| Oliver Cromwell, Charles Harding Firth - 1904 - 580 páginas
...to that issue at last ; and gave it unto us by way of redundancy ; and at last it proved that which was most dear to us. And wherein consisted this more...from strangers, and to live in howling wildernesses [Our poor Brethren of' Neti> England /] ; and for which also many that remained here were imprisoned... | |
| Alfred Plummer - 1907 - 216 páginas
...Parliament of the Protectorate, 22nd January 1655, he said that in the Civil War they had fought for " liberty from the tyranny of the Bishops to all species...God according to their own light and consciences. . . . And was it fit for them to sit heavy upon others ? Is it ingenuous to ask liberty, and not to... | |
| Alfred Plummer - 1907 - 214 páginas
...Parliament of the Protectorate, 22nd January 1655, he said that in the Civil War they had fought for " liberty from the tyranny of the Bishops to all species...God according to their own light and consciences. . . . And was it fit for them to sit heavy upon others ? Is it ingenuous to ask liberty, and not to... | |
| Geoffrey F. Nuttall - 1992 - 228 páginas
...toleration to those whose Common Prayer Book 'remained the very badge of Royalism'.4 His work had been 'In obtaining that liberty from the tyranny of the...God according to their own light and consciences', in obtaining it from those who had sought 'to eat out the core and power and heart and life of all... | |
| David Masson, George Grove, John Morley, Mowbray Morris - 1895 - 546 páginas
...enjoyment of the true religion of more importance than the best possible political constitution. " Liberty to all .species of Protestants to worship God according to their own light and conscience " was in his eyes the essential object of the great war. Whether England should be a monarchy... | |
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