The Decline of Merry EnglandBobbs-Merrill Company, 1930 - 320 pages Essay on the development of Puritanism in seventeenth-century England. |
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Page 22
... Lord Chesterfield described as being against both justice and compassion . Some forty years after the Gin Act , a Presbyterian Lord Chief Justice is to be found defending the savageries of the penal code , the public dissection of the ...
... Lord Chesterfield described as being against both justice and compassion . Some forty years after the Gin Act , a Presbyterian Lord Chief Justice is to be found defending the savageries of the penal code , the public dissection of the ...
Page 131
... Lord President of the North , gives the clearest statement of his point of view . " Here are some things extrajudicially to be noted , all of which difference and faction between Governors in the medius terminus . I find the King's duty ...
... Lord President of the North , gives the clearest statement of his point of view . " Here are some things extrajudicially to be noted , all of which difference and faction between Governors in the medius terminus . I find the King's duty ...
Page 139
... Lord Protector was much addicted . enness . • · The insistence on the duty of the rich towards the poor is iterated and reiterated in the ordinances and proc- lamations of this decade . The Lord Keeper's speech to the judges about to ...
... Lord Protector was much addicted . enness . • · The insistence on the duty of the rich towards the poor is iterated and reiterated in the ordinances and proc- lamations of this decade . The Lord Keeper's speech to the judges about to ...
Table des matières
Section 1 | 7 |
Section 2 | 11 |
Section 3 | 25 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
action army attempted authority become believe Bishops blood body Book brought called Calvin carried cause century Christ Christian Church of England Civil classes common Council court Cromwell dancing death divine doctrine enemies English eyes fell followed force give hand head held holy House human idea industry interest Italy John King knew labour land later Laud learned less liberty light live London looked Lord March matter means mind ministers moral natural never once Parliament party passed perhaps play political poor practical Prayer Puritan Quakers reason reformers refused religion religious Rome side society souls spirit stand strong things thought tion trade turned virtues whole