History of the Great Civil War, 1642-1649: 1644-1647Longmans, Green, 1889 - Great Britain |
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Page 2
... reason that up to a certain point it had been driven to be revolutionary . A task which can only be accom- plished by the energy of a whole generation un- ENGLISH PRESBYTERIANISM . CHAP . XXII . 1644 Prynne's activity 2 PRYNNE , MILTON ...
... reason that up to a certain point it had been driven to be revolutionary . A task which can only be accom- plished by the energy of a whole generation un- ENGLISH PRESBYTERIANISM . CHAP . XXII . 1644 Prynne's activity 2 PRYNNE , MILTON ...
Page 4
... reason his doctrine was a great power in the land . It was Prynne's Presbyterianism which was welcome to a world which fancied itself necessarily intelligent because it was educated . It 1 Hist . of Engl . 1603-1642 , ix . 407 . Twelve ...
... reason his doctrine was a great power in the land . It was Prynne's Presbyterianism which was welcome to a world which fancied itself necessarily intelligent because it was educated . It 1 Hist . of Engl . 1603-1642 , ix . 407 . Twelve ...
Page 11
... reason and convincement . Under these fantastic terrors of sect and schism , we wrong the earnest and zealous thirst after knowledge and understanding which God hath stirred up in this city . What some lament of , we rather should ...
... reason and convincement . Under these fantastic terrors of sect and schism , we wrong the earnest and zealous thirst after knowledge and understanding which God hath stirred up in this city . What some lament of , we rather should ...
Page 21
... reason for proceeding with the attack on Manchester , because it was only after the removal of Manchester that it would be possible to send into the field an English force such as Cromwell desired to see . When at last the two generals ...
... reason for proceeding with the attack on Manchester , because it was only after the removal of Manchester that it would be possible to send into the field an English force such as Cromwell desired to see . When at last the two generals ...
Page 23
... reason of that darling of the sectaries , and , in obtaining his removal from the army , which him- self by his over - rashness has procured , to break the power of that potent faction . This is our present difficile exercise : -we had ...
... reason of that darling of the sectaries , and , in obtaining his removal from the army , which him- self by his over - rashness has procured , to break the power of that potent faction . This is our present difficile exercise : -we had ...
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Common terms and phrases
Aberdeen amongst April April 20 Argyle attack Baillie battle BATTLE OF AULDEARN besiegers campaign Carte's Ormond Castle Catholic cavalry CHAP charge Charles Charles's Church Clarendon command commissioners Committee Covenant Covenanters Crom Cromwell Cromwell's despatched Digby enemy England English Essex Fairfax favour force garrison Glamorgan Gordon Goring Herefordshire Highlanders hope horse House of Commons Independents Ireland Irish Irish army July June King King's Cabinet Opened Kingdoms L.J. vii Langport Laud Laud's letter Leven liberty Lilburne Lords Lowlands Macdonald Manchester March March 11 ment military Model Model army Montrose Montrose's Naseby negotiation numbers officers orders Oxford Parlia Parliament Parliamentary army party peace Peers plunder Presby Presbyterian Prince proposal Prynne Queen refused regiments Royalists Rupert Rushw Scotland Scots Scottish Self-Denying Ordinance sent side siege soldiers Taunton terianism tion Treaty of Uxbridge Uxbridge victory Waller West Westminster whilst Whitacre's Diary Wishart wrote XXVI XXVIII СНАР
Popular passages
Page 10 - Now once again by all concurrence of signs, and by the general instinct of holy and devout men, as they daily and solemnly express their thoughts, God is decreeing to begin some new and great period in his church, even to the reforming of reformation itself; what does he then but reveal himself to his servants, and as his manner is, first to his Englishmen...