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Show 178 ACTS RELATING Part ll, Sec‘t. VII. TO THE Commas. ,9 cognilhnce of the Plantations till the time For my part, I mull; own, I cannot well of the civil wars, meaning the wars in the nnderlland how it is, that from barely time of Charles I.) " upon this "round it knowing that a petition vas withdrawn, " was the King" (fpealfing of James I. predecell‘or of Charles) " conlidered the we are warranted to conclude the ground of its b‘ing withdrawn to have been a " lands as his demelhes, and the Colonil‘ts conlieiouhiel‘s of a want of right to pro- " as his fubjeé‘ts, in thcle his firing/1 do-. ceed upon it. " minions, not his fubjei‘ts of the realm, this withdrawing accompanied at the time, " or {late 'l‘." or l‘UCCCCL ed within a Thor: time afterwards, by inch relolutions as in the nature of \Vhat our author meant to give as the ground of Jamesls opinion, was, Ifhould fuppofe, the lingle tranlhe‘tion, whatever I‘Llpecially when we find them mull have been founded. on the {hpfight. The reiifiutionsl polition of it was, g/, or in, the houfe, whereby an mean, are lil>lC :Lp end was put to that particular bulincfs : and it was fome fucceeding)r king, Ilhp~ ‘ when he tells us pole, (that is, Charles I.) by whom, if by any, inch a notion mull be conceived to have been entertained, as could arile from " nn'l " them." lacks in the charters, tillunnnlling 'I‘hcle are charters {granted the continuance of a habit of aequielbence, to, from the time of that aft to the time of the civil war. and it feems rather extraordinary to go on in the lame breath, and lay that and ef'tabliihi133?J the ilawnfions: ‘ ‘ \nl" ‘ ‘4 the home tocl' ) no iJlLLlLl e u 1- Pownzil en the Adminillration of the C0- lanies, p. 50. For " anee oi‘ the Plantations, tlll tnc cirnv "inenceinent ot the crril wars. N2 |