Selected quad for the lemma: death_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
death_n brother_n king_n year_n 5,919 5 5.0531 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A26165 An answer to Mr. Molyneux his Case of Ireland's being bound by acts of Parliament in England, stated, and his dangerous notion of Ireland's being under no subordination to the parliamentary authority of England refuted, by reasoning from his own arguments and authorities. Cary, John, d. 1720?, attributed name.; Atwood, William, d. 1705?, attributed name. 1698 (1698) Wing A4167; ESTC R9464 73,026 218

There are 2 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

it may be really so or may be not so for all its Venerable Ancient Appearance we can conclude with no more Certainty than he leaves it only we may believe from the Credit of the Arguments produced by his Nephew Samuel Dopping 's Father the Reverend and Learned Doctor Dopping late Bishop of Meath that this old Modus was found in the Treasury of Waterford by my Lord Longford's Grandfather My Reader may perhaps think me as impertinent in this Repetition but I do it to shew that I have in this abbreviated about nine of his pages which offers no more of Argument to the Matter than that Henry the Second settled the Kingdom of Ireland under the very same Coustitution of Governm●nt with England and this we should as readily have granted as he could have propos'd and 't is sufficiently to our purpose that he hath abundantly prov'd That all Ranks and Orders of the Irish did unanimously agree to submit themselves to the Government of the King of England That they did thankfully receive the Laws of England and swear to be governed thereby and I know not what hath releas'd them from any part of that Obligation to this day himself owning that There cann't be shewn a more fair Original Compact than this between Henry the Second and the People of Ireland and we have desired no more from them than that they should continue to be so governed He tells us It is manifest that there were no Laws imposed on the People of Ireland by any Authority of the Parliament of England nor any introduced by Henry the Second but by the Consent and Allowance of the People of Ireland and that both the Civil and Ecclesiastical State were settled there Regiae Sublimitatis Authoritate not only this but the manner of holding Parliaments also to make Laws of their own which is the Foundation and Bulwark of the Peoples Liberties and Properties was directed and established there by Henry the Second as if 〈◊〉 were resolved that no other Person or Persons should be the Founders of the Government of Ireland but himself and the Consent of the People who submitted themselves to him against all Persons whatsoever Was it fit for the King to have carried a Parliament about with him or because he had not a Parliament there must it follow therefore that their Authority could never have any concern in what was done The King was now abroad with the Forces of the Kingdom and 't is not to be suppos'd that his own Authority was not sufficient to make Terms with the Enemy if they submitted we do not pretend that the Power of our King is limited at that rate yet whatever Submission is made to his Person on such Occasions is doubtless virtually made as to the Supream Authority of the Kingdom and that I believe every Body will allow to be in our Constitution the King Lords and Commons in all whom the Legislature resides and not in either separate from the rest The King may be said to be vested with the Power of the whole in the Civil and Military Administration of the Government and yet whatsoever is acted or acquired under his Authority as King of England must doubtless be esteemed to be for the Account of the Nation and not in any Propriety peculiar to himself To talk then As if the Parliament had nothing to do in this Transaction and that King Henry the Second acted in it as if he were resolv'd that no other Person or Persons should be the Founders of the Government of Ireland but himself is Language not becoming an Englishman and I wonder that this Author could have so little Sense of what he was about when he said this for in the very next Paragraph but one he gives us an Instance which shews beyond all Contradiction that King Henry himself had no such Opinion of his own Seperate Authority And now he comes to the Matter and tells us that King Henry about the 23d ●ear of his Reign and five Years after his Return from Ireland creates his Younger Son John King of Ireland at a Parliament held at Oxford and that by this Donation Ireland was most eminently set apart again as a seperate and distinct Kingdom by it self from the Kingdom of England and did so continue until the Kingdom of England descended and came unto King John after the Death of his Brother Richard the First which was about 22 years after his being made King of Ireland during which time and whilst his Father and Brother were successively reigning in England he made divers Grants and Charters to his Subjects of Ireland wherein he stiles himself Dominus Hiberniae and in some Dominus Hiberniae Comes Meritoniae by which Charters both the City of Dublin and divers other Corporations enjoy many Privileges and Franchises to this day We know that di●ers of our Kings have at several Times granted out Parcels of their Dominions to their Sons or Subjects and endowed them with many Royal Privileges yet always as Feudatories of the Empire after the same manner so much anciently practised in most Kingdoms of Europe such have been in England the Principality of Wales the Counties Palatine of Chester Lancaster and Durham and what was much less considerable than these the Isle of Man was given with the Title of King in Man which was more than King Iohn had which continues in the Earls of Darby at this day In like manner also have Proprietoryships been granted to the Settlers of Colonies in America in our time and such and no other was this Grant of King Henry the Second to his Son Iohn but what is very remarkable in this Case is that this Grant was made in Parliament Did ever Man so expose himself in Print what he hath been endeavouring to prove is that the Irish were never so conquered by Henry the Second as to give the Parliament of England any Jurisdiction over them and yet here he tells us that this same King Henry created his Son Iohn King of Ireland in a Parliament at Oxford which to word it in the Stile of this time is to say that about the twenty third Year of Henry the 2d an Act of Parliament was made at Oxford by which Iohn the younger Son of the said King was Created King of Ireland Is it possible to think upon a greater Instance in which the Authority of a Parliament over a People can be exerted than this of creating a King to rule them and that without ever asking their Consent and is it not plain from this that King Henry himself did never esteem the Submission of the Irish to have been made to him in respect of his Person according to this Author 's New Doctrine but in respect of the Kingdom which he govern'd otherwise why did he not make a King of Ireland by his own Authority rather than thus eclipse his Power and Right if he had it by submitting it to be
own Weapons I have indeed he●e and there as Occasion hath required asserted some things that may have occurr'd to me through that small stock of Reading or Conversation that hath fallen to my share and ●f my Memory don't serve m● so well as to be able to prove them out of Authors I don't think 't will be thought any great Fault it may be sufficient for ●e to say that they are become Principles to me and I think them so conspicuous that the reasonable part of Mankind don't disagree about them Besides I was ●esolv'd to have a Care of Mr. Molyneux's Failing least I should chance to quo●e any Authorities which might with more advantage be used against me I had never medled in this Matter but that I saw Mr. Molyneux was so egregiously out in it as that a Man of indifferent Reasoning might undertake it and 't was that part only that I was willing to attempt Neither did I resolve to go on with it when I was told that a very Learned Gentleman had an Answer in Hand 'till shewing what I had written to some Gentlemen of better Judgments than my own I was encourag'd by them to go through in the way I had begun because they believ'd Mr. Attwood would principally handle the Learned part and mine might also have its Service How meanly soever I have been able to perform it I am sure it will appear that my Intentions were right and I need no more to recommend me to the Charitable part of Mankind and he that is afraid of the rest ought of all things in the World to forbear Writing in this Critical Age. FINIS Some few Faults have escaped the Press ●hich the Reader is desired to Correct Page 14 of the Epi●●le Line 4 Rea● 〈◊〉 Feud●tory Page 13 Line 〈◊〉 Read as with 34 14 Reb●llio●s 75 14 Person 〈◊〉 13 I●dep●●dent 1●8 ● this Debt 156 8 Representatives BOOKS Printed for R. Parker under the Royal-Exchange in Cornhill OF Wisdom three Books written Originally in French by the Sieur de Charron with an Account of the Author made English by George Stanhop● D. D. late Fellow of Kings Colledge in Cambridge from the best Edition Correcte● and Enlarged by the Author a little before his death The Roman History from the Building of the City to the perfect Settlement of the Empire By Augustus Caesar containing the Space of 727 Years designed as well for the Understanding the Roman Authors as ●he Roman Affairs By Lawrenc● E●hard A. M The Roma● History from the Settlement of the Empire by Aug●●●●● Caesar to th● removal of the Imperial Seat by Constantine the Great containing the Space of 355 Years Vol. 2. for the use of his Highness the Duke of Gloucester By L. Eachard A. M. The History of the Revolutions in Sweden occasioned by the change of Religion and alterations of the Government in that Kingdom Written originally in French by the Abbot Vertot Printed at Paris and done into English by I. Mitchel M. D. With a Map of Sweden Denmark and Norway The Second Edition In which the whole Work is Revis'd and Corrected and almost the whole Second Part which was done by another Hand newly Translated A Relation of a Voyage made in the Years 1695 1696 1697. On the Coast of Africa Streights of Magellan Brasil Cagenna and the Antilles by a Squadron of French Men of War under the Command of M. de ●ennes By the Sieur F●oger Voluntier●Engineer on board the E●●glis● Falcon. Illus●r●ted with divers strange Figures drawn to the Life The Modest Critick or Remarks on the most Eminent H●storians ancient and modern with useful Cautions and Instructions as well for Writing as Reading History wherein the Sense of the Greatest Men on this Subject is faithfully abridg'd by one of the Society of the Port Royal. Poems on several Occasions written in imitation of the manner of Anacreon with other Poems Letters and Transla●ions By Mr. Old●ixon The Gentleman's Journal or the Monthly Miscellany by way of L●tter to a Gentleman in the Country consisting of News History Philosophy Poetry Musicks c. Compleat Sets or single Ones By Mr. Motteux Busby's Greek Grammar Cambridge Phrases Dr. Syden●am's compleat Method of curing almost all Diseases and description of their Symptoms to which are now added five Discour●es of the same Author concerning the Pleurisie Go●t Hysterical Pa●sion Drop●ie and Rheumatis●s abri●g'd and faithfully translated out of the Original Latin with short and useful Notes on the former Part written by a Learned Physitian and never before Printed The Third Edition The Art of preserving and rest●ring Health explaining the Nature and Causes of the Distempers that afflict Mankind Also shewing that every Man is or may be his own Physitian To which is added a Treatise of the most simple and effectual Remedies for the Diseases of Men and Women Written in French by I. Hammond M. D. and faithfully translated into English Mr. Brady's Sermon at the Funeral of L. General Tolmash at Hel●ing●am in Suffolk I●●e 30. 1694. His Sermon at the Death of the Queen preach'd before the Countess of D●rby and the Mourning Ladies March 3. 1695. His Sermon before the Company of Apothecaries Sept. 12. 1695. His Sermon on the Occasion of the late Horrid Plot March the 1st 1696. His Farewell Sermon at Cree Ch●rch Iune 29. 1696. Mr. Butler's Fast Sermon before the Lord Mayor 1680. The Usefulness of the Stage to the Happiness of Mankind to Government and to Religion Occasion'd by a late Book written by Ieremy Collier M. A. By Mr. Dennis PLAYS Marriage Hater Match'd a Comedy by Mr. D'urfey Intriegues at Versailes or a Jilt in all Humours a Comedy by Mr. D'urfey Plot and no Plot a Comedy by Mr. Dennis Love's last Shift or the Fool in Fashion a Comedy by Mr. Cibber Agnes de Castro a Trajedy by a young Lady Neglected Virtue a Trajedy Unhappy Kindness a Tragedy by Mr. Scott Traytor a Tragedy by Mr. Rivers 28 H. 8. Ch. 2. Ch. 8. Ch. 19. 33 H. 8. Ch. 1. p. 99. Page 2. p. 3. p. 4. p. 6. p. 8. p. 12 p. 12. p. 9. p. 10. p. 17. p. 18. p. 18. p. 22. p. 24. p. 20. p. 19. p. 21. p. 25. p. 22. p. 23. p. 19. p. 20. p. 27. p. 28. p. 29. p. 30. p. 32. p. 35. p. 36. p. 37. p. 38. p. 38. p. 39. p. 40. p. 40. p. 41. p. 41. p. 117. p. 42. p. 42. p. 43. p. 44. p. 44. p. 45. p. 46. p. 55. p. 56. p. 64. p. 90. p. 91. p. 92. p. 93. p. 94. p. 96. p. 100. p. 103. p. 104. p. 104. p. 106. p. 110. p. 115. p. 116. p. 117. p. 117. p. 119. p. 120. p. 120. p. 121. p. 121. p. 122. p. 122. p. 124. p. 125. p. 127. p. 128. p. 128. p. 129. p. 131. p. 136. p. 139 p. 140. p. 142. p. 142. p. 143. p. 143. p. 144. p. 144. p. 144. p. 154. p. 145. p. 148. p. 149. p. 149. p. 166. p. 167. p. 172.