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"But others," she said, "will be found less scrupulous." * Camden, p. 538. Strype, vol. iii. p. 375, 376. MS. in the Advocates' Library, A. 3. 28, p. 17, from the Cott. Lib. Calig. c. 9. Biog. Brit. p. 1625, 1627.
Strype, vol. i. p. 73, with some small variations. Those in high ecclesiastic stations, being exposed to the eyes of the public, seem chiefly to have placed a point of honor in their perseverance; but on the whole, the Protestants, in the former change introduced by Mary, appear to have been much more rigid and conscientious.
Elizabeth wrote a letter to James, in which she quoted a moral sentence from Isocrates, and indirectly reproached him with inconstancy, and a breach of his engagements. * Spotswood, p. 325, 326, et seq. Melvil, p. 140, 141. Strype, vol. iii. p. 156. * Melvil, p. 148. Jebb, vol. ii. p. 530. * Spotswood. p. 333 Spotswood. p. 334.
Strype, vol. i. p. 414. Haynes, p. 447. He talked to her of his travels, and forgot not to mention the different dresses of the ladies in different countries, and the particular advantages of each in setting off the beauties of the shape and person.
There was only one instance in which the spirit of contradiction to the Romanists took place universally in England: the altar was removed from the wall, was placed in the middle of the church, and was thenceforth denominated the communion table. * Strype, vol. i. p. 416. Keith, p. 565. Knox, p. 402. * Heylin, Preface, p. 3. Hist. p. 106.
He betrayed the whole conspiracy to the ministers; and Parry, being thrown into prison, confessed the guilt both to them and to the jury who tried him. These bloody designs now appeared every where, as the result of that bigoted spirit by which the two religions, especially the Catholic, were at this time actuated. * State Trials, vol. i. p. 103, et seq. Strype, vol. iii. p. 255, et seq.
Open in her address, gracious and affable in all public appearances, she rejoiced in the concourse of her subjects, entered into all their pleasures and amusements; and without departing from her dignity, which she knew well how to preserve, she acquired a popularity beyond what any of her predecessors or successors ever could attain. * Heylin, p. 104. Strype, vol. i. p. 41. Camden, p. 371.
Had Elizabeth gratified her own inclinations, the exterior appearance, which is the chief circumstance with the people, would have been still more similar between the new and the ancient form of worship. * Heylin, p. 111. Burnet, vol. ii. p. 376, 397. Camden, p. 371. * Camden, p. 378. Strype, vol. i. p. 150, 370.
But how did you get round the sister? That's the question." "Well, my lord, I'll tell you. You know there was always a kind of frindship between Anty and the girls at home, and they set her up to going to old Moylan he that receives the rents on young Barron's property, away at Strype. Moylan's uncle to Flaherty, that married mother's sister.
This "principal pillar of the Reformation," as Fuller calls him, is said by Strype to have been "an excellent instrument" in its general progress. A Gloucestershire worthy, having been born at Dursley in that county, he was sent first to Eton and then to Cambridge, becoming, in 1528, Provost of King’s College. In 1531 he succeeded Stephen Gardiner as Archdeacon of Leicester.
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