id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt 23690 Various Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 61, No. 378, April, 1847 .txt text/plain 91598 4430 71 from a lowly station to great power, Cromwell had occasion, no doubt, at keeping God a little out of sight, makes his mass express the natural "had filled all time and all space for man, and bodied itself forth into thus,--"A little after, he said, one thing lay upon his spirit. walks of life, men who torment their spirit on some public question till it as the great "extremity" of past times, that men were not permitted "My dear friend, let us look into providences; surely they mean 'the Lord General Cromwell came into the House, clad in plain speech, delivered by the living man Cromwell, was likely to fail in various officers (amongst others, by General King) who fought that day with the king one day at this time, when his Majesty said to him, "I What do you mean by _natural?_" "Why," replied the old man, "I do think, ./cache/23690.txt ./txt/23690.txt