| John Lewis - 1720 - 526 pages
...fpoke; We will not, faysi he, be the Dreggsof all Men : Seeing other Nations^ fcripturis, have the Lam of GOD, -which is the Law of our^' Faith, written in their own Language ; and {wearing a great Oath, declared, he -would maintain it again ft thofe, whoever they jhould be... | |
| Robert Gray - Apocryphal books (Old Testament) - 1792 - 572 pages
...Collier. The Duke is related to have faid, " We will not be the dregs of all, feeing other nation, have the law of God, which is the law of our faith, written in their own language." Vid. Fox's pref. to Sixon gofprl, AD 1571, "• U(her de Script. 8e Sacr. Vern. (li) At that time the... | |
| Bible - 1799 - 204 pages
...translation, hut tailed through the manliness of John of Gannt. He boldly affirmed that Englishmen " tronkl not be the dregs of all, seeing other nations have...Oxford under archbishop Arundel. These revivals of religion—all connected, it will be noticed, with the use of the Scriptures in the vernacular tongue,... | |
| 1835
...understood, by the influence of the before-named John of Gaunt, who is reported to have said ' We will not be the dregs of all, seeing other nations have...law of our faith, written in their own language.' It was however decreed in a convocation of the clergy held at Oxford about 1408, by Archbishop Arundel,... | |
| 1842 - 634 pages
...fearless John of Gaunt declared in the upper house, " We will not be the dregs of all, seeing that other nations have the Law of God, which is the law of our faith, written in their own language." Nor less conclusive is the counter-argument of Dr. Buckenham, a prior of Blackfriars, at Cambridge.... | |
| George Pretyman - Apologetics - 1815 - 588 pages
...which the Duke of Lancaster, the king's uncle, is reported to have spoken to this effect: ' We will not be the dregs of all, seeing other nations have...law of our faith, written in their own language.' At the same time he declared in a very solemn manner, " That he would maintain our having this luw... | |
| Early English newspapers - 1816 - 832 pages
...was rejected, on the opposition of John Duke of Lancaster, who is recorded to have said, " We will not be the dregs of all, seeing other Nations have...Law of our faith, written in their own language." 1 need scarcely reler for this fact to Dr. Gray's Key to the Old Testament, who states it upon the... | |
| George Tomline - Bible - 1818 - 608 pages
...which the Duke of Lancaster, the king's uncle, is reported to have spoken to this effect : ' We will not be the dregs of all, seeing other nations have...law of our faith, written in their own language.' At the same time he declared in a very solemn manner, ' That he would maintain our having this law... | |
| 1819 - 402 pages
...which the Duke of Lancaster, the king's uncle, is reported to have spoken to this effect : ' We will not be the dregs of all, seeing other nations have...law of our faith, written in their own language.' At the same time he declared, in a very solemn manner, ' That he would maintain our having this law... | |
| James Townley - Bible - 1891 - 544 pages
...uncle to the king, defended a vernacular translation, saying, "We will not be the dregs of all men; seeing other nations have the law of God, which is...law of our faith, written in their own language." Declaring, at the same time, in the most solemn manner, "That he would maintain our having this law... | |
| |