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A COMPLETE

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9388

COLLECTION OF

THE LORDS' PROTESTS, FROM
THE FIRST VPON RECORD,
IN THE REIGN OF HENRY
THE THIRD, TO THE PRE-
SENT TIME; WITH A
COPIOVS INDEX.

To which is added,

An HISTORICAL ESSAY on the Legislative Power
of ENGLAND. Wherein the Origin of both Houses of
Parliament, their antient Conftitution, and the Changes
that have happened in the Perfons that compofed
them, with the Occafion thereof, are related
in chronological Order. And many Things
concerning the ENGLISH Government,
the Antiquity of the Laws of ENG-
LAND, and the Feudal Law, are
occafionally illuftrated and
explained.

IN TWO VOLVMES.

VOLVME THE FIRST.

LONDON:

Printed in the Year MDCCLXVII.

Toninklike
Bibliotheck

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ADVERTISEMENT.

F all kinds of Parliamentary Papers, the Protefts of the House of Lords, have ever been esteemed the most valuable and interefting. They are particularly fo to thofe young gentlemen who are studying the history and conftitution of their country; and, in a word, to every one who is defirous of being acquainted with the Proceedings of Parliament, which form the great school of political knowledge. The fubjects of the Protefts. here offered to the public are of the highest impor tance to the interefts and freedom of the nation. They prefent to us a view of the many noble ftruggles, which, from time to time, have been made in defence of constitutional Liberty; and ferve to keep alive, and infpire into the minds of the rifing generation, some of the most exalted fentiments that ever entered into the heart of man. The style, in general, is nervous and animated, and the arguments are the strongest that could poffibly be produced; all which, indeed, is no more than what might naturally be expected, from the diftinguished abilities of thofe, who thus committed their fentiments to writing; that they might be delivered to pofterity, without the poffibility of mifreprefentation, in the language as they arofe fpontaneously from the mind; when it was warm and full of vigour, and when the expreffions flowed ftrong, and pure from the heart.-Nothing, it is hoped, need further be laid to recommend to the public the prefent publication; a publication, it is prefumed, which, to every competent judge, will appear to be a work that fufficiently speaks for itfelf. It may be requifite, however, for the fatiffaction

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