Gentlemen, the first thing I recommended to you at our last meeting was to provide for a ministry, and nothing is yet done. You are all big with the privileges of Englishmen and Magna Charta, which is your right, and the same law provides for the religion... The Correspondence of John Henry Hobart... - Page 83by John Henry Hobart - 1912Full view - About this book
| Martha Joanna Lamb - 1921 - 874 pages
...regard to what he had said on a former occasion angered him, and he remarked with much asperity : " Gentlemen, the first thing I recommended to you at...it at the next meeting and do something toward it effectually." The two factions which had derived their existence from the Revolution would not agree... | |
| Alan Taylor - 2002 - 548 pages
...pointedly reminded the New York assembly, "There are none of you but what are big with the privilege of Englishmen and Magna Charta, which is your right; and the same law doth provide for the religion of the church of England." Congregationalists sustained an especially... | |
| Patricia U. Bonomi Professor of History New York University (Emerita) - 2003 - 330 pages
...opening address to the assembly in 1693, "There are none of you but what are big with the privilege of Englishmen and Magna Charta, which is your right; and the same law doth provide for the religion of the church of England." Fletcher forced a bill through the assembly... | |
| Martha Lamb, Martha Joanna Lamb, Mrs. Burton Harrison - 2005 - 605 pages
...ministry, and nothing is yet done. You are all big with the privileges of Englishmen and Magna Charts, which is your right, and the same law provides for...the religion of the Church of England. As you have postl wined it this session, I trust you will take hold of it at the next meeting and do something... | |
| James H. Hutson - 2007
...are big," the new royal governor of New York, Benjamin Fletcher, lectured his legislature in 1692, "with the privileges of Englishmen and Magna Charta, which is your right; and the same law, doth provide for the Religion of the Church of England." Using Warburton's rationale, British officials... | |
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