The Constitutional History of England From the Accession of Henry Vii to the D

Cover The Constitutional History of England From the Accession of Henry Vii to the D
The Constitutional History of England From the Accession of Henry Vii to the D
Henry Hallam
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2 Peace however was by no means brought nearer by their meeting; the parliament, jealous and alarmed at it, would never recognize their existence, and were so provoked at their voting the lords and commons at Westminster guilty of treason, that, if we believe a writer of some authority, the two houses unanimously passed a vote on Essex s motion, summoning the king to appear endon, iv. 351, that he was the adviser ting, if attentively considered, a little of calling the Oxford parliament. The ap...prehension of popery and arbitrary former editors omitted his name. Power. Baillie says, in one of his let- 1 Parl. Hist. 218. The number who ters : " The first day the Oxford parlia- took the covenant in September, 1643, nient met, the king made a long speech ; appears by a list of the long parliament but many being ready to give in papers in the same work, vol. Ii. , to be 236 ; but for the removing of Digby, Cottington, twelve of these are included in both lists, and others from court, the meeting having gone afterwards into the king s was adjourned for some days.

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