| Samuel Rawson Gardiner - 1863 - 474 pages
...when the nation gave its consent to the authority which he is called to exercise, they did so upon the express understanding that there were certain...reciprocal conditions which neither King nor people might violate with impunity. A King who pretended to rule by any other title, such as that of conquest,... | |
| Samuel Rawson Gardiner - 1883 - 432 pages
...when the nation gave its consent to the authority which he is called to exercise, they did so upon the express understanding that there were certain...reciprocal conditions which neither king nor people might violate with impunity. A king who pretended to rule by any other title, such as that of conquest,... | |
| Samuel Rawson Gardiner - 1885 - 460 pages
...there were certain reciprocal conditions which neither king nor people might violate with impunity. A king who pretended to rule by any other title, such...that of conquest, might be dethroned whenever there v.-as force sufficient to overthrow him.1 He concluded by 1 This is, I suppose, the meaning of the... | |
| Samuel Rawson Gardiner - 1889 - 418 pages
...when the nation gave its consent to the authority which he is called to exercise, they did so upon the express understanding that there were certain...reciprocal conditions which neither king nor people might violate with impunity. A king who pretended to rule by any other title, such as that of conquest,... | |
| Philip Alexander Bruce, William Glover Stanard - 1921 - 660 pages
...sovereign and his subjects were reciprocal; that the people gave its consent to the king's authority upon the express understanding that there were certain...king who pretended to rule by any other title such as conquest might be dethroned by any force sufficient to overthrow him. James was incensed and Sandys... | |
| Samuel Rawson Gardiner - 1895 - 418 pages
...there were certain reciprocal conditions which neither king nor people might violate with impunity. A king who pretended to rule by any other title, such as that of coiquest, might be dethroned whenever there \vas force sufficient to overthrow him.1 He concluded by... | |
| Leslie Stephen - 1897 - 552 pages
...every monarchy lay in / election ; that the people gave its consent to y the king's authority upon the express understanding that there were certain...reciprocal conditions which neither king nor people might violate with impunity ; and that a king who pretended to rule by any other title, such as that... | |
| Woodrow Wilson - 1902 - 442 pages
...£ rf i 'H r 1 r 3? I rr V certain reciprocal conditions which neither the king nor the people might violate with impunity; and that a king who pretended...whenever there was force sufficient to overthrow him"; and here was now a constitution for Virginia drawn in like spirit. No wonder the King had cried, "... | |
| Charles Mills Gayley - 1917 - 296 pages
...and limitations of that authority;" that "the people gave its consent to the king's authority upon the express understanding that there were certain...reciprocal conditions which neither king nor people might violate with immunity; and that a king who pretended to rule by any other title, such as that... | |
| 1916 - 758 pages
...understanding that there were certain reciprocal conditions which neither the king nor the people might violate with impunity; and that a king who pretended...whenever there was force sufficient to overthrow him " (pages 56 and 58, Vol. 1). This doctrine, which is diametrically opposed to the doctrine of ruling... | |
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