History of England from the Accession of James I. to the Outbreak of the Civil War, 1603-1642: 1616-1621Longmans, Green, and Company, 1895 |
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Page 4
... refused to ac- knowledge the rising claims of the House of Commons , Bacon had no choice but to advocate the plan of entrusting the Crown with powers the exercise of which would ultimately prove as injurious to itself as to the ...
... refused to ac- knowledge the rising claims of the House of Commons , Bacon had no choice but to advocate the plan of entrusting the Crown with powers the exercise of which would ultimately prove as injurious to itself as to the ...
Page 9
... refused to take Bacon's view of the case , and directed that the question of the legality of the writ should be argued before them.1 The King , too , was not behindhand in perceiving the importance of the question at issue . He gave ...
... refused to take Bacon's view of the case , and directed that the question of the legality of the writ should be argued before them.1 The King , too , was not behindhand in perceiving the importance of the question at issue . He gave ...
Page 11
... refused , on the ground that , the judgment having once been obtained , nothing further could be done . He then applied to the Court of Chancery , from which he obtained the justice which he sought . Allen's case was somewhat similar ...
... refused , on the ground that , the judgment having once been obtained , nothing further could be done . He then applied to the Court of Chancery , from which he obtained the justice which he sought . Allen's case was somewhat similar ...
Page 12
... refused to do as he told them , he would commit them for their conduct . In spite of all this , the grand jury refused to be bullied into submission . They returned once more into court , and , to Coke's disgust , returned an ignoramus ...
... refused to do as he told them , he would commit them for their conduct . In spite of all this , the grand jury refused to be bullied into submission . They returned once more into court , and , to Coke's disgust , returned an ignoramus ...
Page 15
... refuse to decide upon all cases in which the Crown was concerned until it had obtained the Chancellor's permission to investigate the matter , it would serve his purpose equally if he could reduce the Common Law judges to such a state ...
... refuse to decide upon all cases in which the Crown was concerned until it had obtained the Chancellor's permission to investigate the matter , it would serve his purpose equally if he could reduce the Common Law judges to such a state ...
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Common terms and phrases
ambassador amongst asked Assembly attack attempt Bacon bishops Bohemian brought Buckingham Captain Catholic Chamberlain to Carleton Church clergy Coke Commissioners Cottington Council Court Cranfield Crown declared despatched Digby Dohna Doncaster doubt Dutch Earl Elector Elector of Saxony Elector Palatine England English favour favourite Ferdinand fleet French give Gondomar Gondomar to Philip Government hands hope James James's judges July June justice Keymis King King of Spain King's knew Lady Hatton Lady Lake Lady Roos Lake London Lord Madrid Majesty March March 20 marriage matter ment Naunton opinion Orinoco Palatinate Parliament Philip III Prince proposed Protestant Protestantism Pularoon Puritans quarrel question Raleigh ready refused reply S. P. Dom Salvetti's News-Letter Scotland sent Sept Simancas MSS soon Spain Spaniards Spanish Stukely Suffolk taken thought tion told treaty Venice MSS vessels Villiers whilst Whitelocke Winwood wished words Yelverton
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