An Inquiry Into the Evidence Relating to the Charges Brought by Lord Macaulay Against William Penn

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W. Blackwood and sons, 1858 - 138 sayfa
 

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Sayfa 123 - We cannot but heartily wish, as it will easily be believed, that all the people of our dominions were members of the Catholic Church...
Sayfa 124 - In the first place, we do declare that we will protect and maintain our archbishops, bishops, and clergy, and all other our subjects of the Church of England in the free exercise of their religion as by law established, and in the quiet and full enjoyment of all their possessions, without any molestation or disturbance whatsoever.
Sayfa 36 - used all the means I could to be excused, " both by some lords near the King, and also " by Sir Nicholas Butler and Mr Penn. But it " was all in vain ; I was told that they knew I " had an interest that might serve the King, 1 Vol.
Sayfa 125 - We do in the next place declare our will and pleasure to be that the execution of all and all manner of penal laws in matters ecclesiastical, against whatsoever sort of nonconformists or recusants, be immediately suspended, and they are hereby suspended...
Sayfa 124 - ... that conscience ought not to be constrained, nor people forced in matters of mere religion. It has ever been directly contrary to our inclination, as we think it is to the interest of government, which it destroys by spoiling trade, depopulating countries and discouraging strangers; and finally, that it never obtained the end for which it was employed.
Sayfa 93 - And if, for an excuse, they pretend they will send for his body, let them know it is mine; and rather than send it, I will take up the bones, and make of it a skeleton, and put it in my register office, to be a memorial of their baseness to all posterity.
Sayfa 125 - ... we do freely give them leave to meet and serve God after their own way and manner, be it in private houses or places purposely hired or built for that use...
Sayfa 125 - And forasmuch as we are desirous to have the benefit of the service of all our loving subjects, which by the law of nature is inseparably annexed to, and inherent in our royal person...
Sayfa 126 - ... royal person, and that none of our subjects may for the future be under any discouragement or disability (who are otherwise well inclined and fit to serve us), by reason of some oaths or tests that have been usually administered on such occasions, we do hereby further declare that it is our Eoyal will and pleasure that the oaths commonly called the Oaths of Supremacy and Allegiance...
Sayfa 78 - It is melancholy to relate that Penn, while professing to consider even defensive war as sinful, did everything in his power to bring a foreign army into the heart of his own country. He wrote to inform James that the adherents of the Prince of Orange dreaded nothing so much as an appeal to the sword, and that, if England were now invaded from France or from Ireland, the number of Eoyal* Life of James, ii.

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