The Prose Works of John Milton ...Bell & Daldy, 1872 |
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Results 6-10 of 54
Page 48
... judge , whe ther these men do not endeavour to cast unjust envy upon me Answ . Agreed . Remonst . I had said that the civil polity , as in general notion , hath sometimes varied , and that the civil came from al f er 10 al ei U ...
... judge , whe ther these men do not endeavour to cast unjust envy upon me Answ . Agreed . Remonst . I had said that the civil polity , as in general notion , hath sometimes varied , and that the civil came from al f er 10 al ei U ...
Page 64
... judge , who now themselves are deliberating whether liturgy and episcopacy be to be well wished to or no . Remonst . This they say they cannot but rank amongst my notorious speak out , masters ; I would not have that word stick in your ...
... judge , who now themselves are deliberating whether liturgy and episcopacy be to be well wished to or no . Remonst . This they say they cannot but rank amongst my notorious speak out , masters ; I would not have that word stick in your ...
Page 78
... judge who is fit to be made a minister , that would not be found fit to be made ministers themselves ; as it will not be denied that he may be the competent judge of a neat picture , or elegant poem , that cannot limn the like . Why ...
... judge who is fit to be made a minister , that would not be found fit to be made ministers themselves ; as it will not be denied that he may be the competent judge of a neat picture , or elegant poem , that cannot limn the like . Why ...
Page 83
... judge sit out the wrangling noise of litigious courts to shrive the purses of unconfessing and unmortified sinners , and not their souls , or be discouraged though men call him not lord , whenas the due performance of his office would ...
... judge sit out the wrangling noise of litigious courts to shrive the purses of unconfessing and unmortified sinners , and not their souls , or be discouraged though men call him not lord , whenas the due performance of his office would ...
Page 95
... judge it to behove me , notwithstanding any false name that could be invented to wrong or undervalue an honest meaning . Wherein al- hough I have not doubted to single forth more than once such of them as were thought the chief and most ...
... judge it to behove me , notwithstanding any false name that could be invented to wrong or undervalue an honest meaning . Wherein al- hough I have not doubted to single forth more than once such of them as were thought the chief and most ...
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Common terms and phrases
adultery ancient Answ answer Antichrist apostle argument Aristotle authority better bill of divorce bishops bondage Bucer called canon canon law cause CHAPTER charity Christ Christian church Cicero civil command confess confuter conscience consent covenant dispense divine divorce doctrine doth duty episcopacy evil faith false father fear flesh forbid force fornication give God's gospel granted hardness of heart hath holy honour husband Jews judge justly labour law of Moses learned less lest liberty licence liturgy live Lord magistrate marriage marry Martin Bucer matrimony matter Milton mind ministers moral Moses nature never opinion ordinance parliament peace permitted person pharisees Plato preaching precept prelates priest prove punishment reason reformation religion Remonst saith Saviour scripture shew SMECTYMNUUS soul speak spirit suffered taught teach things thou thought tion tithes true truth virtue vorce wedlock whenas wherein whereof wife wisdom wise words write