This is a table of type quadgram and their frequencies. Use it to search & browse the list to learn more about your study carrel.
quadgram | frequency |
---|---|
early english books online | 171 |
represented either as utf | 54 |
characters represented either as | 54 |
this keyboarded and encoded | 48 |
images scanned from microfilm | 48 |
to the terms of | 48 |
owned by the institutions | 48 |
from proquest page images | 48 |
coded from proquest page | 48 |
text and markup reviewed | 48 |
english books online text | 48 |
keyed and coded from | 48 |
text is available for | 48 |
institutions providing financial support | 48 |
keyboarded and encoded edition | 48 |
of the work described | 48 |
encoded text transcribed from | 48 |
books online text creation | 48 |
markup reviewed and edited | 48 |
the terms of creative | 48 |
encoded edition of the | 48 |
and markup reviewed and | 48 |
the work described above | 48 |
the institutions providing financial | 48 |
edition of the work | 48 |
tcp assigned for keying | 48 |
financial support to the | 48 |
work described above is | 48 |
phase i text is | 48 |
for keying and markup | 48 |
is available for reuse | 48 |
by the institutions providing | 48 |
and coded from proquest | 48 |
terms of creative commons | 48 |
the text can be | 48 |
this phase i text | 48 |
according to the terms | 48 |
providing financial support to | 48 |
online text creation partnership | 48 |
and encoded edition of | 48 |
support to the early | 48 |
assigned for keying and | 48 |
to the early english | 48 |
all without asking permission | 48 |
even for commercial purposes | 48 |
text can be copied | 48 |
the early english books | 48 |
described above is co | 48 |
i text is available | 48 |
the house of commons | 42 |
the lords and commons | 34 |
the death of the | 31 |
there are a number | 28 |
are a number of | 28 |
been issued variously as | 27 |
these processes should make | 27 |
phase of the project | 27 |
edition of a work | 27 |
to range over a | 27 |
mind that in all | 27 |
gaps by user contributors | 27 |
readable characters will be | 27 |
sometimes a second or | 27 |
with level of the | 27 |
to a limit of | 27 |
and sometimes a second | 27 |
in english were prioritized | 27 |
carried out by editorial | 27 |
was enhanced and or | 27 |
to page images in | 27 |
based on the image | 27 |
a compelling reason to | 27 |
on the image sets | 27 |
of every monographic english | 27 |
the project have been | 27 |
and some readable characters | 27 |
enhanced and or corrected | 27 |
use these texts for | 27 |
of tcp data is | 27 |
request that due credit | 27 |
be marked as illegible | 27 |
text with mnemonic sdata | 27 |
via their early english | 27 |
were corrected where possible | 27 |
be made about the | 27 |
and those which did | 27 |
be aware of the | 27 |
should make clear that | 27 |
available at the text | 27 |
universities of michigan and | 27 |
gap elements of known | 27 |
with mnemonic sdata character | 27 |
of the process of | 27 |
have been issued variously | 27 |
been transformed into placeholder | 27 |
range over a wide | 27 |
image sets published by | 27 |
the tei in libraries | 27 |
of instances per text | 27 |
partnership between the universities | 27 |
of creating the tcp | 27 |
and therefore of any | 27 |
were sent to external | 27 |
between and available in | 27 |
are available at the | 27 |
by university of nebraska | 27 |
sent to external keying | 27 |
to produce large quantities | 27 |
tei in libraries guidelines | 27 |
as opposed to critical | 27 |
elements to simplify the | 27 |
illegible were corrected where | 27 |
are eligible for inclusion | 27 |
a partnership between the | 27 |
to reflect the true | 27 |
to tei p using | 27 |
selection was based on | 27 |
usually the first edition | 27 |
cambridge bibliography of english | 27 |
tcp aimed to produce | 27 |
placeholder characters or elements | 27 |
likelihood such instances will | 27 |
tcp is a partnership | 27 |
of each text was | 27 |
by editorial teams in | 27 |
compelling reason to do | 27 |
of the texts have | 27 |
that can be made | 27 |
notably latin and welsh | 27 |
or for an anonymous | 27 |
or corrected and characters | 27 |
and encoded texts based | 27 |
text was proofread for | 27 |
accordance with level of | 27 |
accurately transcribed and encoded | 27 |
as illegible were corrected | 27 |
been looked at by | 27 |
attribution is given to | 27 |
opposed to critical editions | 27 |
the text encoding initiative | 27 |
the usual project restraints | 27 |
images in accordance with | 27 |
was a compelling reason | 27 |
processed by university of | 27 |
each text was proofread | 27 |
during phase of the | 27 |
for an anonymous work | 27 |
quality of tcp data | 27 |
some errors will remain | 27 |
within the usual project | 27 |
texts created during phase | 27 |
editions of a works | 27 |
works are eligible for | 27 |
text creation partnership web | 27 |
of the print record | 27 |
teams in oxford and | 27 |
some readable characters will | 27 |
second or later edition | 27 |
proquest via their early | 27 |
standards were returned to | 27 |
the process of creating | 27 |
that due credit and | 27 |
nature of the print | 27 |
into the public domain | 27 |
therefore chose to create | 27 |
which did not meet | 27 |
record of the period | 27 |
on the new cambridge | 27 |
or tei g elements | 27 |
the filling in of | 27 |
in accordance with level | 27 |
been released into the | 27 |
although there are a | 27 |
and markup guidelines are | 27 |
encoded as gap s | 27 |
the overall quality of | 27 |
a number of works | 27 |
transcribed and encoded texts | 27 |
the texts were encoded | 27 |
the encoding was enhanced | 27 |
between the universities of | 27 |
encoded texts based on | 27 |
texts based on the | 27 |
to simplify the filling | 27 |
michigan and oxford and | 27 |
were encoded and linked | 27 |
oxford and the publisher | 27 |
was based on the | 27 |
tcp project was divided | 27 |
the print record of | 27 |
to external keying companies | 27 |
proquest to create accurately | 27 |
created by converting tcp | 27 |
did not meet qa | 27 |
should bear in mind | 27 |
was chosen if there | 27 |
to create diplomatic transcriptions | 27 |
mnemonic sdata character entities | 27 |
quantities of textual data | 27 |
was intended to range | 27 |
iv tiff page images | 27 |
in mind that in | 27 |
linked to page images | 27 |
a second or later | 27 |
new cambridge bibliography of | 27 |
were encoded as gap | 27 |
there was a compelling | 27 |
returned to the keyers | 27 |
works in english were | 27 |
based on the new | 27 |
encoded and linked to | 27 |
converting tcp files to | 27 |
assumptions that can be | 27 |
by a tcp editor | 27 |
was then carried out | 27 |
of works in other | 27 |
instances will never have | 27 |
and or corrected and | 27 |
and oxford and the | 27 |
produce large quantities of | 27 |
released into the public | 27 |
project was divided into | 27 |
guidelines are available at | 27 |
to their original source | 27 |
we respectfully request that | 27 |
external keying companies for | 27 |
users should bear in | 27 |
corrected where possible up | 27 |
of known extent have | 27 |
then their works are | 27 |
included and sometimes a | 27 |
based on the text | 27 |
keyers to be redone | 27 |
ascii text with mnemonic | 27 |
was proofread for accuracy | 27 |
first editions of a | 27 |
or elements to simplify | 27 |
can be made about | 27 |
intended to range over | 27 |
respectfully request that due | 27 |
files to tei p | 27 |
structural encoding based on | 27 |
texts were encoded and | 27 |
then carried out by | 27 |
of gaps by user | 27 |
the original in the | 27 |
and therefore chose to | 27 |
such instances will never | 27 |
their early english books | 27 |
issued variously as sgml | 27 |
chose to create diplomatic | 27 |
have been released into | 27 |
a limit of instances | 27 |
for their own purposes | 27 |
works in other languages | 27 |
or text strings within | 27 |
have been transformed into | 27 |
created during phase of | 27 |
by converting tcp files | 27 |
assurance was then carried | 27 |
texts for their own | 27 |
processes should make clear | 27 |
limit of instances per | 27 |
credit and attribution is | 27 |
now take and use | 27 |
unicode or tei g | 27 |
tcp data is very | 27 |
the universities of michigan | 27 |
but we respectfully request | 27 |
overall quality of tcp | 27 |
into placeholder characters or | 27 |
of a works in | 27 |
elements of known extent | 27 |
keying companies for transcription | 27 |
is a partnership between | 27 |
is to encode one | 27 |
the public domain as | 27 |
of a work was | 27 |
general aim of eebo | 27 |
level of the tei | 27 |
later edition of a | 27 |
anyone can now take | 27 |
tei p using tcp | 27 |
the text creation partnership | 27 |
a wide variety of | 27 |
or later edition of | 27 |
text strings within braces | 27 |
data within the usual | 27 |
of textual data within | 27 |
at the text creation | 27 |
p using tcp tei | 27 |
take and use these | 27 |
published between and available | 27 |
have been looked at | 27 |
text selection was based | 27 |
creating the tcp texts | 27 |
where possible up to | 27 |
in of gaps by | 27 |
to create accurately transcribed | 27 |
publisher proquest to create | 27 |
encoding was enhanced and | 27 |
transformed into placeholder characters | 27 |
a works in english | 27 |
bear in mind that | 27 |
up to a limit | 27 |
copies of the texts | 27 |
will be marked as | 27 |
the general aim of | 27 |
whichever is the greater | 27 |
remaining illegibles were encoded | 27 |
reason to do so | 27 |
meet qa standards were | 27 |
of michigan and oxford | 27 |
not meet qa standards | 27 |
the new cambridge bibliography | 27 |
encoding based on the | 27 |
proofread for accuracy and | 27 |
of the tei in | 27 |
accuracy and those which | 27 |
companies for transcription and | 27 |
filling in of gaps | 27 |
textual data within the | 27 |
possible up to a | 27 |
extent have been transformed | 27 |
editorial teams in oxford | 27 |
corrected and characters marked | 27 |
due credit and attribution | 27 |
true nature of the | 27 |
print record of the | 27 |
characters will be marked | 27 |
for accuracy and those | 27 |
will remain and some | 27 |
any remaining illegibles were | 27 |
of the project have | 27 |
the keyers to be | 27 |
of any assumptions that | 27 |
the image sets published | 27 |
unicode or text strings | 27 |
those which did not | 27 |
image sets were sent | 27 |
quality assurance was then | 27 |
never have been looked | 27 |
changes to facilitate morpho | 27 |
marked as illegible were | 27 |
characters marked as illegible | 27 |
published by proquest via | 27 |
characters or elements to | 27 |
public domain as of | 27 |
qa standards were returned | 27 |
the true nature of | 27 |
looked at by a | 27 |
title published between and | 27 |
if there was a | 27 |
sets were sent to | 27 |
transcription and basic encoding | 27 |
for transcription and basic | 27 |
the texts have been | 27 |
out by editorial teams | 27 |
and linked to page | 27 |
a work was chosen | 27 |
that in all likelihood | 27 |
in all likelihood such | 27 |
simplify the filling in | 27 |
remain and some readable | 27 |
given to their original | 27 |
errors will remain and | 27 |
texts have been issued | 27 |
creation partnership web site | 27 |
the publisher proquest to | 27 |
keying and markup guidelines | 27 |
and use these texts | 27 |
bibliography of english literature | 27 |
tcp is to encode | 27 |
project restraints of time | 27 |
mainly structural encoding based | 27 |
data is very good | 27 |
and the publisher proquest | 27 |
known extent have been | 27 |
illegibles were encoded as | 27 |
markup guidelines are available | 27 |
of time and funding | 27 |
was divided into two | 27 |
reflect the true nature | 27 |
made about the data | 27 |
these texts for their | 27 |
while the overall quality | 27 |
aware of the process | 27 |
any assumptions that can | 27 |
work was chosen if | 27 |
chosen if there was | 27 |
therefore of any assumptions | 27 |
on the text encoding | 27 |
will never have been | 27 |
usual project restraints of | 27 |
in oxford and michigan | 27 |
tcp files to tei | 27 |
process of creating the | 27 |
can now take and | 27 |
with changes to facilitate | 27 |
and characters marked as | 27 |
to the keyers to | 27 |
sets published by proquest | 27 |
wide variety of subject | 27 |
understanding these processes should | 27 |
and available in eebo | 27 |
number of works in | 27 |
to encode one copy | 27 |
aimed to produce large | 27 |
variety of subject areas | 27 |
should be aware of | 27 |
page images in accordance | 27 |
over a wide variety | 27 |
at by a tcp | 27 |
and attribution is given | 27 |
were returned to the | 27 |
of the original in | 27 |
project have been released | 27 |
is given to their | 27 |
language title published between | 27 |
by proquest via their | 27 |
large quantities of textual | 27 |
divided into two phases | 27 |
their works are eligible | 27 |
restraints of time and | 27 |
create accurately transcribed and | 27 |
all likelihood such instances | 27 |
users should be aware | 27 |
domain as of january | 27 |
selection was intended to | 27 |
the statute of h | 26 |
reproduction of the original | 26 |
in the case of | 26 |
of the house of | 26 |
apex covantage keyed and | 25 |
sovereign lord the king | 25 |
covantage keyed and coded | 25 |
the church of england | 24 |
ocm this keyboarded and | 24 |
r ocm this keyboarded | 23 |
r this keyboarded and | 23 |
estc r this keyboarded | 23 |
death of the king | 23 |
you know any thing | 23 |
estc r ocm this | 23 |
r in the english | 22 |
i must tell you | 22 |
the realm of england | 22 |
the earl of shaftsbury | 22 |
and professional end users | 21 |
is an enriched version | 21 |
digital transcription a of | 21 |
text has not been | 21 |
the text the author | 21 |
the tcp digital transcription | 21 |
spellings that support the | 21 |
display of a text | 21 |
enrichments aim at making | 21 |
at restoring the text | 21 |
any person or persons | 21 |
annotation includes standard spellings | 21 |
based collaborative curation by | 21 |
textual changes and metadata | 21 |
guilty or not guilty | 21 |
and linguistically annotated with | 21 |
tokenized and linguistically annotated | 21 |
and suitable for network | 21 |
or stationer meant to | 21 |
standardized format that preserves | 21 |
a standardized format that | 21 |
this text has not | 21 |
not been fully proofread | 21 |
metadata enrichments aim at | 21 |
changes aim at restoring | 21 |
a of text r | 21 |
aim at making the | 21 |
many walks of life | 21 |
the text has been | 21 |
stationer meant to publish | 21 |
linguistically annotated with morphadorner | 21 |
version of the tcp | 21 |
text in a standardized | 21 |
text has been tokenized | 21 |
text the author or | 21 |
this text is an | 21 |
text more computationally tractable | 21 |
enriched version of the | 21 |
iv tiff page image | 21 |
english short title catalog | 21 |
amateur and professional end | 21 |
reproduction of original in | 21 |
the english short title | 21 |
that preserves archaic forms | 21 |
a text in a | 21 |
making the text more | 21 |
restoring the text the | 21 |
standard spellings that support | 21 |
of text r in | 21 |
format that preserves archaic | 21 |
collaborative curation by amateur | 21 |
of the tcp digital | 21 |
at making the text | 21 |
text is an enriched | 21 |
anthony earl of shaftsbury | 21 |
the display of a | 21 |
textual changes aim at | 21 |
been fully proofread approx | 21 |
an enriched version of | 21 |
transcription a of text | 21 |
aim at restoring the | 21 |
end users from many | 21 |
of a text in | 21 |
has not been fully | 21 |
in a standardized format | 21 |
that support the display | 21 |
author or stationer meant | 21 |
by amateur and professional | 21 |
changes and metadata enrichments | 21 |
the annotation includes standard | 21 |
tcp digital transcription a | 21 |
and metadata enrichments aim | 21 |
the text more computationally | 21 |
curation by amateur and | 21 |
has been tokenized and | 21 |
from many walks of | 21 |
the author or stationer | 21 |
been tokenized and linguistically | 21 |
support the display of | 21 |
professional end users from | 21 |
in the english short | 21 |
text r in the | 21 |
includes standard spellings that | 21 |
users from many walks | 21 |
what do you know | 20 |
said sovereign lord the | 20 |
in the presence of | 20 |
our said sovereign lord | 20 |
the rest of the | 19 |
for the time being | 19 |
in the kings bench | 19 |
commons assembled in parliament | 19 |
soveraign lord the king | 19 |
do you know any | 19 |
and commons assembled in | 18 |
i will tell you | 18 |
by the name of | 18 |
the said lord chief | 18 |
the kings most excellent | 18 |
at the time of | 18 |
lords and commons assembled | 18 |
original in the british | 17 |
the city of london | 17 |
the laws of the | 17 |
the said anthony earl | 17 |
said anthony earl of | 17 |
of the lords and | 17 |
of our privy council | 17 |
said lord chief justice | 17 |
in the british library | 17 |
prisoner at the bar | 17 |
a copy of the | 17 |
the tryal of the | 16 |
to seize the king | 16 |
at the same time | 16 |
the statute of the | 16 |
this realm of england | 16 |
do you know of | 16 |
out of this realm | 16 |
with my lord shaftsbury | 16 |
the prisoner at the | 16 |
of oyer and terminer | 16 |
of this realm of | 16 |
the duke of york | 15 |
global keyed and coded | 15 |
the grace of god | 15 |
i do not remember | 15 |
i do not know | 15 |
said soveraign lord the | 15 |
good and lawfull men | 15 |
to the kings most | 15 |
spi global keyed and | 15 |
our said soveraign lord | 15 |
by the grace of | 15 |
logarbo text and markup | 14 |
or any of them | 14 |
logarbo sampled and proofread | 14 |
and lawfull men of | 14 |
mona logarbo text and | 14 |
you ask him any | 14 |
the king and his | 14 |
in the time of | 14 |
mona logarbo sampled and | 14 |
in the county of | 14 |
of the church of | 14 |
by the statute of | 14 |
that there was a | 14 |
gentlemen of the jury | 14 |
against my lord shaftsbury | 13 |
where a man doth | 13 |
a great deal of | 13 |
and xml conversion a | 13 |
know any thing of | 13 |
king for the time | 13 |
a case of pistols | 13 |
i know nothing of | 13 |
what do you ask | 13 |
the death of his | 13 |
the crown of england | 13 |
of the realm of | 13 |
if there be any | 13 |
a declaration of the | 13 |
gap elements at the | 12 |
no known defects that | 12 |
have a copy of | 12 |
declaration of the lords | 12 |
my lord of shaftsbury | 12 |
this text has no | 12 |
text has no known | 12 |
and he told me | 12 |
by authority of parliament | 12 |
the king of spain | 12 |
has no known defects | 12 |
that were recorded as | 12 |
a this text has | 12 |
known defects that were | 12 |
and of our reign | 12 |
by the lords and | 12 |
defects that were recorded | 12 |
the sitting of the | 12 |
elements at the time | 12 |
the statutes of h | 12 |
as gap elements at | 12 |
were recorded as gap | 12 |
sitting of the parliament | 12 |
recorded as gap elements | 12 |
the time of transcription | 12 |
commissioners of oyer and | 11 |
as a false traytor | 11 |
the king for the | 11 |
of the popish plot | 11 |
lords and commons in | 11 |
members of the house | 11 |
he said he had | 11 |
i know not what | 11 |
by an ordinary jury | 11 |
by the king and | 11 |
by good and lawfull | 11 |
peers as well as | 11 |
did he tell you | 11 |
by reason of the | 11 |
and xml conversion the | 11 |
by act of parliament | 11 |
i hope you will | 11 |
by the laws of | 11 |
notes for div a | 11 |
the lords in the | 11 |
he the said anthony | 11 |
and commons in parliament | 11 |
the king and the | 11 |
subjects of our said | 11 |
i think it was | 10 |
on the other side | 10 |
tryal and condemnation of | 10 |
lords in the tower | 10 |
and the duke of | 10 |
i have to say | 10 |
given under our signet | 10 |
the case of the | 10 |
you know of him | 10 |
kings most excellent majesty | 10 |
in the mean time | 10 |
do you ask him | 10 |
this kingdom of england | 10 |
if any person or | 10 |
out of the realm | 10 |
the parliament sat at | 10 |
of our reign the | 10 |
against the king and | 10 |
the earle of strafford | 10 |
after the parliament was | 10 |
from time to time | 10 |
is not to be | 10 |
in respect of the | 10 |
the justices of peace | 10 |
the kings prerogative in | 10 |
laws of the realm | 10 |
the time of the | 10 |
by vertue of this | 10 |
tryal by their peers | 10 |
he told me he | 10 |
by the heir of | 9 |
i desire to know | 9 |
the trial of the | 9 |
the year of our | 9 |
he said he was | 9 |
this act of h | 9 |
both houses of parliament | 9 |
lawfull men of the | 9 |
prisoner in the tower | 9 |
it please your lordship | 9 |
for the most part | 9 |
heir of andrew anderson | 9 |
rate of defects per | 9 |
statute of the th | 9 |
for treasons done in | 9 |
to kill the king | 9 |
the rate of defects | 9 |
category of texts with | 9 |
in the next place | 9 |
year of our lord | 9 |
let me have my | 9 |
that i know of | 9 |
to the crown of | 9 |
the power of the | 9 |
it was in the | 9 |
this text in the | 9 |
the latter end of | 9 |
the parliament was dissolved | 9 |
the heir of andrew | 9 |
the earl of danby | 9 |
the humble petition of | 9 |
that the king was | 9 |
in the statute of | 9 |
treasons committed in ireland | 9 |
to raise a rebellion | 9 |
according to the law | 9 |
words puts this text | 9 |
of the members of | 9 |
puts this text in | 9 |
of england and ireland | 9 |
there can be no | 9 |
in his own house | 9 |
of original in huntington | 8 |
between the king and | 8 |
this land of ireland | 8 |
original text notes for | 8 |
cut off the kings | 8 |
text notes for div | 8 |
of your own knowledge | 8 |
the parliament at oxford | 8 |
there was no such | 8 |
was one of the | 8 |
his most sacred majesty | 8 |
the presence of god | 8 |
the opinion of the | 8 |
from the original text | 8 |
under our signet at | 8 |
defender of the faith | 8 |
the first time i | 8 |
as well as commons | 8 |
the tower of london | 8 |
upon the statute of | 8 |
against the earle of | 8 |
by them in ireland | 8 |
the states of the | 8 |
nothing but what they | 8 |
in the face of | 8 |
may it please your | 8 |
off the kings head | 8 |
of the justices of | 8 |
justice of the peace | 8 |
of the same shire | 8 |
the realm of ireland | 8 |
the other five lords | 8 |
the kings of england | 8 |
of our said soveraign | 8 |
will you ask him | 8 |
the original text notes | 8 |
of our said sovereign | 8 |
of the earl of | 8 |
oyer and terminer and | 8 |
by his peers in | 8 |
by the house of | 8 |
by authority of this | 8 |
that he was a | 8 |
me have my papers | 8 |
our signet at edinburgh | 8 |
the beginning of the | 8 |
that the late king | 8 |
against her majesty and | 8 |
aptara keyed and coded | 8 |
the third of august | 8 |
i did not know | 8 |
of the parliament at | 8 |
that there was no | 8 |
peers of this realm | 8 |
but what they had | 8 |
ignorant of the law | 8 |
wing s estc r | 8 |
original in huntington library | 8 |
of the king and | 8 |
by a middlesex jury | 7 |
heir to the crown | 7 |
of original in the | 7 |
to take notice of | 7 |
men of the same | 7 |
the face of the | 7 |
and that it was | 7 |
what they had just | 7 |
if you have any | 7 |
the king was a | 7 |
he said he would | 7 |
of the rest of | 7 |
the oath of allegiance | 7 |
you had this discourse | 7 |
the national library of | 7 |
to go to the | 7 |
of the crown of | 7 |
know any thing more | 7 |
of right ought to | 7 |
did nothing but what | 7 |
in the national library | 7 |
never in my life | 7 |
in the year of | 7 |
give you an account | 7 |
have my papers again | 7 |
before the sitting of | 7 |
the th of march | 7 |
death of his father | 7 |
it was before the | 7 |
he did not believe | 7 |
copy of the indictment | 7 |
the first day of | 7 |
into the hands of | 7 |
that i should speak | 7 |
of the tryal of | 7 |
the major part of | 7 |
ought not to have | 7 |
i am a protestant | 7 |
did you ever hear | 7 |
the first time that | 7 |
last speech against the | 7 |
that he the said | 7 |
there was such a | 7 |
all the judges of | 7 |
that the said lord | 7 |
by their peers in | 7 |
the subversion of the | 7 |
there is no doubt | 7 |
s estc r ocm | 7 |
speech against the earle | 7 |
him any more questions | 7 |
settlement of the crown | 7 |
any thing of this | 7 |
what they have said | 7 |
in point of law | 7 |
angell of the lord | 7 |
of the duke of | 7 |
national library of scotland | 7 |
the county of oxford | 7 |
i was in the | 7 |
of any such thing | 7 |
commons in parliament assembled | 7 |
ask him any more | 7 |
of the same opinion | 7 |
they had just cause | 7 |
the life of the | 7 |
to him and his | 7 |
the same shire where | 7 |
of high treason against | 7 |
titus oates and mr | 7 |
accused of high treason | 7 |
huber sampled and proofread | 7 |
in the beginning of | 7 |
it was about the | 7 |
would you ask him | 7 |
what did he say | 7 |
heirs of his body | 7 |
the place of execution | 7 |
at any other time | 7 |
within the compass of | 7 |
to all intents and | 7 |
annotation on thomason copy | 7 |
and terminer and gaol | 7 |
the king and queen | 7 |
treasons done in ireland | 7 |
person or persons shall | 7 |
he did not know | 7 |
in the first place | 7 |
original in the national | 7 |
of high treason by | 7 |
he was a papist | 7 |
upon the death of | 7 |
the earl of holland | 7 |
what was done at | 7 |
that it is not | 7 |
all intents and purposes | 7 |
the lord of heaven | 7 |
for the preservation of | 7 |
turning to the executioner | 7 |
pleas of the crown | 7 |
where a man committeth | 6 |
for div a e | 6 |
printer to their most | 6 |
huber text and markup | 6 |
of the kings bench | 6 |
when i was in | 6 |
justices of the peace | 6 |
worthy members of the | 6 |
the king to submission | 6 |
was in the room | 6 |
the heirs of his | 6 |
peers of the realm | 6 |
front of the scaffold | 6 |
when you have pleaded | 6 |
if it had been | 6 |
to the treasons of | 6 |
i know not but | 6 |
ought not to be | 6 |
three and thirtieth year | 6 |
you are not to | 6 |
your lordship and the | 6 |
her majesty and the | 6 |
of this land of | 6 |
and parliament of england | 6 |
and condemnation of stephen | 6 |
the heirs and successors | 6 |
i was with him | 6 |
lords of our privy | 6 |
the people of england | 6 |
what say you to | 6 |
city of london and | 6 |
to the place of | 6 |
this realm of ireland | 6 |
at our court at | 6 |
bull of pius quintus | 6 |
he had been at | 6 |
in the three and | 6 |
ask him any questions | 6 |
to bring them to | 6 |
the church of rome | 6 |
but i must tell | 6 |
there would be a | 6 |
printed by the heirs | 6 |
john latta text and | 6 |
the middle of the | 6 |
the right honourable sir | 6 |
kings prerogative in matters | 6 |
to my lord shaftsbury | 6 |
disturb and destroy their | 6 |
what you know of | 6 |
the said kingdom of | 6 |
their majesties do hereby | 6 |
sheriffs in that part | 6 |
the law of the | 6 |
subversion of the government | 6 |
an account of it | 6 |
majesties have received information | 6 |
and destroy their government | 6 |
of what was done | 6 |
if they had been | 6 |
i have told you | 6 |
as i have proved | 6 |
of the royal family | 6 |
the th day of | 6 |
by a jury of | 6 |
the lords of our | 6 |
to take away the | 6 |
the late earl of | 6 |
burnt in the hand | 6 |
heirs and successors of | 6 |
in the realm of | 6 |
to disturb and destroy | 6 |
whalley and william goffe | 6 |
in cases of treason | 6 |
b wing s estc | 6 |
statute of magna charta | 6 |
her majesty and her | 6 |
as to the matter | 6 |
in ireland by irish | 6 |
by the heirs and | 6 |
the front of the | 6 |
the justice of the | 6 |
the members of parliament | 6 |
were taken from me | 6 |
and their majesties do | 6 |
in order to the | 6 |
given at our court | 6 |
as near as i | 6 |
of the lords in | 6 |
condemnation of stephen colledge | 6 |
by the common law | 6 |
have sworn against me | 6 |
whereas their majesties have | 6 |
where a man is | 6 |
our sheriffs in that | 6 |
as is evident by | 6 |
their majesties have received | 6 |
successors of andrew anderson | 6 |
to be expected from | 6 |
then turning to the | 6 |
the king hath power | 6 |
cases of high treason | 6 |
and successors of andrew | 6 |
and thirtieth year of | 6 |
if i have a | 6 |
as well as commoners | 6 |
to their most excellent | 6 |
persons herein after particularly | 6 |
against the earl of | 6 |
take the oath of | 6 |
as appears by the | 6 |
the three and thirtieth | 6 |
proceeding in cases of | 6 |
but as to the | 6 |
chief justice of the | 6 |
fit to be argued | 6 |
of misprision of treason | 6 |
to the front of | 6 |
was the first time | 6 |
herein after particularly named | 6 |
had the honour to | 6 |
the force of the | 6 |
give me leave to | 6 |
not to be believed | 6 |
all manner of offences | 6 |
and are to be | 6 |
it would not be | 6 |
edward whalley and william | 6 |
or hereafter to be | 6 |
of the popes bull | 6 |
of the whole kingdom | 6 |
vertue of this act | 6 |
one thousand six hundred | 6 |
and the subversion of | 6 |
within the realm of | 6 |
that he did not | 6 |
read in both houses | 6 |
a proclamation for apprehending | 6 |
the parliament at oxon | 6 |
and proceeding in cases | 6 |
law of the land | 6 |
of a popish successor | 6 |
under the pain of | 6 |
advice of our privy | 6 |
th day of march | 6 |
out of the coffee | 6 |
that the persons herein | 6 |
told me he was | 6 |
he was a man | 6 |
in the presence and | 6 |
but he did not | 6 |
and that the king | 6 |
xml conversion a proclamation | 6 |
the name of rowley | 6 |
with all my heart | 6 |
their most excellent majesties | 6 |
the persons herein after | 6 |
my lord was committed | 6 |
latta text and markup | 6 |
prerogative in matters of | 6 |
his speech in parliament | 5 |
and when i was | 5 |
the reading the bill | 5 |
and that they had | 5 |
for the execution of | 5 |
divers other disaffected persons | 5 |
high court of justice | 5 |
master bagshawe in parliament | 5 |
to the articles against | 5 |
of the king of | 5 |
of original in thomason | 5 |
when the parliament sat | 5 |
the articles against master | 5 |
the kings iustices of | 5 |
king hath power to | 5 |
in the statutes of | 5 |
to the king and | 5 |
or concealments of treasons | 5 |
war against the king | 5 |
and that he was | 5 |
to be tryed by | 5 |
as i take it | 5 |
know nothing of it | 5 |
bring the king to | 5 |
was so far from | 5 |
was a man of | 5 |
first time that ever | 5 |
about the time of | 5 |
i told you before | 5 |
you have heard the | 5 |
by master bagshawe in | 5 |
in answer to plain | 5 |
presence and hearing of | 5 |
printed in the year | 5 |
do you no wrong | 5 |
by all the judges | 5 |
occasioned upon the reading | 5 |
him to be a | 5 |
ask him any thing | 5 |
the county of middlesex | 5 |
and that the said | 5 |
give an account of | 5 |
the king and council | 5 |
to any body else | 5 |
e estc r this | 5 |
where i was born | 5 |
the great seale of | 5 |
parliament by sir simon | 5 |
thomason e estc r | 5 |
do not know what | 5 |
at the tryal of | 5 |
the gentlemen of the | 5 |
tryal by irish peers | 5 |
of sir edmundbury godfrey | 5 |
in conspiring the death | 5 |
where the kings bench | 5 |
the duty of his | 5 |
i have a right | 5 |
of the reign of | 5 |
was done at oxford | 5 |
of parliament made in | 5 |
on thursday the th | 5 |
in his life time | 5 |
was brought to the | 5 |
i would have you | 5 |
by the statutes of | 5 |
i have a soul | 5 |
but i did not | 5 |
and he desired me | 5 |
bishops on munday the | 5 |
god save the king | 5 |
but he does not | 5 |
healey text and markup | 5 |
out of the house | 5 |
laws of this realm | 5 |
put an end to | 5 |
i asked him what | 5 |
a wing e thomason | 5 |
the destruction of the | 5 |
the election of the | 5 |
same shire where the | 5 |
elspeth healey text and | 5 |
my lord shaftsbury was | 5 |
upon the reading the | 5 |
as in cases of | 5 |
per actum dominorum secreti | 5 |
to the law of | 5 |
for the rooting out | 5 |
said kingdom of france | 5 |
mo a wing e | 5 |
the law of england | 5 |
lord the king to | 5 |
court of kings bench | 5 |
to the church of | 5 |
a speech made in | 5 |
that it may not | 5 |
for the king to | 5 |
the tryal by peers | 5 |
kingdom of england to | 5 |
are to be sold | 5 |
the rooting out of | 5 |
reading the bill of | 5 |
lost the first blood | 5 |
is evident by the | 5 |
it would be a | 5 |
of the other five | 5 |
by his peers of | 5 |
by the law of | 5 |
of the english pale | 5 |
by the advice of | 5 |
lay upon the bed | 5 |
the statute of magna | 5 |
discourse with my lord | 5 |
the character of a | 5 |
speech made in parliament | 5 |
out of the realme | 5 |
there is no such | 5 |
nothing to the purpose | 5 |
to a tryal at | 5 |
you ever hear me | 5 |
to peers as well | 5 |
did not believe it | 5 |
to be a witness | 5 |
the king at oxford | 5 |
the credibility of the | 5 |
major part of the | 5 |
proceedings at the sessions | 5 |
cases of misprision of | 5 |
and we charge you | 5 |
of the county of | 5 |
do you mean by | 5 |
the reign of our | 5 |
his present majesty to | 5 |
made by master bagshawe | 5 |
intentional blank spaces in | 5 |
that the earl of | 5 |
and all his family | 5 |
the presence and hearing | 5 |
for the common good | 5 |
the seventeenth of january | 5 |
to give an account | 5 |
will be pleased to | 5 |
of the court of | 5 |
upon the credit of | 5 |
out of the kings | 5 |
the right of the | 5 |
according to the laws | 5 |
force of the evidence | 5 |
original in thomason collection | 5 |
what he hath said | 5 |
i believe you will | 5 |
and this was the | 5 |
their peers in ireland | 5 |
all and every the | 5 |
that it may be | 5 |
many other painfull divines | 5 |
the court of kings | 5 |
in any other place | 5 |
of the common law | 5 |
of texts with between | 5 |
came out of the | 5 |
of my lord stafford | 5 |
right to the crown | 5 |
hearing of divers liege | 5 |
what is your christian | 5 |
indicted by the name | 5 |
the peace of the | 5 |
copy of the jury | 5 |
you are upon your | 5 |
latta sampled and proofread | 5 |
shall abjure the realme | 5 |
the said stephen colledge | 5 |
at his own house | 5 |
if you please to | 5 |
how long have you | 5 |
between and defects per | 5 |
articles against master calamy | 5 |
if it please your | 5 |
justice of the court | 5 |
pray let me have | 5 |
the king and queens | 5 |
of this realm shall | 5 |
at the kings sute | 5 |
impeached of high treason | 5 |
twelve bishops on munday | 5 |
branch of the royal | 5 |
touching the point of | 5 |
the proceedings at the | 5 |
with divers other disaffected | 5 |
whether you be guilty | 5 |
the twelve bishops on | 5 |
munday the seventeenth of | 5 |
he had to say | 5 |
earl of shaftsbury was | 5 |
for the defence of | 5 |
brought to condign punishment | 5 |
before the king and | 5 |
year of the reign | 5 |
the angell of the | 5 |
can say no more | 5 |
if he doth not | 5 |
upon the earl of | 5 |
statute made in the | 5 |
house of commons against | 5 |
of the kings person | 5 |
great seale of england | 5 |
for the apprehension of | 5 |
and purposes as if | 5 |
to the value of | 5 |
printed by the heir | 5 |
trial of irish peers | 5 |
the body of the | 5 |
that part of the | 5 |
be tryed by his | 5 |
ordered by the lords | 5 |
against the king or | 5 |
healey sampled and proofread | 5 |
since the beginning of | 5 |
you an account of | 5 |
was an honest man | 5 |
the several speeches of | 5 |
speech made by master | 5 |
answer to plain english | 5 |
or either of them | 5 |
laws and statutes of | 5 |
when was the first | 5 |
at dublin in ireland | 5 |
relation of the birth | 5 |
and him our said | 5 |
texts with between and | 5 |
i never saw him | 5 |
the justices of the | 5 |
committed by any person | 5 |
and that he would | 5 |
then the earl of | 5 |
the bill of attainder | 5 |
conspiring the death of | 5 |
the government of the | 5 |
macers of our privy | 5 |
rooting out of popery | 5 |
blank spaces in text | 5 |
and of right ought | 5 |
i may have my | 5 |
before my lord was | 5 |
the good old cause | 5 |
house in the old | 5 |
of the twelve bishops | 5 |
the time of h | 5 |
and then turning to | 5 |
the time of his | 5 |
ceased to be king | 5 |
to speak with me | 5 |
within this kingdom of | 5 |
to the tryal of | 5 |
year of our reign | 5 |
triall of the twelve | 5 |
in the month of | 5 |
had just cause for | 5 |
parliament sat at oxford | 5 |
of god and man | 5 |
the triall of the | 5 |
i will give you | 5 |
i would ask you | 5 |
the king and kingdom | 5 |
told me he would | 5 |
made in parliament by | 5 |
a speech made by | 5 |
no peers at all | 5 |
what was said in | 5 |
the king did not | 5 |
character of a popish | 5 |
the secretary of state | 5 |
attainted of high treason | 5 |
is your christian name | 5 |
any thing of that | 5 |
i came to him | 5 |
elspeth healey sampled and | 5 |
betwixt the two houses | 5 |
as well as of | 5 |
thing of that nature | 5 |
as well as the | 5 |
that if any person | 5 |
you be guilty or | 5 |
the laws of england | 5 |
laws of the land | 5 |
the eleventh of ianuary | 5 |
any of the kings | 5 |
when did you give | 5 |
and the heirs of | 5 |
did you never hear | 5 |
be guilty or not | 5 |
for the city of | 5 |
in parliament by sir | 5 |
states of the kingdom | 5 |
the counsel of state | 5 |
against my lord of | 5 |
as to the time | 5 |
that there was such | 5 |
and the officers of | 5 |
declared by the lords | 5 |
you shall have the | 5 |
that it was the | 5 |
lord chief justice of | 5 |
was held to have | 5 |
the beginning of her | 5 |
there was a design | 5 |
the judges of england | 5 |
have a right to | 5 |
the house of lords | 5 |
the duke of guise | 5 |
you have had with | 5 |
and there was a | 5 |
that the dutchess of | 5 |
they did nothing but | 5 |
and the rest of | 5 |
most of the irish | 5 |
with between and defects | 5 |
of the lord magwire | 5 |
is the first time | 5 |
a prisoner in the | 5 |
desire i may have | 5 |
they were in the | 5 |
in cases of high | 5 |
concerning the triall of | 5 |
the preservation of the | 5 |
and i told him | 5 |
i told him i | 5 |
convention of the states | 5 |
there be any thing | 5 |
what he meant by | 5 |
to be deposed as | 5 |
on munday the seventeenth | 5 |
and one of the | 5 |
the accusation of the | 5 |
or any of the | 5 |
tried by his peers | 5 |
at the old baily | 5 |
what do you mean | 5 |
john latta sampled and | 5 |
in the city of | 5 |
accusation of the house | 5 |
the pain of treason | 5 |
the presence of mr | 5 |
coming to the crown | 5 |
are you guilty or | 4 |
did you give in | 4 |
committed out of this | 4 |
opinion of the court | 4 |
maiesties letter to the | 4 |
sat last at westminster | 4 |
apprehension of thomas cook | 4 |
hath been preferred unto | 4 |
of london and county | 4 |
of some of the | 4 |
the county of oxon | 4 |
humble petition of the | 4 |
in the judgment of | 4 |
are not to be | 4 |
the apprehension of thomas | 4 |
it is well known | 4 |
we charge you strictly | 4 |
course of the common | 4 |
but when you have | 4 |
or intend the death | 4 |
text in the c | 4 |
acts of parliament made | 4 |
peers by their peers | 4 |
wholly ignorant of the | 4 |
before the parliament sat | 4 |
of the city of | 4 |
by authority of the | 4 |
of the arms and | 4 |
as well as i | 4 |
it was the first | 4 |
you gentlemen of the | 4 |
any thing that is | 4 |
may have a copy | 4 |
told me it was | 4 |
the tenth of march | 4 |
against the king in | 4 |
an ansvver to the | 4 |
inhabitants of the county | 4 |
have lost the first | 4 |
whereas a petition hath | 4 |
hope you will consider | 4 |
in the th year | 4 |
upon the scaffold immediately | 4 |
blazon or coat of | 4 |
there is but one | 4 |
was dissolved at oxford | 4 |
his peers in ireland | 4 |
of the inhabitants of | 4 |
in possession of the | 4 |
in matter of fact | 4 |
bagshawe in parliament concerning | 4 |
in the tower of | 4 |
there would be cutting | 4 |
i would not have | 4 |
the tryal and condemnation | 4 |
the said edward whalley | 4 |
the murder of the | 4 |
with the whole manner | 4 |
the lord chief justice | 4 |
cutting of throats at | 4 |
treason by his majesty | 4 |
by force of arms | 4 |
to take the oath | 4 |
the peers of ireland | 4 |
the protection of sir | 4 |
and some of the | 4 |
the murder of sir | 4 |
the king in his | 4 |
the queen and the | 4 |
the th year of | 4 |
that what person soever | 4 |
london and county of | 4 |
i am ignorant of | 4 |
have the use of | 4 |
was condemned by the | 4 |
he did not care | 4 |
subjection of all traytors | 4 |
treason by this act | 4 |
parish and ward aforesaid | 4 |
what person soever shall | 4 |
a terrour for traytours | 4 |
the five members of | 4 |
that he was to | 4 |
according to their own | 4 |
c the rate of | 4 |
irish peers by their | 4 |
the lord digby his | 4 |
richard ford and james | 4 |
before sir george treby | 4 |
you are to consider | 4 |
and nothing but the | 4 |
high treason by his | 4 |
for the sake of | 4 |
our said lord the | 4 |
proclamation for apprehension of | 4 |
the king to death | 4 |
look upon me as | 4 |
cases of petie treason | 4 |
i did not hear | 4 |
and proceedings in cases | 4 |
drawing the accusation of | 4 |
if the king did | 4 |
great deal of time | 4 |
and drawing the accusation | 4 |
nor is there any | 4 |
to bring the king | 4 |
and as to the | 4 |
the parish of st | 4 |
the land of ireland | 4 |
and county of middlesex | 4 |
to be an evidence | 4 |
shall be from henceforth | 4 |
what discourse you have | 4 |
in parliament concerning the | 4 |
the first time you | 4 |
the laws of god | 4 |
it was the th | 4 |
to be high treason | 4 |
king upon the death | 4 |
concerning sir edward herbert | 4 |
would have you believe | 4 |
am wholly ignorant of | 4 |
known to have been | 4 |
i know not whether | 4 |
i am wholly ignorant | 4 |
attainder touching the point | 4 |
of a trial by | 4 |
and he said he | 4 |
the arms and ammunition | 4 |
case of the lord | 4 |
of the great seale | 4 |
and you shall have | 4 |
of explanation touching treasons | 4 |
to the french king | 4 |
over and over again | 4 |
it is hereby declared | 4 |
claim to the crown | 4 |
would not be long | 4 |
and condemnation of mr | 4 |
the preservation of his | 4 |
that ever i heard | 4 |
the king by his | 4 |
to make a protestant | 4 |
mo a wing c | 4 |
you know bryan haynes | 4 |
expected from the king | 4 |
tryal at this bar | 4 |
together with the whole | 4 |
i was with my | 4 |
of this present parliament | 4 |
the true protestant religion | 4 |
shall harbour and conceale | 4 |
for want of such | 4 |
lord keeper of the | 4 |
the credit of his | 4 |
a soul to save | 4 |
his last speech against | 4 |
as much as in | 4 |
soever shall harbour and | 4 |
raising arms to subvert | 4 |
bill of attainder touching | 4 |
to whom did you | 4 |
was the case of | 4 |
not by his peers | 4 |
a minister of the | 4 |
brought into this kingdom | 4 |
what you said at | 4 |
the recorder of london | 4 |
reflections upon a treasonable | 4 |
out of this act | 4 |
a peer of ireland | 4 |
king deserved to be | 4 |
the c category of | 4 |
i refer my self | 4 |
kings bench at westminster | 4 |
the plot upon the | 4 |
with the earl of | 4 |
council of the whole | 4 |
the case of connor | 4 |
to come to him | 4 |
king richard the second | 4 |
the world may see | 4 |
or belonging to the | 4 |
i do declare it | 4 |
trials by juries of | 4 |
or coat of arms | 4 |
but i am sure | 4 |
in our name and | 4 |
to maintain the indictment | 4 |
the duke of monmouth | 4 |
i have heard him | 4 |
the consent of the | 4 |
the law of nature | 4 |
such manner and form | 4 |
five members of the | 4 |
if there had been | 4 |
who were in the | 4 |
design against my lord | 4 |
the case of my | 4 |
ordinance of explanation touching | 4 |
ford and james yard | 4 |
condemned by the counsel | 4 |
that were with him | 4 |
who were impeached of | 4 |
my plea for the | 4 |
the point of treason | 4 |
if you do not | 4 |
possession of the crown | 4 |
on twesday the eleventh | 4 |
in one of the | 4 |
of the power of | 4 |
we went to the | 4 |
i was a prisoner | 4 |
will you call any | 4 |
on the th of | 4 |
what he had said | 4 |
the subjection of all | 4 |
you ought not to | 4 |
the house of peers | 4 |
to subvert the goverment | 4 |
for the county of | 4 |
take care of the | 4 |
reign the seventh year | 4 |
that he should be | 4 |
one of the most | 4 |
parliament that sate last | 4 |
year of his reign | 4 |
swear against my lord | 4 |
late earl of argile | 4 |
i believe it was | 4 |
in the hearts of | 4 |
be made or declared | 4 |
as we are perswaded | 4 |
concerning proceeding against the | 4 |
i am sure it | 4 |
to be one of | 4 |
is hereby declared by | 4 |
god is in heaven | 4 |
against sir miles stapleton | 4 |
parliament sat at oxon | 4 |
what i have to | 4 |
justice of the kingdom | 4 |
he said it was | 4 |
of the kings of | 4 |
to lay violent hands | 4 |
act for the apprehension | 4 |
of any such treasons | 4 |
of him in the | 4 |
of the th of | 4 |
shall be proceeded against | 4 |
to the earl of | 4 |
the parliament that sate | 4 |
of sir george chudleigh | 4 |
to him and the | 4 |
for apprehension of edward | 4 |
juries of good and | 4 |
a true relation of | 4 |
written by sir francis | 4 |
he ought to be | 4 |
where they shall be | 4 |
what would you have | 4 |
extend to peers as | 4 |
to be at the | 4 |
hold up thy hand | 4 |
he told me they | 4 |
tried by their peers | 4 |
by one of the | 4 |
and many other painfull | 4 |
the consideration of his | 4 |
by the earl of | 4 |
advice of the lords | 4 |
ask you one question | 4 |
life of the king | 4 |
to comply with the | 4 |
kings iustices of his | 4 |
after the affidavit made | 4 |
to the kings last | 4 |
that there may be | 4 |
drink a glass of | 4 |
all manner of treasons | 4 |
i will do you | 4 |
you know of mr | 4 |
our reign the first | 4 |
as near as you | 4 |
to irish peers as | 4 |
in the countie of | 4 |
printer to the kings | 4 |
the true interest of | 4 |
i think there is | 4 |
these our letters seen | 4 |
high steward of england | 4 |
upon some of the | 4 |
tryal of the said | 4 |
be forthwith printed and | 4 |
of an irish peer | 4 |
say any thing against | 4 |
of the lords of | 4 |
his majesties person and | 4 |
treason in conspiring the | 4 |
printer to his most | 4 |
in relation to the | 4 |
under pain of damnation | 4 |
the execution of the | 4 |
the truth of the | 4 |
in the earl of | 4 |
of my lord of | 4 |
was no such thing | 4 |
and every one of | 4 |
do you know that | 4 |
to macers of our | 4 |
did you hear any | 4 |
our court at whitehall | 4 |
to make way for | 4 |
presented to the kings | 4 |
at the city of | 4 |
the right of proximity | 4 |
hamilton earl of cambridg | 4 |
that he may be | 4 |
seize the king at | 4 |
to be made or | 4 |
i think it is | 4 |
kings most excellent maiesty | 4 |
on the behalf of | 4 |
to that part of | 4 |
if they had not | 4 |
and the lord of | 4 |
intend the death of | 4 |
our sovereign lord the | 4 |
let me ask you | 4 |
liege subjects of our | 4 |
all the rest of | 4 |
as well to the | 4 |
there was a discourse | 4 |
clerk of the council | 4 |
of the said five | 4 |
proceeding against the bishops | 4 |
do you know mr | 4 |
treasonable words against the | 4 |
his maiesties letter to | 4 |
he said to the | 4 |
speeches of duke hamilton | 4 |
and the government of | 4 |
upon him to be | 4 |
and with divers other | 4 |
the jesuits reasons unreasonable | 4 |
court at whitehall the | 4 |
after the first day | 4 |
and trials by juries | 4 |
i must take notice | 4 |
of duke hamilton earl | 4 |
this act extends to | 4 |
they were to be | 4 |
him in my life | 4 |
and it is hereby | 4 |
with advice of our | 4 |
is all that i | 4 |
which was condemned by | 4 |
a stranger to me | 4 |
upon the bill of | 4 |
of a presbyterian plot | 4 |
answer to the question | 4 |
done well to have | 4 |
asleep behind the table | 4 |
our reign the seventh | 4 |
as god is in | 4 |
him in the tower | 4 |
me that i would | 4 |
you need not fear | 4 |
make a protestant plot | 4 |
of edward whalley and | 4 |
words any person or | 4 |
you have been told | 4 |
i never had a | 4 |
upon me as one | 4 |
an indictment of treason | 4 |
at head of text | 4 |
by the counsel of | 4 |
of the late king | 4 |
lordship and the jury | 4 |
if it be true | 4 |
out of the chancery | 4 |
a proclamation for apprehension | 4 |
if he had not | 4 |
for i did not | 4 |
duke hamilton earl of | 4 |
irish peers as well | 4 |
tryed by his peers | 4 |
the parish and ward | 4 |
justice of the kings | 4 |
statutes of this realm | 4 |
was in march last | 4 |
within this realm of | 4 |
his hand upon his | 4 |
parliament was dissolved at | 4 |
it will not be | 4 |
bishops accused of high | 4 |
thing of this nature | 4 |
several speeches of duke | 4 |
of one of the | 4 |
the execution of justice | 4 |
in the behalfe of | 4 |
as well as irish | 4 |
printed for edward husbands | 4 |
of the body of | 4 |
his said wicked treasons | 4 |
arbitrary power and popery | 4 |
the tryal of sir | 4 |
his highness the lord | 4 |
parliament concerning the triall | 4 |
any thing of any | 4 |
the credit of the | 4 |
the kingdom of england | 4 |
highness the lord protector | 4 |
you are to enquire | 4 |
was before the sitting | 4 |
that hath been given | 4 |
nothing but the truth | 4 |
the liberty of the | 4 |
ye pass to the | 4 |
from the beginning of | 4 |
i cannot exactly tell | 4 |
petition of the inhabitants | 4 |
a matter in law | 4 |
hereby declared by the | 4 |
herbert the kings attorney | 4 |
the honour to be | 4 |
iustices of his bench | 4 |
was with my lord | 4 |
his heirs and successors | 4 |
know nothing of the | 4 |
credibility of the witnesses | 4 |
to be proceeded against | 4 |
kings most excellent maiestie | 4 |
arms to subvert the | 4 |
of his most sacred | 4 |
refer my self to | 4 |
apprehension of edward whalley | 4 |
by juries of good | 4 |
our name and authority | 4 |
forthwith printed and published | 4 |
that have sworn against | 4 |
reasons and occasions of | 4 |
of justice in england | 4 |
as commons in ireland | 4 |
him of high treason | 4 |
and that which is | 4 |
to be the first | 4 |
of the kings dominions | 4 |
in order to this | 4 |
the acts of parliament | 4 |
of the kings subjects | 4 |
for the security of | 4 |
of divers liege subjects | 4 |
have a care of | 4 |
went out of town | 4 |
as well as others | 4 |
to the crown tavern | 4 |
to have been king | 4 |
at the chequer inn | 4 |
accusation of high treason | 4 |
deserved to be deposed | 4 |
city of london aforesaid | 4 |
was the author of | 4 |
i never heard it | 4 |
the authority of the | 4 |
henry earl of holland | 4 |
him our said sovereign | 4 |
to the kings of | 4 |
johns argument at law | 4 |
the scaffold immediately before | 4 |
i cannot be positive | 4 |
the city of oxon | 4 |
twesday the eleventh of | 4 |
for i must tell | 4 |
an ordinance of explanation | 4 |
had this discourse with | 4 |
then and there present | 4 |
is nothing to the | 4 |
trial by their peers | 4 |
of throats at oxford | 4 |
the accusation of high | 4 |
and that there was | 4 |
to the laws of | 4 |
i must needs say | 4 |
vertue of this law | 4 |
the reading of the | 4 |
of thomas cook esq | 4 |
or any of his | 4 |
on monday the th | 4 |
said th day of | 4 |
in such manner and | 4 |
as in case of | 4 |
hee shall abjure the | 4 |
my lord of strafford | 4 |
make war against his | 4 |
case of connor magwire | 4 |
that i may have | 4 |
he would have you | 4 |
vpon the reading of | 4 |
or persons out of | 4 |
ordered that it be | 4 |
the said five lords | 4 |
and hearing of divers | 4 |
letter to the lord | 4 |
to the protestant religion | 4 |
order me my papers | 4 |
bring them to their | 4 |
proceedings in cases of | 4 |
the countie of devon | 4 |
or committed by any | 4 |
shall i not have | 4 |
and all the world | 4 |
the king and parliament | 4 |
high treason against the | 4 |
is said to have | 4 |
raise a rebellion amongst | 4 |
no more to be | 4 |
by the names of | 4 |
petition of the lords | 4 |
death and final destruction | 4 |
there was a great | 4 |
in the court of | 4 |
for treasons committed in | 4 |
of edward the third | 4 |
that the lords spiritual | 4 |
the bishop of rome | 4 |
that this declaration be | 4 |
reign the first year | 4 |
speak any thing against | 4 |
and arthur lord capel | 4 |
a great deal more | 4 |
to the lord keeper | 4 |
to the matter of | 4 |
anabaptists and fifth monarchy | 4 |
an act for the | 4 |
c category of texts | 4 |
both at home and | 4 |
you shall well and | 4 |
did desire me to | 4 |
any of the members | 4 |
upon a treasonable opinion | 4 |
of the accusation of | 4 |
where there is no | 4 |
by sir francis bacon | 4 |
any matter of law | 4 |
for as much as | 4 |
light for loyall subiects | 4 |
the lord keeper of | 4 |
he told me the | 4 |
i went to the | 4 |
will you please to | 4 |
the kings bench at | 4 |
reading of the accusation | 4 |
in matters of law | 4 |
the person of the | 4 |
as well as to | 4 |
indicted for high treason | 4 |
true relation of the | 4 |
the rights of the | 4 |
by the hand of | 4 |
i do not see | 4 |
any thing against the | 4 |
the act of parliament | 4 |
the high court of | 4 |
and in what manner | 4 |
he desired me to | 4 |
petition hath been preferred | 4 |
for which the prisoner | 4 |
the said thomas cook | 4 |
that sate last at | 4 |
to the right honourable | 4 |
an exact account of | 4 |
committed to the tower | 4 |
the commons of england | 4 |
plead guilty or not | 4 |
said lord the king | 4 |
a pair of pistols | 4 |
an act of parliament | 4 |
law at straffords attainder | 4 |
be one of them | 4 |
right ought to be | 4 |
the statute made in | 4 |
ought to be the | 4 |
that has been given | 4 |
what he had to | 4 |
of all the judges | 4 |
a justice of the | 4 |
you guilty or not | 4 |
the kings last message | 4 |
for the said county | 4 |
to go along with | 4 |
most excellent maiestie at | 4 |
day of the month | 4 |
plea for the lords | 4 |
the trial of irish | 4 |
for the service of | 4 |
of the life of | 4 |
the defence of the | 4 |
been preferred unto us | 4 |
i desire i may | 4 |
whom did you give | 4 |
at law at straffords | 4 |
part of the members | 4 |
thirtieth year of the | 4 |
to drink a glass | 4 |
that sir john brooks | 4 |
the king deserved to | 4 |
in the c category | 4 |
it is to be | 4 |
intents and purposes as | 4 |
i can say no | 4 |
in case of treason | 4 |
by any person or | 4 |
the word of a | 4 |
be cutting of throats | 4 |
i know not of | 4 |
to the secretary of | 4 |
the inhabitants of the | 4 |
divers liege subjects of | 4 |
in other cases of | 4 |
would be cutting of | 4 |
and when we were | 4 |
any thing of the | 4 |
near as i can | 4 |
hereafter to be made | 4 |
and the five members | 4 |
the judges of the | 4 |
it was a good | 4 |
i do not believe | 4 |
any thing of your | 4 |
a petition hath been | 4 |
the hands of the | 4 |
it was in march | 4 |
person soever shall harbour | 4 |
pass to the mercat | 4 |
heare and determine all | 4 |
by sir simon dvcy | 4 |
of commons against mr | 4 |
in the reign of | 4 |
how can this be | 4 |
seduced by wicked counsell | 4 |
not that i know | 4 |
were impeached of high | 4 |
argument at law at | 4 |
would speak with me | 4 |
as king richard the | 4 |
constitution of this monarchy | 4 |
a member of the | 4 |
lord digby his last | 4 |
treason against the king | 4 |
protection of sir george | 4 |
any thing of it | 4 |
of attainder touching the | 4 |
lately brought into this | 4 |
case of my lord | 4 |
possession of the throne | 4 |
the duke of norfolk | 4 |
digby his last speech | 4 |
be two witnesses to | 4 |
so far from being | 4 |
of the irish peers | 4 |
the army of ireland | 4 |
the votes of non | 4 |
of the royal stock | 4 |
to which i shall | 4 |
will take notice of | 4 |
him the said anthony | 4 |
the state of the | 4 |
of the penal laws | 4 |
that they may be | 4 |
there is nothing of | 4 |
it is not to | 4 |
the duke of bucks | 4 |
for the protection of | 4 |
as well as you | 4 |
was there ever such | 4 |
him our said soveraign | 4 |
have you any more | 4 |
printed by evan tyler | 4 |
the said th day | 4 |
her majesty to be | 4 |
about the middle of | 4 |
in this court by | 4 |
the evidence of the | 4 |
ansvver to the articles | 4 |
the narrative of the | 4 |
and richard nelthorp esquires | 4 |
of heaven and earth | 4 |
trial of the lords | 4 |
the benefit of the | 4 |
treasons committed by them | 4 |
th and th of | 4 |
keeper of the great | 4 |
ever hear me speak | 4 |
his eldest son edward | 4 |
thing of your own | 4 |
if there be not | 4 |
sir simon dvcy knight | 4 |
as i told you | 4 |
doth make war against | 4 |
time that ever i | 4 |
sir edward herbert knight | 4 |
all the people of | 4 |
did not know of | 4 |
discourse you had with | 4 |
the office of the | 4 |
of the said dr | 4 |
to make good his | 4 |
where the said bench | 4 |
i have lost the | 4 |
against the mind and | 3 |
the harbouring or concealing | 3 |
in england for treasons | 3 |
of parliament at oxford | 3 |
a man doth maliciously | 3 |
and outed of a | 3 |
doe daily undertake with | 3 |
be seene the odiousnesse | 3 |
his parliament and people | 3 |
of several treatises concerning | 3 |
protestant carpenter in newgate | 3 |
the meaning of that | 3 |
was a design to | 3 |
apprehending several traitors and | 3 |
advising and drawing the | 3 |
into this kingdom by | 3 |
is said to be | 3 |
by an irish jury | 3 |
richard duke of york | 3 |
persons enemies to the | 3 |
excellent maiestie at vvindsor | 3 |
or our privy council | 3 |
had with my lord | 3 |
brought to the bar | 3 |
kingdom by the late | 3 |
he tells you of | 3 |
the eye of faith | 3 |
the receipt of the | 3 |
up arbitrary power and | 3 |
the good of the | 3 |
in a parliament of | 3 |
i went into the | 3 |
this our antient kingdom | 3 |
we know nothing of | 3 |
to try them here | 3 |
argument at law made | 3 |
in the yeare of | 3 |
and to have been | 3 |
the honourable the judges | 3 |
proviso in this act | 3 |
of the romish church | 3 |
not to have been | 3 |
his most honourable privy | 3 |
th day of november | 3 |
manner and form to | 3 |
religion are you of | 3 |
petition of stephen colledge | 3 |
will you call your | 3 |
tryed by their peers | 3 |
i hope your lordship | 3 |
those that have been | 3 |
consent of the people | 3 |
shall say to you | 3 |
to take away all | 3 |
bloody designe intended by | 3 |
told me they were | 3 |
the great charter of | 3 |
was in the city | 3 |
as true as god | 3 |
do you think we | 3 |
i never had any | 3 |
the right hand of | 3 |
as the king should | 3 |
published by special authority | 3 |
seditious designs and combinations | 3 |
and others of the | 3 |
of the lords spiritual | 3 |
if this be the | 3 |
i ought to have | 3 |
would be one of | 3 |
where a man counterfeiteth | 3 |
would be sure to | 3 |
and the statute of | 3 |
hone the protestant carpenter | 3 |
i did not understand | 3 |
to oppose his majesties | 3 |
is the same thing | 3 |
the th of edward | 3 |
the rebellion in the | 3 |
the great care and | 3 |
that which is my | 3 |
receipt of the rebels | 3 |
ought to move all | 3 |
jonathan blaney sampled and | 3 |
the end for which | 3 |
to do such base | 3 |
original in the folger | 3 |
contrary opinions in religion | 3 |
made in the parliament | 3 |
and he came to | 3 |
and the kingdom and | 3 |
severed his head from | 3 |
the ruine of this | 3 |
but i knew not | 3 |
i have been a | 3 |
you are bound to | 3 |
and there was no | 3 |
came to the crown | 3 |
he does not say | 3 |
from any tryal by | 3 |
i am sure i | 3 |
nor was he ever | 3 |
the tryal of all | 3 |
there are two witnesses | 3 |
by the late earl | 3 |
me that there was | 3 |
that i can say | 3 |
that he would be | 3 |
that he had been | 3 |
every one of them | 3 |
and i went to | 3 |
of the kings majesties | 3 |
in a short time | 3 |
this statute of h | 3 |
and that they would | 3 |
of the death of | 3 |
to maintain an indictment | 3 |
was declared to be | 3 |
you would not have | 3 |
execution of justice in | 3 |
to hone the protestant | 3 |
long was it before | 3 |
vvith his maiesties gratious | 3 |
thursday the th day | 3 |
that the king hath | 3 |
to be kings of | 3 |
her realm of ireland | 3 |
no less than a | 3 |
evidence that hath been | 3 |
in ireland it self | 3 |
that none pretend ignorance | 3 |
the bishops accused of | 3 |
all that i can | 3 |
them in the house | 3 |
a friend to a | 3 |
he came from oxon | 3 |
the printer declared against | 3 |
be a king de | 3 |
the duty of all | 3 |
mind and will of | 3 |
persons haue desired our | 3 |
treason against anthony earl | 3 |
an account of this | 3 |
names of anabaptists and | 3 |
are a great many | 3 |
are a stranger to | 3 |
that the queens majesty | 3 |
to the prejudice of | 3 |
blood in the cause | 3 |
not find the bill | 3 |
and seditious designs and | 3 |
this time of danger | 3 |
the whole manner of | 3 |
my lord chief justice | 3 |
said i to him | 3 |
f category of texts | 3 |
oppose his majesties person | 3 |
right honourable sir patient | 3 |
within the compasse of | 3 |
believe there was any | 3 |
within the city of | 3 |
lieutenant of the tower | 3 |
executioner at one blow | 3 |
be the author of | 3 |
honourable the judges of | 3 |
presbyterian plot of it | 3 |
to the crown by | 3 |
by peers in ireland | 3 |
and i have been | 3 |
wing b estc r | 3 |
to move all true | 3 |
that an irish peer | 3 |
not yield to the | 3 |
had you any other | 3 |
which true and faithful | 3 |
me as one that | 3 |
a rebellion amongst us | 3 |
traytors by his majestie | 3 |
went to my lord | 3 |
survey of the tryal | 3 |
to say against him | 3 |
impeached him of high | 3 |
statute of this king | 3 |
what time was it | 3 |
pray tell the court | 3 |
and upon which the | 3 |
delivered them to him | 3 |
and gentlemen of the | 3 |
as to that part | 3 |
discharging the receipt of | 3 |
do you know bryan | 3 |
with the particular evidence | 3 |
you say as to | 3 |
is one of the | 3 |
had nothing to say | 3 |
ignorant in the law | 3 |
a rebellion in ireland | 3 |
arms at head of | 3 |
foreign country out of | 3 |
by which the pope | 3 |
such as are not | 3 |
his crown and dignity | 3 |
received information that the | 3 |
defence he made for | 3 |
a peer of the | 3 |
the reasons and narrative | 3 |
i am sure you | 3 |
that he ought to | 3 |
lifting up his hands | 3 |
faithful subjects of our | 3 |
as i can to | 3 |
make way for a | 3 |
us the better to | 3 |
majestie by the bishops | 3 |
was any protestant plot | 3 |
in his answer to | 3 |
the executioner at one | 3 |
commission of oyer and | 3 |
i have a priviledge | 3 |
one and the same | 3 |
ought to be tried | 3 |
some of the members | 3 |
i am not bound | 3 |
the irish peers and | 3 |
malitiously called by him | 3 |
that his present majesty | 3 |
that this act extends | 3 |
says sir vvilliam vvaller | 3 |
a wing c a | 3 |
the particular evidence given | 3 |
king and queens majesties | 3 |
proclamation discharging the receipt | 3 |
against our sovereign lord | 3 |
in his owne house | 3 |
a great number of | 3 |
i went along with | 3 |
this for which the | 3 |
of the popes foresaid | 3 |
the wonderfull preseruation of | 3 |
he did not say | 3 |
majesties commissioners of oyer | 3 |
observations of him in | 3 |
for this sessions held | 3 |
it may be i | 3 |
the case of a | 3 |
i vow to god | 3 |
texts with or more | 3 |
and ought to be | 3 |
this sessions held for | 3 |
the defence he made | 3 |
take notice to you | 3 |
pray i may have | 3 |
humble petition of edward | 3 |
shall happen to be | 3 |
presbyterian or protestant plot | 3 |
a design against my | 3 |
but if it be | 3 |
do appoint thomas basset | 3 |
king to death and | 3 |
his kingdom of england | 3 |
proclamation for apprehending several | 3 |
and the heirs male | 3 |
the parliament of england | 3 |
none of his servants | 3 |
the king and government | 3 |
his maiesties gratious answere | 3 |
that the king and | 3 |
the names of anabaptists | 3 |
do not know whether | 3 |
the crown of this | 3 |
said bench shall sit | 3 |
expressing the great care | 3 |
not fit to be | 3 |
preseruation of anoynted princes | 3 |
as i shall prove | 3 |
held for the city | 3 |
friend to a friend | 3 |
be expected from the | 3 |
that all statutes late | 3 |
we have told you | 3 |
about the space of | 3 |
not fit to reign | 3 |
at the sessions house | 3 |
any more of them | 3 |
as it was read | 3 |
was foreman of the | 3 |
i know him very | 3 |
which were delivered by | 3 |
before the grand jury | 3 |
it was the resolution | 3 |
two witnesses to the | 3 |
that you can have | 3 |
wicked persons haue desired | 3 |
pope and king of | 3 |
and occasions of the | 3 |
part of a papist | 3 |
account of the tryal | 3 |
i said those words | 3 |
with a loud voice | 3 |
vigilancy of those theologians | 3 |
a proclamation discharging the | 3 |
country out of the | 3 |
king or the government | 3 |
of this instant january | 3 |
and he shewed me | 3 |
the king should appoint | 3 |
may have my papers | 3 |
or know of the | 3 |
great care and vigilancy | 3 |
scaffold immediately before their | 3 |
of some vvestern shires | 3 |
as well as your | 3 |
at one blow severed | 3 |
the lords and house | 3 |
this declaration be forthwith | 3 |
i will not conceal | 3 |
concerning the death of | 3 |
or concealing of the | 3 |
or any other of | 3 |
he came to me | 3 |
is misprision of treason | 3 |
it would have been | 3 |
be called to an | 3 |
the king at oxon | 3 |
did cut off the | 3 |
and for the erecting | 3 |
our kingdom of england | 3 |
of tryal by their | 3 |
the king of england | 3 |
that received sentence for | 3 |
tried in this court | 3 |
law fit to be | 3 |
the book in dyer | 3 |
that you speak of | 3 |
for treasons committed by | 3 |
could not find them | 3 |
perpetrated or committed out | 3 |
the odiousnesse of treason | 3 |
the humble answer and | 3 |
was done in the | 3 |
not within this act | 3 |
in all cases of | 3 |
at law made in | 3 |
with the rest of | 3 |
by virtue of the | 3 |
am not bound to | 3 |
and treasonable words against | 3 |
limits of this realm | 3 |
you say it was | 3 |
me ask you one | 3 |
the behalf of the | 3 |
him and the heirs | 3 |
his majestie by the | 3 |
the proceedings of the | 3 |
his hands and eyes | 3 |
how easily his fathers | 3 |
before in my life | 3 |
by an ordinary iury | 3 |
the evidence that has | 3 |
have a soul to | 3 |
articles of high misdemeanours | 3 |
sir john brooks did | 3 |
i have nothing but | 3 |
papers to the prisoner | 3 |
what religion i have | 3 |
be the duty of | 3 |
this court in england | 3 |
he shall be tryed | 3 |
those that were with | 3 |
the thirteenth of this | 3 |
and their respective crimes | 3 |
considerations which ought to | 3 |
i hope i shall | 3 |
not to be allowed | 3 |
answer and petition of | 3 |
to your lordship and | 3 |
lords justices and council | 3 |
in england and ireland | 3 |
lawfull men of england | 3 |
vessels from going to | 3 |
the dignity of his | 3 |
and against the form | 3 |
shall well and duely | 3 |
the peace of our | 3 |
that you would be | 3 |
order to print dated | 3 |
where a man being | 3 |
the duke of alva | 3 |
added all the articles | 3 |
as to what you | 3 |
against anthony earl of | 3 |
here is my almanack | 3 |
duty of his allegiance | 3 |
if i would go | 3 |
was one of them | 3 |
the said bench shall | 3 |