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" Lord send us our king again, and our old laws again, and the Lord send us our religion again. . . " ' As for that which is practised now, it has no name; and methinks there is more talk of religion, than any good effects of it. "
The History of the House of Stanley, from the Conquest to the Death of the ... - Page 181
by John Seacome - 1821 - 265 pages
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Peerage of England: Containing a Genealogical and Historical ..., Volume 2

Arthur Collins - Nobility - 1756 - 606 pages
...laws " again, and the Lord fend us our religion again. «* As for that which is pradifed now, it nas no name, and " methinks there is more talk of religion, than any good effects «« of it. «' Truly to me it kerns I die for God, the King, and the " laws, and this...
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Memoirs of James earl of Derby, with an account of the life of Oliver ...

James Stanley (7th earl of Derby.) - Jacobite Rebellion, 1745-1746 - 1804 - 682 pages
...fend us our religion again ; as for that which is praclifed, now, it hath no name, and methinks tliere is more talk of religion than any real practice or...God, the King, and the laws ; and this makes me not afhamed of my life, nor afraid of my death." At which words " King and the laws" a trooper faid, "...
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Cobbett's Complete Collection of State Trials and Proceedings for High ...

Thomas Bayly Howell - Trials - 1810 - 796 pages
...condemned ' to suffer l>y new and unknown laws. The ' Lord send us our king again, and our old laws 'again, and the Lord send us our religion 'again. ' As for that which is practised now, it has ' no name, and meihinks there is more talk of 'religion than any good effects of it. ' Truly to...
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Peerage of England. ...

Arthur Collins - 1812 - 824 pages
...I am condemned to suffer by new and unknown laws. The Lord send us our King again, and our old laws again, and the Lord send us our religion again. " As for that which is practised now, it has no name, and tnethinks there is more talk of religion, than any good effects of it. " Truly to...
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Contains the earls to the termination of the seventeenth century

Arthur Collins, Sir Egerton Brydges - Aristocracy (Social class) - 1812 - 828 pages
...old laws again, and the Lord send us our religion again. "As for that which is practised now, it has no name, and methinks there is more talk of religion, than any good effects of it. " Truly to me it seems I die for God, the King, and the laws, and this makes me...
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History of the Isle of Man: With a Comparative View of the Past and Present ...

Hannah Ann Bullock - Isle of Man - 1816 - 494 pages
...it is as well known, that I am condemned to die by his Majesty's enemies, by new and unknown laws. The Lord send us our religion again ; as for that which is practised now, it hath no name ; and I think there is more talk of religion than any practice or good effects thereof. Truly, for me, I...
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Biographia Borealis: Or, Lives of Distinguished Northerns

Hartley Coleridge - Biography - 1833 - 764 pages
...I am condemned to suffer by new and unknown laws. The Lord send us our King again, and our old laws again, and the Lord send us our religion again. " As for that which is practised now, it has no name, and methinks there is more talk of religion than any good effects of it. " Truly, to me...
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The Worthies of Yorkshire and Lancashire;: Being Lives of the Most ...

Hartley Coleridge - Lancashire (England) - 1836 - 774 pages
...I am condemned to suffer by new and unknown laws. The Lord send us our King again, and our old laws again, and the Lord send us our religion again. " As for that which is practised now, it has no name, and methinks there is more talk of religion than any good effects of it. " Truly, to me...
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The Church of England Magazine, Volume 18

1845 - 518 pages
...condemned to suffer by new and unknown laws. The Lord send us our king again, and our old laws airain, and the Lord send us our religion again. As for that which is practised now, it has no name; and methinks there is more talk of religion than any good effects of it. Truly to me it...
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English Churchwomen of the Seventeenth Century

Great Britain - 1846 - 140 pages
...I am condemned to suffer by new and unknown laws. The Lord send us our king again, and our old laws again, and the Lord send us our religion again. . . " ' As for that which is practised now, it has no name; and methinks there is more talk of religion, than any good effects of it. " ' Truly, to...
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