| Robert Blakey - Political science - 1855 - 482 pages
...members be complained of, and questioned for anything done or said in parliament, the same is to be shown to the king by the advice and assent of all the Commons...the king give credence to any private, information." BARCLAY'S "Argenis; or, the Loves of Poliarchus and Argenis," translated 1623, is one of the early... | |
| Robert Blakey - 1855 - 244 pages
...members be complained of, and questioned for anything done or said in parliament, the same is to be shown to the king by the advice and assent of all the Commons...the king give credence to any private information." BARCLAY'S "Argenis; or, the Loves of Poliarchus and Argenis," translated 1623, is one of the early... | |
| John Langton Sanford - Great Britain - 1858 - 650 pages
...anything said or done in parliament, the same is to he showed to the king, by the advice and consent of all the Commons assembled in Parliament, before...the king give credence to any private information.'* On this the king dissolved Parliament, and with his own hand erased the protestation from the Journals.... | |
| David Rowland - Constitutional history - 1859 - 606 pages
...business ; and that if any of the said members be complained of, and questioned for anything done or said in parliament, the same is to be showed to the king,...parliament, before the king give credence to any private information."1 The king sent for the journals, and he " rent out the protestation with his own hand;"... | |
| Robert Ross - 1860 - 516 pages
...speaking, reasoning, or declaring of any matter or matters touching the parliament or parliamentary business; and that if any of the said members be complained...the king give credence to any private information " This was too much for the temper of the king. He rode up to London, sent for the journals, and tore... | |
| Walter Farquhar Hook - Bishops - 1879 - 468 pages
...expression of his opinions ; and that if any complaint was made of members, the same should be shewed to the king by the advice and assent of all the Commons...the king give credence to any private information." and gave vent to his indignation in words. He treated CHAP. the committee of the House, when it waited... | |
| Henry Hallam - Constitutional history - 1862 - 422 pages
...parliament have like liberty and freedom to treat of those matters in such order as in their judgments shall seem fittest : and that every such member of...the king give credence to any private information." 2 This protestation was not likely to pacify the king's anger. Dissolution He had already pressed the... | |
| Robert Vaughan - Great Britain - 1863 - 684 pages
...and questioned for anything said ' or done in parliament, the same is to be showed to ' the king by advice and assent of all the commons ' assembled in parliament, before the king gives cre' dence to any private information.'* Such was the excitement of the debate on this resolution,... | |
| John Fulton - Constitutional history - 1864 - 582 pages
...business ; and that if any of the said members be complained of, and questioned, for anything done or said in Parliament, the same is to be showed to the king,...the king give credence to any private information." The king sent for the journals, and he " rent out the protestation with his own hand ; " and afterwards... | |
| David Hume - 1864 - 602 pages
...members be complained of or questioned any thing done or said in Parliament, the same is to be shown to the king by the advice and assent of all the Commons...the king give credence to any private information." Franklyn, p. 65. Rushworth, vol. ip 53. Kennet, p. 747. Coke, p. 77. NOTE [H], p. 86. The moment the... | |
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