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A50977 A view of the court of St. Germain from the year 1690, to 95 with an account of the entertainment Protestants meet with there : directed to the malecontents Protestants of England. Macky, John, d. 1726. 1696 (1696) Wing M221; ESTC R11112 11,198 31

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Protestant Religion you cannot expect to be more Favourably Treated then his present Followers Some others amongst you are disaffected because as they say without the Restoration of King James a Protestant War will be entailed on the Nation and because our Treasure is exhausted by Taxes and our Blood expended beyond Sea which the Nation cannot long bear To these Gentlemen I must answer that they are much mistaken for the bringing in of King James which they think will put an end to these Troubles would infallibly bring the Seat of War from Flanders into England For it is unreasonable to Suppose that so many Noble-men and Gentlemen as are ingaged in King William's Cause would tamely Submit or that his Majesty whose Interest in Europe is so very great would either ingloriously abandon his Throne or want Foreign Assistance to Support him in it 2. King James and the French King are both Old and upon a change of a Governour in France we may reasonably expect change of Measures for as to the Prince of Wales his Interest stands or fall with that of his Supposed Father but after all is it reasonable to believe that the French or any other Nation will live in perpetual War with us meerly for the sake of a Prince who pretends to be deprived of his Rights There are very few Knights-Errants in this Age or at least sure I am that no Nation ●n general is Acted by their Principles and we see the French offer already to forsake him 3. I Grant that our Taxes are greater then ever our Nation paid but yet they are not so heavy but that we can hold it out many Years at this Rate In short whatever they be I believe there is no good Man but will rather hazard his Person to keep the Enemy abroad than see a French and Irish Army in the Bowels of our own Country destroying our Substance burning our Habitations and committing the Barbarities which they committed in the Palatinate For certainly by one Months Ravage of this Nature we should lose more Blood and Treasure than can probably be spent to bring the War to an Honourable and happy Conclusion That happy Moment is not perhaps so far as some People imagine for whosoever will cast his Eyes on the present Posturs of Affairs in Europe must needs conclude that the French cannot hold it out much longer FINIS BOOKS Sold by Richard Baldwin BIbliotheca Politica Or an Enquiry into the Antient Constitution of the English Government with respect both to the just Extent of Regal Power and to the Rights and Liberties of the Subject Wherein all the chief Arguments as well against as for the late Revolution are impartially represented and considered In XIII Dialogues Collected out of the best Authors both Ancient and Modern To which is added an Alphabetical Index to the whole Work The Works of F. Rabelais M. D. in five Books or the Lives Heroick Deeds and Sayings of the good Gargantua and Pantagruel and his Voyage to the Oracle of the Bottle As also his Historical Letters To which is added the Author's Life and Explanatory Remarks By Mr. Motteux Never before Printed in English The World Bewitch'd containing an Examination of the common Opinions concerning Spirits their Nature Power Administration and Operations as also the Effects Men are able to produce by their Communication Divided into four Parts By Belthazer Bekker D. D. and Pastor at Amsterdam Vol. I. Translated from a French Copy approv'd of and subscribed by the Author 's own Hand A Collection of Speeches of the Right Honourable Henry late Earl of Warrington viz. I. His Speech upon his being swore Mayor of Chester in November 1691. II. His Speech to the Grand-Jury at Chester April 13 1692. III. His Charge to the Grand-Jury at the Quarter-Sessions held for the County of Chester on the 11th of October 1692. IV. His Charge to the Grand-Jury at the Quarter-Sessions held for the County of Chester on the 25th of April 1693. Letters of State written by Mr. John Milton to most of the Sovereign Princes and Republicks of Europe from the Year 1649 to the Year 1659. To which is added an Account of his Life Together with several of his Poems and a Catalogue of his Works never before Printed An Answer to a Paper written by Count d' Avaux the French King's Ambassador in Sweden concerning the Proposals of Peace made by France to the Confederates