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Details
Title
The Aphorismes of the kingdome [electronic resource].
Created/published
[London?] : [s.n.], [1642]
Description
60 p.
Associated name
Note
This record was provided by a vendor. It may contain incorrect or incomplete information.
Caption title.
Opposing the commissions of array.
Doubtfully attributed to William Prynne.
"1. The Parliament is the moderation of monarchy ... 2. The power of it is sufficient to prevent and restraine tyranny ... 3. The essence of the law is the free consent of the law-makers ... 4. The sole reason of the King is not the sound judgement of the kingdome ... 5. All the votes in Parliament are directive to the law, none destructive ... 6. The vote that is directive and coactive, is no wayes nomotheticall ... 7. The negative vote of a King is no more than the dissent of one man ... 8. The affirmative vote of a King makes not the law; ergo, the negative cannot destroy it ... 9. He that cannot destroy a law made, cannot destroy it in the making ... 10. The power that makes lawes, repeales and revives them as reason requires ... 11. Kings that doe good to their subjects of countie, would be free of the obligation ... 12. Laws are the best directions and obligations for all men to follow. To submit the principality to the laws is more than the crowne ...
Reproduction of original in Thomason Collection, British Library.
Caption title.
Opposing the commissions of array.
Doubtfully attributed to William Prynne.
"1. The Parliament is the moderation of monarchy ... 2. The power of it is sufficient to prevent and restraine tyranny ... 3. The essence of the law is the free consent of the law-makers ... 4. The sole reason of the King is not the sound judgement of the kingdome ... 5. All the votes in Parliament are directive to the law, none destructive ... 6. The vote that is directive and coactive, is no wayes nomotheticall ... 7. The negative vote of a King is no more than the dissent of one man ... 8. The affirmative vote of a King makes not the law; ergo, the negative cannot destroy it ... 9. He that cannot destroy a law made, cannot destroy it in the making ... 10. The power that makes lawes, repeales and revives them as reason requires ... 11. Kings that doe good to their subjects of countie, would be free of the obligation ... 12. Laws are the best directions and obligations for all men to follow. To submit the principality to the laws is more than the crowne ...
Reproduction of original in Thomason Collection, British Library.
Reproduction
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Mich. : UMI, 1999- (Early English books online) Digital version of: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 265:E.240, no. 26 and 265:E.240, no. 27)
Cited/described in
Wing P3893
Union Theological Seminary (New York, N.Y.). Catalogue of the McAlpin collection of British history and theology II 99
Union Theological Seminary (New York, N.Y.). Catalogue of the McAlpin collection of British history and theology II 99
Series
Early English books online.
Linked resources
Place of creation/publication
Great Britain -- England -- London.
Item Details
Call number
Available offsite via a Folger OpenAthens account