id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt 39711 Hallam, Henry Constitutional History of England, Henry VII to George II. Volume 1 of 3 .txt text/plain 194433 8928 64 the king's courts; but in these the common rules of law and the mode of given to the king by acts of parliament in the last year of Henry, and the House of Commons, attended by several lords, to declare the king's James the Fifth, late King of Scots, otherwise called Mary Queen of the king having bound himself to use according to law that power, it so the King's Bench, Common Pleas, and other courts, to their great charges house._--The Commons asserted in this reign, perhaps for the first time, queen says: "By our common law, although there be for the prince laws made publicly in parliament may by the king's authority be king's absolute power, and not in a grant of parliament; a point, parliaments upon it, though the law could never be respected if the king knew the true and ancient common law to be the most favourable to kings ./cache/39711.txt ./txt/39711.txt