This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.
identifier | question |
---|---|
A22547 | Kirke, George, d. 1675? |
A22757 | [ 1640] Possibly written by John Finch, Baron Finch of Fordwich? |
A25708 | Is there no waie left to make Mee a glorious King, but by My sufferings? |
A32012 | First published: Edinburgh in Scotland: by Robert and Iames Brysons, 1641? |
A32105 | [ 6] p. Printed by Leonard Litchfield, Oxford:[ 1642?] |
A69793 | eng Brooke, Basil,-- Sir, 1576- 1646? |
A32111 | Originally published: Oxford: 1642? |
A32111 | Shall the Spring of learning bee dam''d up? |
A32147 | E. R.[ 2], 6 p. Printed for Mathew Walbancke,[ London?] |
A32147 | Whalley, Edward, d. 1675? |
A47471 | The Kings letter intercepted coming from Oxford with a ioyful and true relation of th[e?] |
A22656 | : 1628?] |
A22656 | Bonham Norton and John Bill? |
A22656 | [ London? |
A32128 | Have I denied to passe any one Bill for the ease and securitie of my Subjects? |
A32128 | Have I violated your Laws? |
A32128 | Have any of my People been transport with Fears and Apprehensions? |
A32128 | What would you have? |
A26103 | Impetigo Romana quam amplam tum sibi nacta videbitur se diffundendi materiam, cùm non sit nisi imbelles adversarios habitura? |
A26103 | Quàm praematurum putemus bonis artibus oc ● asum imminere, si stipendium idem Militi sit quòd Imperatori? |
A26103 | and how great a tyranny may it prove over the minds and consciences of men? |
A74203 | Have I denied to passe any one Bill for the rase and security of my Subjects? |
A74203 | Have I violated your Laws? |
A74203 | Have any of my People been transport with Fears and Apprehensions? |
A74203 | What would you have? |
A79047 | Doth fond ambition, or your selfe- will''d pride so much bewitch you, that you can not see the crown of all your actions? |
A79047 | Was it because your actions were so bad, you were ashamed to own them? |
A79047 | When the great Councel of the Parliament was first assembled, you then were Members; why did you not continue? |
A78780 | If the Lord would be extreme to mark what is done amiss, who could abide it? |
A78780 | Quid utilius potui, quam tot sententias in unum conducere, pulcras, acres,& itame Salus amet, ad Salutem natas generis humani? |
A78780 | What Widows or Orphans tears can witness against me, the just cry of which must now be avenged with my own bloud? |
A35762 | How many Millions would the French give for such a place? |
A35762 | The Kings Brother smelt the Design, and asked the Xeriff; If these holy men conquered the Christians, who should conquer them? |
A35762 | Their Camels and Dromedaries, their strength, treasure and pleasure: wherefore if you ask how rich a man is? |
A35762 | You would ask, What is their Religion? |
A35762 | what is their Language? |
A41374 | Bayly, Thomas, d. 1657? |
A41374 | How my Lord said the Lady? |
A41374 | replyd, what my old friend Claret? |
A39625 | Can it possibly goe well with you, while ill with Vs? |
A39625 | Is it not your own cause and quarrell? |
A39625 | Let your consciences speake, would you betray so great a trust committed to you, by so great a Councell? |
A39625 | Tell Vs We beseech you; shall we dye and you live? |
A39625 | Would you have us wash our hands in your dearest blood? |
A39625 | in sum; would you have us render you the people of the Kings wrath? |
A39625 | nay, Gods and the Kings which wee maintaine? |
A39625 | would you that we should wound through your sides heaven and Earth? |
A31803 | Or how, in any one particular, can a more equall& fitting way be taken for the avoyding the grieving Our good Subjects in their own particulars? |
A31803 | What more reasonable proportion of charging them can bee found? |
A31803 | Wherein can the Limitation of the( otherwise Arbitrary) Discretion be bettered? |
A31803 | Yet withall providing for the defence of our Kingdome in the generall, then is by this Commission? |
A31803 | and how they themselves can imagine these powers to be of a better nature by their authority, then they are by Ours? |
A31823 | For these things seemingly vowed to be sought for, how unlike is it, to what is indeed laboured for? |
A31823 | Is Gods glory sought, in throwing downe the Kingdome of Jesus Christ? |
A31823 | Is the true Protestant Religion sought? |
A31823 | and making warre against his Members? |
A31823 | by advancing Papists, Iesuits, and Popish Priests? |
A25456 | Besides, whom do they represent? |
A25456 | But however I le see his reason: What''s that? |
A25456 | But they must have a right to their power in this case of distresse; whence have they that? |
A25456 | By what right? |
A25456 | Did not the Peoples consent, at first make Kings and conveigh power into their hands? |
A25456 | How shall these men bee bound to doe right, who so easily unty the knots of these sacred bookes of Law and Oathes? |
A25456 | Is he alone able to doe it without the People? |
A25456 | Is it not possible, that they may( in time) find a power in themselves of declaring that obligation void, as well, as have done the other? |
A25456 | It is hardly credible? |
A25456 | No? |
A25456 | OBSERV: Statutes are not binding to them, why should then Presidents? |
A25456 | The King alone? |
A25456 | Truely Sir, not solely; but grant it, what then? |
A25456 | What? |
A25456 | never such power in the whole body? |
A25456 | with what justice? |
A90515 | Are you Charls the son of King James, and do you not yet perceive wherefore you are oppressed with such a weight of affliction? |
A90515 | But could you by no printed papers, insinuate into the minds of your Subjects, how much you stood devoted to their safety and prosperity? |
A90515 | Did you ever wear a Crown on your head, who have not a head on your Shoulders? |
A90515 | Do you not cal to mind how heretofore I seized upon that place by violence? |
A90515 | How could that be? |
A90515 | How many innocent men have I imprisoned, because they would not be subject to my will? |
A90515 | O how just are the Judgments of God, and his wayes past finding out? |
A90515 | Should a King suffer by his Subjects? |
A90515 | Was I guilty of it? |
A90515 | What hainous crime have you committed, that could inforce your subjects to so great a violence? |
A90515 | Who art thou that presumest by a Sacrilegious Impiety to disturbe the ashes of a King, which so many years have been at rest? |
A90515 | do you not plainly perceive the admirable course and tenour of the Divine Justice? |
A62841 | But how? |
A62841 | But what need I go out of England for Examples? |
A62841 | But what need I mention Books that were not Canonical? |
A62841 | But why, in the Name of God, is none of these ever since produc''d? |
A62841 | How came this Prince''s Autographs to be thus neglected, when his Day is so strictly observ''d? |
A62841 | If this Quality was sufficient to entitle the two last to Inspiration, why should it not do as much for the two first? |
A62841 | Now who can laugh at the Popish Legends, and be serious when he reads this Passage? |
A62841 | Now, what could be more impartial than this? |
A62841 | WHAT need had Mr ● BLACKHALL to inform that August Assembly how little he kn ● w of the History of the Canon? |
A62841 | Was there no other Secret in the World but this, says Mr. WAGSTAF, that the divulging of it would gratify Mr. MILTON? |
A62841 | Were not great Persons employ''d to solicit and make an Interest for them? |
A62841 | What is this therefore but to throw a Calumny on good Men, and to fix the Accusation of Discord on the Unanimous Society of CHRIST''s Disciples? |
A62841 | or more likely to secure me from all Imputations, whatever should be the Reception of MILTON from the Public? |
A70321 | And besides these ships which they here confesse, how many Land- companies be there in the same condition? |
A70321 | Is keeping on the hat irreverence at that time? |
A70321 | May any Ceremonies be imposed or no? |
A70321 | Sect 3 But what is it that this so falsely supposed sad experience hath made manifest? |
A70321 | These two may therefore live like Abraham and Lot, and why should there be any wrangling or controversie betwixt thy Heards- men and my Heards- men? |
A70321 | how many thousand families which have no Minister in them? |
A31787 | And shall Petitions framed upon these Grounds be called Mutinous? |
A31787 | And yet lawfull Assemblies: Were not severall Members of either House assaulted, threatned, and ill intreated? |
A31787 | Can this be thought the Wisdome and Justice of both Houses of Parliament? |
A31787 | Have so many Petitions( even against the Form and Constitution of the Kingdome, and the Laws established) been joyfully received and accepted? |
A31787 | Or is there such a thing as Law left? |
A31787 | Shall We believe those Reproches to be the voice of the Kingdome of England? |
A31787 | Vpon what Grounds would these men have Petitions framed? |
A31787 | What Member is there of either Houses that saw not those numbers, and heard not those cries? |
A31787 | Where is every mans Propertie, every mans Libertie? |
A78958 | ( your two first I answer but as one Argument) and because the Apostles met with those of the inferiour Orders, for Acts of Government; what then? |
A78958 | And, if nothing of this kind can be done without the consent of the Clergy, what Reformation can be expected in France, or Spaine, or Rome it selfe? |
A78958 | Now consider, ought I not to keep my selfe from presumptuous sinnes? |
A78958 | Scripture is best interpreted by it selfe, therefore that all other interpretations are unlawfull? |
A78958 | and you know who sayes, What doth it profit a man, though he should gaine the whole World, and lose his owne Soule? |
A78958 | are there not divers Parishes in one Diocesse? |
A78958 | or to make him alter Lawes against his will? |
A38258 | And must I be opposed with force, because they have not reason wherewith to convince me? |
A38258 | But if thou wilt not restore me and mine, what am I that I should charge thee foolishly? |
A38258 | But who can unfold the riddle of some mens justice? |
A38258 | For, what profit is there in my bloud, or in their gaining my Kingdomes, if they lose their owne S ● ules? |
A38258 | Hast thou forgotten to be gracious, and shut up thy loving kindnesse in displeasure? |
A38258 | If thou Lord shouldst be extream to mark what is done amisse, who can abide it? |
A38258 | Is there no way left to make Me a glorious KING but by My sufferings? |
A38258 | Is this the reward and thanks that I am to receive for those many Acts of Grace I have lately passed, and for those many Indignities I have endured? |
A38258 | O My God, how long shall the sonnes of men turne My glory into shame? |
A38258 | What good man had not rather want any thing he most desired, for the Publique good, then obtaine it by such unlawfull and irreligious meanes? |
A38258 | Whom did I by power protect against the Justice of Parliament? |
A38258 | Whose innocent bloud during My Reigne have I shed, to satisfie My lust, anger, or covetousnesse? |
A38258 | how long shall they love vanity, and seek after lies? |
A38258 | what Widowes or Orphans tears can witnesse against me; the just cry of which must now be avenged with My owne bloud? |
A91339 | 10 What is the Good or Conveniency of Aristocracy? |
A91339 | 11 What is the Ill of Aristocracy, or the Inconvenience to which it is Lyable? |
A91339 | 12 What is the Good, or Convenience of Democracy? |
A91339 | 13 What is the Ill of Democracy, or the Inoonvenience to which it is Lyable? |
A91339 | 15 What Priviledges doth the King chalenge to himself? |
A91339 | 16 For what end is this Authority trusted to the King, and Placed in him? |
A91339 | 17 To what purpose especially are the priviledges of the house of Commons and the house of Peeres? |
A91339 | 4 What kind of government then is that of the state of England? |
A91339 | 5 If the Government be Regulated, why do men tell us that the King is above all Law? |
A91339 | 6 Is this Regulated and mixt Monarchy, as good as an Absolute Monarchy, or better, or worse? |
A91339 | 8 What is the Conveniency or Good of Monarchy? |
A91339 | 9 What is the Ill of Absolute Monarchy? |
A91339 | And what Greater Faction or Division can there be, then such as Divide between King and Parliament, and between the House and their Members? |
A91339 | Are there any of these Simple Formes perfect? |
A91339 | But have the two Houses Power to put their judgements into Execution, as well as to Impeach and Iudge? |
A91339 | By whom was this government framed in this sort? |
A91339 | HOW many Simple kinds are there of Civill Government of States, and Common- wealths? |
A91339 | Is the State of England governed by any one of these kinds simply? |
A91339 | Q 18 What are the speciall priviledges of the House of Commons towards this? |
A91339 | What is the speciall Priviledge of the House of Peers in the former Case of such Favorites and Followers of the Kings as are Impeached by the Commons? |
A91339 | Yet if all would have come away at call, had it not been Dissolved for want of Legall Numbers Remaining? |
A91339 | or the Inconvenience to which it is Lyable? |
A91339 | or who is to be accounted the Immediate Efficient of the Constitution thereof? |
A38428 | And can those be friends to you, and worth the defending, that are enemies to your Kingdoms? |
A38428 | And can your heart endure, or can your hands be strong in the day the Lord will reckon with you for his people committed to your charge? |
A38428 | And for us your people, what have we done that we are made a common spoile? |
A38428 | And is not your Parliament, the Kingdom Representative? |
A38428 | And we hope your Majesty will not deny them to be your entire Parliament; for is the Act recalled whereby they were established? |
A38428 | Can those Councellours that have set you on then bring you as safely off? |
A38428 | Doth not nature teach us the preservation of our soules? |
A38428 | Doth not your Majesty in your Expresses oft Mention your selfe a part of the Parliament? |
A38428 | Dread Soveraign, We beseech you consider, what hath your Parliament and People done, that deserves all this from You? |
A38428 | For your Forts and Navy, are they not yours for your Kingdoms good? |
A38428 | Have not your eyes seen it, and your eares heard the groanes of the wounded gaspe for life? |
A38428 | If not, how can they cease to be your Parliament? |
A38428 | Is all this nothing in your eyes? |
A38428 | Is it because they prosecute Delinquents? |
A38428 | Know you not how our bloud is spilt and the dead bodies of your subjects yea many of your Nobles scat ● ered as dung on the face of the Earth? |
A38428 | To whom should your people go but to your Majesty in this our distresse? |
A38428 | Was it not with your own consent? |
A38428 | Why, to what ends are your Courts of Justice else? |
A38428 | Would your Majesty desire us perfidiously to betr ● y them whom we have trusted; and desert them that have been so faithfull to us? |
A38428 | and are not they your chiefest Court? |
A38428 | and destroy those who are our selves representatively? |
A38428 | and is it not your glory to be King of a rich and free people? |
A38428 | and is the Parliament valid without your authority? |
A38428 | and that the Head without which the Body can not live? |
A38428 | and the smallest worm turne back if you tread on it? |
A38428 | and to kill them whom we have chosen to save us? |
A38428 | relieved us from oppressing Courts, and illegall taxations? |
A38428 | where is now your Majesties ancient clemency? |
A38428 | will not the eye wink without deliberation? |
A47456 | And then Sir, the Scripture says, They that know their Masters will and do it not, what follows? |
A47456 | And then his Lordship said, You have room enough here, have you not? |
A47456 | And then turning to the Executioner, said, How must I lie? |
A47456 | Art thou not interposing thy self between the Justice of God and my Soul? |
A47456 | Art thou not now reconciling an angry God and me together? |
A47456 | Art thou not pacifying the wrath of God? |
A47456 | Col. Cobbet,( ask him) if he did not bring me from the Isle of Wight by force? |
A47456 | Ha? |
A47456 | I hope, through the free grace of your gracious God, you are now able to say, O Death, where is thy sting? |
A47456 | I may ask you Sir; Do these Gentlemen expect I should say any thing to them, or no; They can not hear? |
A47456 | Is this the bringing an end to the Treaty in the publike Faith of the world? |
A47456 | Is this the bringing of the King to his Parliament? |
A47456 | Lie down flat upon your belly: and then having laid himself down, he said ▪ Must I lie closer? |
A47456 | My Lord, shall I put up your hair? |
A47456 | My Lord, think of this, There is no condemnation to them who are in Christ: Who is it that can condemn? |
A47456 | No Sir? |
A47456 | Prisoners? |
A47456 | Shall I withdraw? |
A47456 | Should I, what wil that do me good? |
A47456 | Sir, have you your Warrant here? |
A47456 | Sir, we know very well, That it is a question on your side very much prest, by what President we shall proceed? |
A47456 | Stay a litle, which side do you stand upon? |
A47456 | Stay a little, is it well as it is* now? |
A47456 | The Executioner pointing to the front of the Scaffold, The Earl replyed, What, my head this way? |
A47456 | The King then said to the Executioner, is my hair well? |
A47456 | Then the Earl having layd his Head over the Block, said, Is this right? |
A47456 | Then the Earl of Cambridg said to the Executioner, Must I lie all along? |
A47456 | Then the Earl of Cambridg turning to the Executioner, said, which way is it that you would have me lie ▪ Sir? |
A47456 | Then the Earl turning to the Executioner, said, shall I put on another Cap, must this hair be turned up from my neck? |
A47456 | Then turning about, and looking for the Executioner( who was gone off the Scaffold) said, Which is the Gentleman? |
A47456 | Then turning to the Executioner, he said, Well, you are ready when I am ready, are you not? |
A47456 | Well Sir, shall I be heard before the Judgment be given? |
A47456 | What if I come to him, as Nicodemus did, staggering in the night? |
A47456 | Whether shall I Pray first? |
A47456 | Which is the way of lying? |
A47456 | Which way must I speak? |
A47456 | Will you hear me a word Sir? |
A47456 | Will your Lordship please to give me a sign when I shall strike? |
A47456 | Would he not have said, Yea? |
A47456 | where is thy victory? |
A47456 | which is the man? |
A68707 | * But when shall they bee proved to bee contrarie to the word of God? |
A68707 | * How many of them have determined so? |
A68707 | * In what historie be these words? |
A68707 | * Is it not rather an offence to God, to thrust men out of their places before they be tried? |
A68707 | * The Assembly desired it, but did ever Our Royall Father doe so? |
A68707 | * Whether should the King or his subjects keep the keyes of his owne Kingdome? |
A68707 | * Who have made the Covenanters Judges of the lawfulnesse either of the judicatorie or the cause? |
A68707 | And did not We and Our Councell by equall authoritie command these pretended Innovations? |
A68707 | And have either We or Our Councell given any such interpretation? |
A68707 | And is not this pulling down of Our authoritie, and setting themselves in Our place? |
A68707 | And will any man thinke, that they can bee judges in their owne cause? |
A68707 | Besides these nullities of this Assembly, what indecencie and rudenesse was to be discerned in it? |
A68707 | Can these two be confounded? |
A68707 | First, By what authoritie did they doe the same things which they now doe, before the assembly was indicted? |
A68707 | Is it not sufficient, that by Our authoritie they are discharged, and referred to the tryall of a generall Assembly and Parliament? |
A68707 | May we not therefore intreat my Lord Commissioner his Grace, in the words of the Fathers of the fourth generall Councell at Chalcedon? |
A68707 | Moreover, can these men expect, but in a lawfull Assemble they were to bee called and censured for their enorme transgressions foresaid? |
A68707 | NOw, doth this Petition deserve the name of an explication of their Covenant? |
A68707 | Nay, did they not beleeve and know, that some of these Bishops were holy and learned men, free from the crimes objected? |
A68707 | Next, Who gave the generall assembly power to erect any such Table of Commissioners? |
A68707 | Next, how can We betray the Ministers of that Kingdome unto perpetuall slaverie? |
A68707 | Now, did any of all these precede their Covenant? |
A68707 | Sixthly, who did ever heare, that the forme of proceeding of Presbyteries in that Kingdome was by reading of the Libell in any Church? |
A68707 | Was Our authoritie, or the authoritie of Our Councell so much as asked, much lesse obtained? |
A68707 | We wonder they can or dare affirme it: Did not Our Royall Father discharge that Assembly at Aberdene? |
A68707 | Were there any Commissioners by Us, or Our Councell appointed to receive this oath in the severall Shires? |
A68707 | What then? |
A68707 | Whether any man doth hold Christ or Us to be supreme? |
A68707 | Who would not now have expected a happie period to all the distractions of that Kingdome, upon this Our gracious assenting to all their owne desires? |
A68707 | and when some few turbulent Ministers did notwithstanding hold it, were they not convented before the Lords of his Councell for it? |
A68707 | especially, what an intolerable presumption is it in them to judge Our judicatories in Ireland? |
A68707 | hath the bloud of Gods servants, his holy Ministers, been shed, which bloud I am affraid keepeth the vengeance of God still hanging over this Land? |
A68707 | have none who have subscribed your Covenant, done it with blind and doubting minds? |
A68707 | is it not Regi as well as conventui ordinum? |
A68707 | much lesse of such an explication as should give either Us or Our Commissioner any satisfaction? |
A68707 | or can there bee a convention of the three Estates called without the King or his Authoritie? |
A68707 | † But was ever that previous meeting or contention of the Estates without the calling and authoritie of the King? |
A31771 | ( Man? |
A31771 | ( your two first I answer but as one Argument) and because the Apostles met with those of the inferiour Orders for Acts of Government; what then? |
A31771 | AM I thus laid aside? |
A31771 | AM I thus laid aside? |
A31771 | And are you obliged to publish all the news we send you? |
A31771 | And for all this impudent Injustice( odious to God and Man) what is objected against Us? |
A31771 | And for the question now in hand, there it is said, That where the Word of a King is, there is Power; and who may say unto him, What dost thou? |
A31771 | And had those Persons in that time given them so great cause for that refusal as His Majesty hath had given Him for this? |
A31771 | And hath He met with that Acknowledgment from his two Houses which this great grace and favour justly deserves? |
A31771 | And hath He met with that acknowledgement from His two Houses which this great Grace and Favour justly deserves? |
A31771 | And hath not all the blood that hath been spilt these seven years been cast upon My Head, Who am the greatest Sufferer, though the least guilty? |
A31771 | And hath the King sent but one Message for the renewing of a Treaty? |
A31771 | And have not we taken upon us to discharge all the brotherly assistance of three hundred thousand pounds which we gave the Scots? |
A31771 | And have such proceedings ever been before this Parliament? |
A31771 | And how should those Catalogues be unquestionable, which must be made up out of Testimonies that fight one with another? |
A31771 | And if nothing of this kind can be done without the consent of the Clergy, what Reformation can be expected in France or Spain, or Rome it self? |
A31771 | And if the Law( which of it self is but a dead letter) seems to condemn Him, by what power shall Judgement be given, and who shall give it? |
A31771 | And must I be opposed with Force, because they have not Reason wherewith to convince Me? |
A31771 | And must Our Condition be now irreparable? |
A31771 | And must not We declare such who March with Arms and Force to destroy Us to be Traitors, because the Earl of Essex is their General? |
A31771 | And now I can not but ask, is this the Militia that the King contends for? |
A31771 | And now what hope have we but in God, when as the only means of our subsistence and power of Reformation is under Him in the Parliament? |
A31771 | And now, ye Senators, is this the Thing So oft declar''d? |
A31771 | And was it not requisite to endeavour the stopping of that flux, which, if not stopt, will bring an absolute Destruction to this Nation? |
A31771 | And what can be more done by Us to satisfie and secure Our People in that point? |
A31771 | And what good sense could be made of that expression in Scripture, of anointing one in anothers room? |
A31771 | And where Thou wer''t our KING, art Thou our MARTYR there? |
A31771 | And where''s the Slaughter- House? |
A31771 | And who but you can be judge of the Differences betwixt me and my two Houses? |
A31771 | And who but you can be judge of the differences betwixt Me and My two Houses? |
A31771 | And who knows but the just and merciful God will do Me good for some mens hard, false and evil speeches against Me? |
A31771 | And why all this Severity? |
A31771 | Are Thy Devotions dangerous? |
A31771 | Are not the Principles by which they live destructive to all Laws and Compacts? |
A31771 | Are the Injuries committed against Us and the Law justifiable? |
A31771 | Are they concerned in the contrary, and is any Man returned and admitted whom they would be rid of, and against whom the least pretence is made? |
A31771 | As for the main impediment in the D. of Lorrain''s business( which is his passage) why mayest not Thou procure him passage through France? |
A31771 | But Thou, thine own Soul''s Monarch, art above Revenge and Anger: Canst Thou tame Thy Love? |
A31771 | But can Our good Subjects be longer kept in this Trance? |
A31771 | But if Thou wilt not restore Me and Mine, what am I that I should charge Thee foolishly? |
A31771 | But on the other side; if this clause be not in, how much greater is the disadvantage the other way by some Clauses? |
A31771 | But what can we the Commons, without the conjunction of the House of Lords? |
A31771 | But who can unfold the riddle of some mens Justice? |
A31771 | But( said the King) what wilt thou say when thou seest Him come back again? |
A31771 | Can their Experience, Reason and Understanding be captivated by words and assumptions contradictory to all Principles? |
A31771 | Did His Majesty give any Commission till they had mustered many men? |
A31771 | Did You, Ye Nobles, envy CHARLES His Crown? |
A31771 | Did you bow the knee That you might murther Him with Loyalty? |
A31771 | Did you by Oaths your God and Country mock? |
A31771 | Did you, that swore you''d Mount CHARLES higher yet, Intend the Scaffold for His Olivet? |
A31771 | Doth the directing His Majesty with whom and how far to make Alliances belong to them? |
A31771 | For how can I Treat with Honour, so long as people are terrified with Votes and Orders against coming to speak or write to me? |
A31771 | For how can I treat with Honour, so long as people are terrified with Votes and Orders against coming to speak or write to Me? |
A31771 | For was it through Ignorance that I suffered innocent blood to be shed by a false pretended way of Justice? |
A31771 | For what profit is there in my Blood, or in their gaining my Kingdoms, if they lose their own Souls? |
A31771 | Great CHARLES, is this Thy dying- place? |
A31771 | Hast Thou forgotten to be gracious, and shut up thy loving kindness in displeasure? |
A31771 | Hath not this distracted Nation groaned a long time under the burthen of Tyranny and Oppression? |
A31771 | Hath not this distracted Nation groaned a long time under the burthen of tyranny and oppression? |
A31771 | Have I denied to pass any one Bill for the ease and security of My Subjects? |
A31771 | Have I not been condemned for Evil Counsellors, and shall I now be condemned for having no Counsel but God? |
A31771 | Have I not been condemned for Evil Counsellors; and shall I now be condemned for having no Counsel but God? |
A31771 | Have I not formerly been Imprisoned for making War; and shall I now be condemned for making Peace? |
A31771 | Have I not formerly been imprisoned for making War, and shall I now be condemned for making Peace? |
A31771 | Have I not formerly enjoyed the society of My dear Wife and Children in peace and quietness, and shall I now neither enjoy them, nor Peace? |
A31771 | Have I not formerly enjoyed the society of my dear Wife and Children in peace and quietness; and shall I now neither enjoy them nor Peace? |
A31771 | Have I not formerly ruled like a KING; and shall I now be ruled like a Slave? |
A31771 | Have I not formerly ruled like a King, and shall I now be ruled like a Slave? |
A31771 | Have I violated your Laws? |
A31771 | Have Partiality and Corruption in Judges obstructed the course of Justice? |
A31771 | Have any of My People been transported with Fears and Apprehensions? |
A31771 | Have either or both Houses ever before assumed or pretended to a Power to raise Armes or levy War in any Cause? |
A31771 | Have not I formerly been condemned for yielding too litte to My two Houses of Parliament; and shall I now be condemned for yielding too much? |
A31771 | Have not I formerly been condemned for yielding too little to My two Houses of Parliament, and shall I now be condemned for yielding too much? |
A31771 | Have not My Subjects formerly obeyed Me, and shall I now be obedient to My Subjects? |
A31771 | Have not My Subjects formerly obeyed Me; and shall I now be obedient to My Subjects? |
A31771 | His Majesty then said, Will you hear Me a word, Sir? |
A31771 | How could''st Thou bear Thy Queen''s Divorce? |
A31771 | How ineffectual were that Debate like to prove, wherein the most potent Party had nothing of moment left to ask, and the other nothing more to give? |
A31771 | How ineffectual were that Debate like to prove, wherein the most potent party had nothing of moment left to ask, and the other nothing more to give? |
A31771 | How oft have I intreated for Peace, but when I speak thereof, they make them ready to War? |
A31771 | If Thou, Lord, shouldst be extream to mark what is done amiss, who can abide it? |
A31771 | In what? |
A31771 | Is Honour, Reputation, Freedom and Civility to be esteemed? |
A31771 | Is Peace and tranquillity dear to Our Subjects? |
A31771 | Is it He that keeps Armies on foot when there is none to oppose? |
A31771 | Is it He that will not lay down Excise, Taxations and Free- quarterings? |
A31771 | Is it Liberty of Conscience? |
A31771 | Is it Liberty of Conscience? |
A31771 | Is it Peace? |
A31771 | Is it Peace? |
A31771 | Is it Plenty and Happiness? |
A31771 | Is it Plenty and Happiness? |
A31771 | Is it Security? |
A31771 | Is it Security? |
A31771 | Is it frequent Parliaments? |
A31771 | Is it frequent Parliaments? |
A31771 | Is it the Arrears of the Army? |
A31771 | Is it the Arrears of the Army? |
A31771 | Is it the right administration of Justice? |
A31771 | Is it the right administration of Justice? |
A31771 | Is no Man absolutely vested in his Goods, because all we have we are trusted with for the Glory of God? |
A31771 | Is not every thing Necessary they think so, and every thing lawful that is in order to that Necessity? |
A31771 | Is not the taking away of the Bishops, Deans and Chapters, and indeed the whole establisht Ecclesiastical frame of Order and Government, a new Law? |
A31771 | Is there no more? |
A31771 | Is there no way left to make Me a Glorious KING, but by my Sufferings? |
A31771 | Is this a Just way of proceeding, when Truth, though offered, must not be heard, and that no way must be left to recant an Errour? |
A31771 | Is this the bringing an end to the Treaty in the Publick Faith of the World? |
A31771 | Is this the bringing of the King to His Parliament? |
A31771 | Is this the reward and thanks that I am to receive for those many Acts of Grace I have lately passed, and for those many Indignities I have endured? |
A31771 | It is true, Jerome saith, Quid facit, exceptâ ordinatione, Episcopus, quod non facit Presbyter? |
A31771 | Lastly, Is the Constitution of the Kingdom to be preserved, and Monarchy it self upheld? |
A31771 | London, didst thou Thy Prince''s Life betray? |
A31771 | Nay, what one thing is there that makes life precious to good Men which We do not defend, and these Men oppose, and would evidently destroy? |
A31771 | No, Sir? |
A31771 | Now consider, ought I not to keep My self from presumptuous sins? |
A31771 | O my God, how long shall the sons of men turn my glory into shame? |
A31771 | Or do Thy Prayers want a Guard? |
A31771 | Or else didst thou bemoan His Cross? |
A31771 | Or with Freedom, until I may call such unto Me of whose services I shall have use in so great and difficult a work? |
A31771 | Pretend a Crown, and yet prepare a Block? |
A31771 | Prisoners, Sir? |
A31771 | Quem Regem potiùs, Patrémve dicam? |
A31771 | Scripture is best interpreted by it self, therefore that all other interpretations are unlawful? |
A31771 | Shall I withdraw? |
A31771 | Shall that be blamable in Me, which is commendable veracity and constancy in others? |
A31771 | So there is relation to Office in unction, as well as to conferring of abilities; else how are Kings or Priests or Prophets said to be anointed? |
A31771 | The old question was, What shall be done to the man whom the King will honour? |
A31771 | The variety of Reasons( may we say? |
A31771 | Then the King asked the Executioner, Is My Hair well? |
A31771 | Then what was that from Tavestock in August 1644. and* five others from Oxford the next year? |
A31771 | These faulty too? |
A31771 | Thou England''s David, how Did Shimei''s Tongue not move Thee? |
A31771 | Thou Meeker Moses, how? |
A31771 | Thou once hadst Men, Plate, Arms, a Treasury To bind thy KING, and hast thou none to free? |
A31771 | Thy Prisons, Scorns, Reproach, and Poverty How could''st Thou bear? |
A31771 | WHether this Remonstrance be agreeable to the former Declarations of the Army? |
A31771 | Was ever Lion bit with Whelps till now And did not roar? |
A31771 | Was this, Hail Master? |
A31771 | Well, Sir, shall I be heard before the Judgment be given? |
A31771 | Were not the dying hearts of My poor distressed People much revived with the hopes of a happiness from this Treaty? |
A31771 | Were not the dying hearts of my poor distressed People much revived with the hopes of a Happiness from this Treaty? |
A31771 | Were the Consciences of Men grieved and scandalized at the too much Formality and circumstances used in the exercise of Religion? |
A31771 | Were they troubled to see the Pulpit sometimes made a Barr to plead against the Liberty and Property of the Subject? |
A31771 | What Grievance or Pressure have Our People complained of, and been eased by Us, whch is not now brought upon them in an unlimited degree? |
A31771 | What Guards are set? |
A31771 | What Widows or Orphans tears can witness against Me, the just cry of which must now be avenged with My own Blood? |
A31771 | What can be said or imagined should be any inducement to it? |
A31771 | What concerns more the Publick, and is more( indeed) proper for the high Court of Parliament, then the making of Laws? |
A31771 | What good man had not rather want any thing he most desired for the publick good, than obtain it by such unlawful and irreligious means? |
A31771 | What honest end can that Ordinance have which is not obtained by the execution of and obedience to that Commission? |
A31771 | What is it that Men are afraid to hear from Me? |
A31771 | What is it that men are afraid to hear from me? |
A31771 | What is there else? |
A31771 | What one thing have We denied that with reference to the publick Peace and Happiness were to be bought with the loss of the meanest Subject? |
A31771 | What one thing in Our power have We neglected or omitted which might contribute to the assistance or ease of Our poor Protestant Subjects there? |
A31771 | What shall we say? |
A31771 | What should We do? |
A31771 | What would you have? |
A31771 | What? |
A31771 | When we undertook the charge of the Army, which cost above 50000 pound a month, was not this given to the King? |
A31771 | Where are Thy Nobles? |
A31771 | Where are Thy tender Babes once Princely bred, Thy choicest Jewels? |
A31771 | Where is then the Danger? |
A31771 | Where''s the Where is the King? |
A31771 | Who hath not heard these Men say, That the alteration they intend, and is necessary both in Church and State, must be made by blood? |
A31771 | Whom did I by power protect against the Justice of Parliament? |
A31771 | Whose innocent blood during my Reign have I shed to satisfy my Lust, Anger, or Covetousness? |
A31771 | Why do you then ask that in which Our own Inclination hath prevented you? |
A31771 | Why would''st thou be the cursed Golgotha? |
A31771 | Why, said the King? |
A31771 | Would they confine Thy Dreams within to dwell, Nor let Thy Fancy pass their Centinel? |
A31771 | and are they not equally concerned in the Uncomeliness, Irreverence and Prophaneness now avowed to the dishonour of Christianity? |
A31771 | and are they not more confounded to see it so generally made a Scaffold to incite the People to Rebellion and Sedition against Us? |
A31771 | and did He not offer to wave their Charge, willingly submitting it to the publick Peace? |
A31771 | and hath not all the blood that hath been spilt these seven years been cast upon My head, who am the greatest sufferer, though the least guilty? |
A31771 | and how suddenly are they frustrated in their expectations? |
A31771 | and must I not speak for My self? |
A31771 | and must I not speak for my self? |
A31771 | and was it not requisite to endeavour the stopping of that flux, which, if not stopt, will bring an absolute destruction to this Nation? |
A31771 | and you know who saies, What doth it profit a Man though he should gain the whole World, and lose his own Soul? |
A31771 | are there not divers Parishes in one Diocess? |
A31771 | are these Offers unfit for them to receive? |
A31771 | are they Sequestred? |
A31771 | but yet how quickly gone? |
A31771 | could Thy Sables vent no other way? |
A31771 | couldst not thou be rich till Charles was dead? |
A31771 | how long shall they love vanity, and seek after lies? |
A31771 | is this your Glorious King? |
A31771 | must She At once Thy Wife, and yet Thy Widow be? |
A31771 | or can both Houses together exercise such a Power? |
A31771 | or did ever any King of England pretend to or seek for such a Power? |
A31771 | or that I permitted a wrong way of thy Worship to be set up in Scotland, and injured the Bishops in England? |
A31771 | or with Freedom, until I may call such unto me, of whose services I shall have use in so great and difficult a Work? |
A31771 | or, indeed, what power was left Him to deny any thing? |
A31771 | so consequently, how hopeless of mutual compliance? |
A31771 | so, consequently, how hopeless of mutual compliance? |
A31771 | was it not His Majesties Army? |
A31771 | was it not toward repair of those damages and losses which they received from the Kings Ships and from His Ministers? |
A31771 | were not all the Commanders under contract with His Majesty at higher rates and greater wages then ordinary? |
A31771 | what Cruelty was this? |
A31771 | what Watches do they keep? |
A31771 | what one Proposition that is evidently for the ease of Our Subjects have We denied? |