Page:Terræ-filius- or, the Secret History of the University of Oxford.djvu/118

 1.cid, qo that &y, to acqunt us purpofcly avoid- rag, through his whole reahraent, to mention the of 0o lqames m'el or King Charles i ufing, inClead thereof, the: and fuch-like general expr. e. ffions, as the u ur er, the rightful heir the royalexde, the exi lea monarch, &c. betides whxch, he tingled out fuch incidents in his defcripfion of this our flare of civil and fpirltt,:a! fidtide, as bore a nearer =11ufion to later times than to tho former ones, which the occafion of the day fuggeffed to him; exhibiting to his gaping audience an unjult parallel between Kisg Charles I. and ]amet I[. and between Oliver Cromwel ad King This mof.:ld )lie. murder we committed, t ems, firll, . our aifibedience to the CauRca i and, fe- dreally, our i,,jufliu to the l. By our a,/bbdiece totheCavncu  to prove which, the Cosvocx;ov did he, u,a: filehe'd: a-u/our holy mother va$ ot permitted to take �oun]}l for herOIC. Poor old lewdman! what a fad thing that wai? gent to fhut her holy lip; up .-_nd not �uffer her to tell winter-evening tales of witches and apparitions in a chimney-corner, as /he us'd to do!.-- to be Cure, good man! he did not glance this obliquely upon the prent government for timing her fo now. Seemingly, fiid he. the bifhop were de?rig'd by a lay- ertntokrabte impudence again! that the vile beafis the people lhould offer to turn a q irated gentleman out of a good diocefe, and an tdied coach and fx onl for refufmg to romi to be  re&l i o? upon any other Fretence whaff0- ever !--Here again without doubt, the preacher did not think of the lay-deprivation of biopsat the Revolution. Bt.t, he added, e ought t hie d} God, that many q'to]} rere driv fithm d ri=att ordain fd rns,   to maima the ialuale

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