be which ravels forth into questions the right of a king and of a...again into the comeliness and order he found them." Manwaring, in a passage of one of his sermons, cited 3 ST 346, said, " If they would consider the importunities... | |
| J. P. Kenyon - History - 1986 - 504 pages
...treading the ancient bounds, cut off early all disputes from between them. For whatever he be which ravels forth into questions the right of a king and of a people, [he] shall never be able to wrap them up again into the comeliness and order he found them . . . 8.... | |
| Robert Malcolm Smuts - History - 1987 - 340 pages
...1who] ravels forth into questions and arguments the tight of a king and a people shall never he ahle to wrap them up again into the comeliness and order he found them."" At least in Charles's reign, dehates over the limits of the prerogative invariahly arose out of disputes... | |
| James Daly - Political Science - 1979 - 46 pages
...strive to avoid it : "For whatever he be which ravels forth into questions the right of a King and a people, shall never be able to wrap them up again into the comeliness and order he found them." " It was a very real and practical danger which lay behind the harmonist rhetoric, and of course that... | |
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