A Vindication of Mr. Fox's History of the Early Part of the Reign of James the SecondJ. Johnson, 1811 - 424 страници |
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Страница xxvi
... judge upon the subject , he ec ommends Vertot's * Revolutions of Rome , and tanta- * This recommendation of Mr. Vertot by a person accustomed to official accuracy is rather extraordinary ; for it is a well - known anecdote , that when ...
... judge upon the subject , he ec ommends Vertot's * Revolutions of Rome , and tanta- * This recommendation of Mr. Vertot by a person accustomed to official accuracy is rather extraordinary ; for it is a well - known anecdote , that when ...
Страница xxxvii
... judge whether they are deserving of Mr. Rose's animadversions . It may suffice to say here , that Mr. Fox appears uniformly through- out his work to have been a friend to a limited monarchy ; ( 3 ! a to the existing form of government ...
... judge whether they are deserving of Mr. Rose's animadversions . It may suffice to say here , that Mr. Fox appears uniformly through- out his work to have been a friend to a limited monarchy ; ( 3 ! a to the existing form of government ...
Страница 3
... - Habeas Corpus Act . - Import- ance of Judges being Independent . - Oppression under good Laws and bad Ministers .-- Charges against Mr. Fox not founded . CANTILE FHILADE Á VINDICATION , & c . SECTION THE FIRST . B 2.
... - Habeas Corpus Act . - Import- ance of Judges being Independent . - Oppression under good Laws and bad Ministers .-- Charges against Mr. Fox not founded . CANTILE FHILADE Á VINDICATION , & c . SECTION THE FIRST . B 2.
Страница 18
... judges who condemned him . Mr. Rose seems to think , that because Mr. Fox said something in extenuation of the execution of Charles the First , if it amounts even to extenuation , he must have said much in actual praise of that of Lewis ...
... judges who condemned him . Mr. Rose seems to think , that because Mr. Fox said something in extenuation of the execution of Charles the First , if it amounts even to extenuation , he must have said much in actual praise of that of Lewis ...
Страница 60
... judge whether they are deserving of any credit in proving this negative without some further explanation . Per- haps upon examination they might turn out to be only * What these Newspapers were , we should have been under obli- gations ...
... judge whether they are deserving of any credit in proving this negative without some further explanation . Per- haps upon examination they might turn out to be only * What these Newspapers were , we should have been under obli- gations ...
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afterwards alluded argument Argyle Argyle's assertion authority Barillon bene gesserit bill Bishop Burnet brother catholic Catholic religion character charge Charles the Second Charles's Chief Justice church cited Clarendon conduct conversion Court Cromwell crown Dalrymple death declared disputed doubt Duke of Monmouth Duke of York Dutchess Earl endeavoured England establishment examination execution expressed fact favour Fox's France friends give House of Commons House of Stuart imputed instance James the Second James's Judges King King's Bench letter Lewis liberty Lord Lord Lorne Macph ment mentioned mind ministers monarch Monk Monmouth object observation occasion opinion papers Parliament party passage period person political Prince Prince of Orange principles probably Protestant prove reader reason respect restoration Rose says royal Scotland SECTION sent shew shewn Sir John Sir Patrick Hume statute supposed thing throne tion treaty wish words zeal