And consulting with some members of parliament and others, it was concluded, after a full and free debate, That the measures taken by the parliament were contrary to the trust reposed in them, and tending to contract the guilt of the blood that had been... Memoirs of Edmund Ludlow: Esq. ... - Page 253by Edmund Ludlow - 1698Full view - About this book
| Edmund Ludlow - Great Britain - 1751 - 396 pages
...repofed in them, and tending to contrail the guilt of the blood that had been fhed, upon themfelves and the nation : that it was therefore the duty of the...not fimply as mercenaries, but out of judgment and confidence, being convinced that the caufe in which they were engaged was jufl, and that the good of... | |
| William Harris - Great Britain - 1758 - 458 pages
...in * them, and tending to contract the guilt of the blood * that had been fhed upon themfelves and the nation : * that it was therefore the duty of the...not fimply as mercenaries, but out of judgment ' and confcience, being convinced that the caufe in « which they were engaged was juft, and that the good... | |
| William Harris - Great Britain - 1762 - 564 pages
...poled in them, and tending to contract the guilt of the 4 blood that had been fhed upon thernfelves and the ' nation : that it was therefore the duty of the...fuch proceedings ; having ' engaged in the war, not {imply as mercenaries, btt * out of judgment and confcience, being convinced that * the caufe in which... | |
| William Harris - Great Britain - 1762 - 544 pages
...repofed in them, and tending to contradt the guilt of the blood that had been flied upon themfelves and the nation : that it was therefore the duty of the...fuch proceedings ; having engaged in the war, not limply as mercenaries, but out of judgment and conscience, being convinced that the caufe in which... | |
| William Harris - 1814 - 510 pages
...reposed in them, and tending to contract the guilt of the blood that had been shed upon themselves and the nation : that it was therefore the duty of the army to endeavour to put a stop to such proceedings; h.-iving engaged in the war not simply as mercenaries, bat oat of judgment... | |
| George Buchanan - Scotland - 1827 - 642 pages
...reposed in them, and tended to contract the guilt of the blood that had been shed upon themselves and the nation. That it was, therefore, the duty of the army to endeavour to put a stop to such proceedings, having engaged in the' war, not as mercenaries, but out of judgment and conscience,... | |
| George Buchanan - 1856 - 684 pages
...reposed in them, and tended to contract the guilt of the blood that had been shed upon themselves and the nation ; that it was therefore the duty of the army to endeavour to put a stop to such proceedings ; having engaged in the war, BOOK not as mercenaries, but out of judgment... | |
| Charles Knight - Great Britain - 1858 - 560 pages
...reposed in them, and tending to contract the guilt of the blood that had been shed, upon themselves and the nation : that it was therefore the duty of the Army to endeavour to put a stop to such proceedings." * They went about this work in a very business-like manner. " Three of the... | |
| Andrew Bisset - Constitutional history - 1877 - 388 pages
...and free debate that the measures taken by the Parliament were contrary to the trust reposed in them: that it was therefore the duty of the army to endeavour to put a stop to such proceedings; having engaged in the war, not simply as mercenaries, but out of judgment... | |
| Francis Warre Cornish - Great Britain - 1882 - 444 pages
...reposed in them, and tending to contract the guilt of the blood that had been shed upon themselves and the nation ; that it was, therefore, the duty of the Army to endeavour to put a stop to such proceedings." A committee was appointed, which agreed to draw up the Army the next morning,... | |
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