The Papal Drama: A Historical Essay |
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Page vi
... evil , and that England may ever cleave to that Protestantism which has ministered so mightily to her greatness and glory , to her freedom and felicity . CONTENTS . BOOK I. THE BEGINNINGS OF THE POPEDOM . vi PREFACE .
... evil , and that England may ever cleave to that Protestantism which has ministered so mightily to her greatness and glory , to her freedom and felicity . CONTENTS . BOOK I. THE BEGINNINGS OF THE POPEDOM . vi PREFACE .
Page viii
... Glory and Greatness PAGE 18 BOOK III . THE TRIUMPHS OF THE POPEDOM . The Holy Roman Empire and the Roman Church the Two Great Powers of the Middle Ages . Their singular Relation to each other . Their Close Connection , mutual Dependence ...
... Glory and Greatness PAGE 18 BOOK III . THE TRIUMPHS OF THE POPEDOM . The Holy Roman Empire and the Roman Church the Two Great Powers of the Middle Ages . Their singular Relation to each other . Their Close Connection , mutual Dependence ...
Page xiii
... Glory under Elizabeth and ever since . - The Stewarts bad Kings and bad Protestants . - Base- ness of James I. — Intense Protestantism the main Inspiration of the Struggle against Charles I. - Potent in the Long Parliament . - Cromwell ...
... Glory under Elizabeth and ever since . - The Stewarts bad Kings and bad Protestants . - Base- ness of James I. — Intense Protestantism the main Inspiration of the Struggle against Charles I. - Potent in the Long Parliament . - Cromwell ...
Page 5
... glory of patience and the joy of sorrow than all the apostolical writings , has been endowed with an Italian princi- pality , and been made to cry out in bulls innumerable for nations to unsheath the sword in defence of St. Peter's ...
... glory of patience and the joy of sorrow than all the apostolical writings , has been endowed with an Italian princi- pality , and been made to cry out in bulls innumerable for nations to unsheath the sword in defence of St. Peter's ...
Page 9
... glory or ecclesiastical omnipotence of his own see . Yet its greatness was not a little advanced by his virtues , ability , and energy . Not without him did the Spanish Goths formally renounce Arianism ; through his zealous ...
... glory or ecclesiastical omnipotence of his own see . Yet its greatness was not a little advanced by his virtues , ability , and energy . Not without him did the Spanish Goths formally renounce Arianism ; through his zealous ...
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Common terms and phrases
abhorrence anti-papal assailed Austria Avignon Baronius became Bohemia Boniface Cæsar Cardinal century champion Charlemagne Charles chief Christendom Christian Clement clergy conflict corruption council council of Constance Crown 8vo crusade death doctrines dominion earnest ecclesiastical Edition emperor England English Europe faith father Ferdinand fierce foes France Frederick freedom French genius Germany glory Gregory Hapsburg heart Henry heretics hero History Holy Roman Holy Roman Empire honour House of Austria House of Hapsburg imperial Innocent intellectual Italian Italy Jesuits John king kingdom less liberal Lombard Louis Luther master mighty monarch Naples nation noble oppressed Otho papacy papal power passim patriot persecutor Philip Pius political pontiff pope popedom Post 8vo potent priests princes Protestant Protestantism Raynaldus Reformation reign Revolution Roman bishop Roman Catholic Roman Church Roman Empire Rome sought soul sovereign Spain spiritual stirred successor testant throne tion triumph vanquished victory VIII vols Woodcuts worldly
Popular passages
Page 478 - And she may still exist in undiminished vigour when some traveller from New Zealand shall, in the midst of a vast solitude, take his stand on a broken arch of London Bridge to sketch the ruins of St. Paul's.
Page 469 - Pagan has been dead many a day ; and as for the other, though he be yet alive, he is, by reason of age, and also of the many shrewd brushes that he met with in his younger days, grown so crazy and stiff in his joints that he can now do little more than sit in his cave's mouth, grinning at pilgrims as they go by, and biting his nails because he cannot come at them.