| John Strype - Great Britain - 1711 - 804 pages
...countenanced them agjinft u the Bidiops, they them'.elvcs might rue it at laft. And that all that thefe Men, " tended towards, was to the overthrow of all of Honourable Quality, and the " fetting a foot a Commonwealth, or, as he called it, a Popularly. Which rekable Obfervation he made... | |
| George Brodie - Great Britain - 1822 - 570 pages
...will be the overthrow of all the nobility *." On another occasion, he remarked to Lord Burleigh, " that how secure soever the nobility were of these...they themselves might rue it at last ; and that all these men tended towards, was to the overthrow of all honourable quality, and setting a-foot a commonwealth,... | |
| John Bayly Sommers Carwithen - 1829 - 558 pages
...for the * " Parker, in July, 1573, told lord Burghley, that however some of the nobility were of the puritans, and countenanced them against the bishops,...these men tended towards was to the overthrow of all honourable society, and the setting afloat a commonwealth, or, as he called it, a singularity." —... | |
| Church of England, Edward Cardwell - 1839 - 490 pages
...powerful among the queen's ministers. The archbishop writing to Burghley in the preceding July, says, " How secure soever the nobility were of these puritans,...was to the overthrow of all of honourable quality, 30 and the setting afoot a commonwealth, or as he called it, a popularity." (Strype, Parker, vol. ii.... | |
| Church of England, Edward Cardwell - 1839 - 478 pages
...powerful among the queen's ministers. The archbishop writing to Burghley in the preceding July, says, " How secure soever the nobility were of these puritans,...was to the overthrow of all of honourable quality, 30 and the setting afoot a commonwealth, or as he called it, a popularity." (Strype, Parker, vol. ii.... | |
| Edward Cardwell, Church of England - 1844 - 508 pages
...among the queen's ministers. The archbishop writing to Burghley in the preceding July, says, " How 25 secure soever the nobility were of these puritans,...a commonwealth, or as he called it, a popularity." (Strype, Parker, vol. ii. p. 323.) The immediate 30 occasion of the urgent measures adopted by the... | |
| John Bayly Somers Carwithen - Reformation - 1849 - 618 pages
...appointment of Grindal to the vacant Primacy: it was an unc " Parker, in July, 1573, told Lord Bnrghley, That how secure soever the nobility were of these...a Commonwealth, or as he called it a popularity." Strype's Life of Archbishop Parker, b. iv. c. xxxiii. p. 323. deniable proof of the ascendancy which... | |
| Samuel Hopkins - Great Britain - 1859 - 578 pages
...Council, at the nobility."3 In July, 1573, his mind was clear on the subject; for he wrote to Burleigh, that " how secure soever the nobility were of these...themselves might rue it at last " ; and that " all these men tended towards was to the overthrow of all honorable quality and the setting up of a popularity,"... | |
| George Brodie - Constitutional history - 1866 - 590 pages
...it will be the overthrow of all the nobility.'* On another occasion he remarked to Lord Burleigh, ' that how secure soever the nobility were of these...they themselves might rue it at last ; and that all these men tended towards, was to the overthrow of all honourable quality, and setting a-foot a commonwealth,... | |
| George Brodie - Constitutional history - 1866 - 598 pages
...it will be the overthrow of all the nobility.'* On another occasion he remarked to Lord Burleigh, ' that how secure soever the nobility were of these...they themselves might rue it at last ; and that all these men tended towards, was to the overthrow of ah1 honourable quality, and setting a-foot a commonwealth,... | |
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