item: #1 of 15 id: A29595 author: De Britaine, William. title: The interest of England in the present war with Holland by the author of The Dutch usurpation. date: 1672.0 words: 5571 flesch: 67 summary: But when they came to understand the kindness and behaviour of the English to them , they had a very great love for them , and did much Honour the King of England : the Orankies being often heard to say , that the King of England was a good King , and his God a good God ; but their Tanto and the Hollanders were naught . yet they endeavoured nothing more during their short stay , then to make the Natives disaffected to the English ; affronting their persons , and defaming the Grandeur and Power of the Kings of England . keywords: alliance; author; books; britain; british; characters; charges; dominions; dutch; early; earth; east; eebo; enemies; england; english; europe; general; glory; god; good; grandeur; great; greater; hath; hollanders; honour; images; indies; interest; king; majesties; majesty; men; nation; natives; online; original; oxford; partnership; people; person; phase; power; present; princes; rich; safety; seas; set; ships; states; subjects; tcp; tei; text; time; trade; use; usurpation; want; war; wars; west cache: A29595.xml plain text: A29595.txt item: #2 of 15 id: A32293 author: F. C. title: Two letters the one from a Dutchman to his correspondent in England, the other an answer from the said correspondent : in which most things of note (that relate to, or have been transacted in this in this hostility) are very fully handled : with the present condition of both countries. date: 1673.0 words: 11022 flesch: 37 summary: These and the former Reasons strangely satisfied the multitude , yet many an honest man cryed that we had been mistaken in our measures last war , that Kings find expedients when others little dream of them : That your Kingdom was a place whose Maxims and Secrets were not to be guessed at ; for when we thought our selves wholly sure , & that you wanted either mony or men , Allies abroad , or Uuity at home , and the like , still some accident or other happened to deceive and ruine us . But their private resolution was ( as I said before ) to give you no Reparation , and to sink sooner than to have your Protection , assuring one another that no Demand of France ( though victorious ) could be so destructive to their particular Interest as yours ; nor is this kind of self ends any news to Christendom , since we daily see there are men in Authority that will rather submit to the Turk himself than miss of their aimes , or fall into the hand of a Neighbour , whom they hate or envy . keywords: able; advantage; alwaies; army; assistance; blood; body; books; business; characters; christendom; christian; condition; correspondent; countrey; countries; dutch; early; eebo; enemies; enemy; england; english; fall; fear; fight; fit; fleet; france; french; friends; general; god; good; government; great; half; hands; holland; home; ill; interest; kind; king; letter; like; little; london; long; loss; lost; majesty; man; manner; men; monarch; nation; nature; nay; news; opinion; orange; pardon; parliament; party; peace; people; perchance; power; present; prince; private; reason; religion; ruine; said; sea; self; selves; set; ships; sir; strange; strength; subjects; sure; tcp; tei; text; thing; time; trade; true; use; war; way; world; years cache: A32293.xml plain text: A32293.txt item: #3 of 15 id: A32414 author: Charles II, King of England, 1630-1685. title: By the King, a proclamation for a general fast throughout the realm of England date: None words: 1250 flesch: 64 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. A32414) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 107237) keywords: books; characters; charles; doth; early; eebo; england; english; fast; general; image; king; majesty; online; oxford; partnership; phase; tcp; tei; text; work; xml cache: A32414.xml plain text: A32414.txt item: #4 of 15 id: A32515 author: Charles II, King of England, 1630-1685. title: By the King, a proclamation for taking off the late restraint laid upon the ships of merchants and others from going to sea date: 1672.0 words: 1219 flesch: 63 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). keywords: books; characters; charles; early; eebo; england; english; king; majesties; merchants; online; partnership; phase; proclamation; restraint; sea; ships; tcp; tei; text cache: A32515.xml plain text: A32515.txt item: #5 of 15 id: A34832 author: Cowley, Abraham, 1618-1667. title: A translation of the sixth book of Mr. Cowley's Plantarum being a poem upon the late rebellion, the happy restoration of His Sacred Majesty, and the Dutch war ensuing. date: 1680.0 words: 6977 flesch: 79 summary: 2. Happy above all Kings , while Fate permits , Till the curst Tempest of Rebellion came , Now he 'bove Envy blest securely sits Among the Gods , crown'd with immortal Fame . Impute not yet their ignorance to Fate , Since it was wilful , and the crime 's their own . keywords: arms; author; blood; book; brave; bright; characters; charles; clouds; country; cowley; create; croud; cruel; day; death; declare; dutch; early; eebo; encoding; end; england; english; fame; fate; fear; field; fierce; fight; flames; foe; fortune; fury; generous; glorious; gods; golden; good; great; greatest; grief; hand; happy; heav'n; high; honour; horrid; ill; images; impious; king; late; length; life; long; love; majesty; man; men; miseries; noble; o're; online; opdam; original; oxford; page; partnership; peace; phase; pious; plac't; plantarum; poem; poor; rage; rebellion; rest; revenge; royal; ruin; sacred; sad; sea; self; shame; sixth; tcp; tears; tei; text; time; translation; trembling; true; vain; vvhy; war; way; woods; work; world; xml; young cache: A34832.xml plain text: A34832.txt item: #6 of 15 id: A35651 author: Denham, John, Sir, 1615-1669. title: Further advice to a painter, or, Directions to draw the late engagement, Aug. 11th, 1673 date: 1673.0 words: 2527 flesch: 67 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). keywords: 11th; advice; books; brave; characters; courage; denham; directions; dutch; early; eebo; elements; encoding; engagement; english; fight; glory; hard; honour; images; late; like; online; oxford; painter; partnership; phase; prince; ruyter; sea; ship; spragg; tcp; tei; text; thou; trump; way; xml cache: A35651.xml plain text: A35651.txt item: #7 of 15 id: A36748 author: Du Cros, Simon, 17th cent. title: A letter from Monsieur de Cros (who was an embassador at the Treaty of Nimeguen and a resident in England in K. Ch. the Second's reign) which may serve for an answer to the impostures of Sir. Wm. Temple, heretofore ambassador from England at the Hague and at Nimeguen ... : together with some remarks upon his memoirs, to make appear how grosly he is mistaken in the greatest part of the most important matters he relates concerning what passed from the year 1672 until the year 1679. date: 1693.0 words: 10624 flesch: 55 summary: A letter from Monsieur de Cros (who was an embassador at the Treaty of Nimeguen and a resident in England in K. Ch. Images scanned from microfilm: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 314:5) A letter from Monsieur de Cros (who was an embassador at the Treaty of Nimeguen and a resident in England in K. Ch. keywords: affairs; ambassador; answer; barillon; business; christendom; court; cros; cunning; devoted; dispatch; duke; eebo; england; english; envoy; extraordinary; flanders; france; french; glory; good; great; greater; greatest; hague; hath; holland; honour; important; king; late; letters; like; little; london; lord; man; master; memoirs; men; ministers; monsieur; monsieur barillon; nay; nimeguen; occasion; orders; peace; persons; present; quality; reason; reputation; respect; self; sir; sir w.; state; subject; sweden; tcp; temple; text; thing; time; treaty; true; truth; use; w. t.; williamson; work; year cache: A36748.xml plain text: A36748.txt item: #8 of 15 id: A39387 author: Cerdan, Jean-Paul, comte de. title: The emperour and the empire betray'd by whom and how written by a minister of state residing at that court to one of the Protestant princes of the empire. date: 1682.0 words: 17933 flesch: 38 summary: And that when ever France should be desirous of Peace , there might be those in the Imperial Councils and Court , whose Interest would oblige them to desire and procure it , in order to their restoration and re-establishment in their Estates , and to free themselves from the necessity of begging their Bread elsewhere . Therefore 't is not strange , that the Ministers of France ( though perhaps in this particular against the intention and without the order of his most Christian Majesty ) leave no stone unturned for the destruction of his Highness of Lorrain : But it may surprize any man to find that the Imperial Governour of Phillipsbourgh , should ( so openly and notoriously , as he did ) have attempted the destruction of that Prince , by the trap he caused cunningly to be made in the bridge of that place , for that purpose , through which the good Prince fell headlong to the bottom of the Ditch : keywords: absolute; account; affairs; ancient; appear; arms; army; austria; better; brandenbourgh; business; case; certain; christian; christian majesty; common; condition; conduct; considerable; contrary; council; countries; country; court; credit; crown; day; defence; design; destruction; doubt; duke; eebo; effect; electoral; emissaries; emperor; empire; end; england; english; estates; europe; expect; favour; forces; france; free; french; frontiers; general; germany; god; good; grandeur; great; greater; hand; hath; having; head; highness; hold; honour; hopes; house; imperial; imperial majesty; interest; jesuits; joyn; justice; king; kingdom; late; league; liberty; little; lorrain; majesty; man; mark; master; means; men; ministers; montecuculi; necessary; nobility; order; particular; party; peace; person; point; power; present; princes; principal; project; protestant; provinces; purpose; reason; religion; republick; right; romans; rome; ruin; second; self; society; spain; swede; tcp; text; things; time; true; truth; turenne; united; vienna; war; way; work; years cache: A39387.xml plain text: A39387.txt item: #9 of 15 id: A51057 author: McWard, Robert, 1633?-1687. title: The English ballance weighing the reasons of Englands present conjunction with France against the Dutch vvith some observes upon His Majesties declaration of liberty to tender consciences. date: 1672.0 words: 41131 flesch: -12 summary: yet , it hath not to this day , been further recognosced , even in the Channel , ( it 's principal seat and subject , and where it hath alwayes affected it's maine Parad : for as to the other brittish seas , which are onely , the neerest circumambient parts of the wide Ocean , the Law of nations doth onely attribut to England its common priviledge ) then by the bare ceremony of the first salute ; neither in the last Treaty , wherein the King of England was greatly concerned , and no lesse solicitous to cleare this title , was there any thing else agreed unto , as I have already marked ; and without all peradventure , if his Majesty in the conceit of his dominion , should once offer to exert it , though but in very ordinary effects , such as the assuming of jurisdiction , or imposing of tribute , whereof the Sound and Adriatick do exhibit cleare precedents ; he would soone be made to understand his error , not onely by the reclaming dissent , but also , by the vigourous opposition of all his neighbours : I might insist to disprove this pretense of an indefinit dominion , from the far more rational judgement , of the ancient Romans , who not only reckoned the sea with the air , Inter ea quae sunt nullius ; but , though by reason of the encircling of their vast Empire , they might have acclaimed , even the whole Mediterranean Sea , jure diverticuli , & in many parts thereof , had indeed several powers , and priviledges ; yet , were they so far from captating this vaine and groundlesse title , that one of the greatest Emperours , begins a rescript , with relation to this same subject , in these words , Ego quidem munai dominus , lex vero maris : thereby manifestly holding forth , that , as he judged it incapable of dominion , so it 's unstable nature , and common destination , could only be regulat , as to humane concernes , in so far , as Law , and consequently , condition or consent , did determine : from all which , I conclude , that as the Dutch , doe fully satisfie , all that in justice , the King of England can demand , by their offering to strike , conforme to the last Treatie , and have good reason to repugne , either to his indefinit soveraignity , or any further preheminence , for which nothing anterior to the said last Treaty , can in reason be obtruded ; so , his pressing them further , in this affair , is , both captious , and unjust , and he might upon as good grounds , refuse them the liberty , of a free passage in the channel , as exspect of them a consent , to adominion , which if not cautioned , by a particular explication , might assuredly be thereto extended . And here lyes the great discovery , the right of the Flage is all , that is drectly pretended ; but , dominion of the narrow seas , under the colour of a sophistical equipollency , is the thing mainely intended : I shall not repeat what I have above adduced , for distinguishing , this prerogative , from the dominion aimed at , and explicating this whole matter ; but as his Majesties covert insinuation , doth aboundantly verify , even his own diffidence , of his absurd and insupportable claime ; so , if we go about , thus to renverse nature , and subvert humane liberty , the Dutch are the first ; but neither the greatest , nor the last enemy , which we are to apprehend : As to the license to fish , here instanced ; since I cannot set down what is truth , in matter of fact , considering the confidence , wherewith it is asserted , without a reflexion , which I by choice forbeare , I leave that to the Stats their vindication : But , suppose it had been sought , and graunted , within that space of distance , from our coast , which the positive law of nations , and consent of mankinde , hath in a manner every where appropriat , to the countreyes respectively adjacent , it signifieth nothing to his Majestie 's purpose : What is then the Dutch their ingratitude , and insolence , that provoks his Majesty , to an exclamation ? let all men judge : It 's said , they owe their being and wealth to our protection and valour : keywords: able; absolute; account; advance; advantage; alliance; alwayes; anger; answer; appeare; armes; assistance; assurance; authority; ballance; base; behold; best; better; betwixt; blood; bondage; breach; brethren; broken; cause; certain; christ; church; city; cleare; common; compliance; confidence; conformists; conjunction; consciences; consent; consideration; contrair; countrey; courses; court; covenant; dare; day; debate; declaration; designe; desire; desperat; discourse; displeasure; doe; dominion; doth; doubt; dutch; earth; eebo; effect; end; enemies; enemy; engagement; england; english; evident; evil; expresse; extraordinary; eyes; faith; faithful; favour; feare; fire; flage; fleet; force; france; free; french; friends; fury; generation; glory; god; good; great; greatest; ground; guilty; hand; hath; head; heart; heaven; height; high; hitherto; hold; home; honour; hope; houses; import; indulgence; injuries; injustice; interest; invasion; jesus; judge; judgement; king; kingdome; known; late; law; lesse; lest; liberty; like; little; long; lord; lose; majesties; majesty; making; malice; man; manifest; manner; matter; men; minde; minister; nation; nature; nay; necessity; neighbours; new; non; novv; number; observe; obvious; offer; old; onely; open; opposition; oppressed; order; ovvn; papists; parliament; particular; party; past; people; persons; place; plague; plain; point; policy; poor; popery; popish; possible; posterity; power; precious; prejudice; present; preservation; prince; protestant; provinces; provocation; publick; purpose; quality; quarrel; question; rage; rational; ready; real; reason; religion; return; revenge; righteousnesse; royal; ruine; sad; satisfaction; sea; seas; second; seemeth; seing; self; selves; set; shame; ships; sight; sin; sleep; sober; soul; soveraignity; spirit; stats; stead; strength; subjects; substance; successe; sufficient; sure; sword; tcp; tender; text; things; thought; time; title; trade; treasure; treaty; triple; true; truth; utmost; vaine; violence; viz; vvar; vvas; vve; vvhat; vvhen; vvhich; vvho; vvill; vvith; war; way; wherewith; wickednesse; wise; wonder; work; world; worship; yea; yoke cache: A51057.xml plain text: A51057.txt item: #10 of 15 id: A62260 author: Arlington, Henry Bennet, Earl of, 1618-1685. title: A True relation of the engagement of His Majesties fleet under the command of His Royal Highness with the Dutch fleet, May 28, 1672 in a letter from H.S. Esquire, on board His Royal Highness, to the Earl of Arlington, principal secretary of state. date: 1672.0 words: 2933 flesch: 56 summary: A True relation of the engagement of His Majesties fleet under the command of His Royal Highness with the Dutch fleet, May 28, 1672 in a letter from H.S. Esquire, on board His Royal Highness, to the Earl of Arlington, principal secretary of state. A True relation of the engagement of His Majesties fleet under the command of His Royal Highness with the Dutch fleet, May 28, 1672 in a letter from H.S. Esquire, on board His Royal Highness, to the Earl of Arlington, principal secretary of state. keywords: arlington; board; books; captain; characters; commander; day; dutch; earl; eebo; enemy; engagement; english; fleet; french; henry; highness; letter; majesties; monsieur; online; partnership; phase; relation; royal; royal highness; savile; ship; sir; tcp; tei; text; time; true; van; wind; wing cache: A62260.xml plain text: A62260.txt item: #11 of 15 id: A64312 author: Temple, William, Sir, 1628-1699. title: Memoirs of what past in Christendom, from the war begun 1672 to the peace concluded 1679 date: 1692.0 words: 83412 flesch: 39 summary: Nothing seem'd so likely to determin them , as the Treaty and Expedition of the Duke of Brandenburgh on the Confederate Side , which laid open his Countrey to the Invasion of Sweden , and gave them a pretence of a Breach , in that Prince , of the Treaties between them , in making War against France without the consent of the Swedes . This admitted great debates between the King and Prince ; one pretending France would never be brought to one Scheme ; and t'other , that Spain would never consent to the other . keywords: able; account; action; advantage; affairs; alliance; allies; ambassadors; ambassy; amsterdam; answer; arlington; armies; army; arrival; ask'd; battel; beginning; believ'd; best; better; beverning; body; brandenburgh; bravery; burgundy; business; campania; captain; care; case; certain; change; character; chief; christendom; circumstances; commerce; commission; common; concern'd; concert; conde; conditions; conduct; confederates; conferences; confidence; congress; conjuncture; consent; consequence; considerable; contented; contrary; conversation; countrey; course; court; credit; crown; day; days; deal; declar'd; defence; denmark; deputies; design; desir'd; desire; different; difficulties; difficulty; discourses; dispatch; dispositions; doubted; duke; dutch; dutch ambassadors; easie; effect; elector; emperor; empire; end; endeavour; enemies; engag'd; england; english; entring; fall; family; favour; field; finding; fit; flanders; foot; forc'd; forces; foreign; forms; france; french; french ambassadors; friends; frontier; general; general peace; germany; glad; good; government; great; greater; greatest; greatness; hague; hands; happen'd; hard; head; heart; highness; holland; home; honour; hopes; house; humour; ill; imperialists; instances; intended; interest; invasion; journey; kind; kindness; king; known; language; late; leave; left; les; letters; liberty; life; like; lionel; little; london; long; longer; lorain; lord; loss; majesty; man; manner; march; master; mastricht; matters; mean; measures; mediation; mediators; mention; middle; mind; ministers; ministry; money; monsieur; month; morning; motions; munster; near; necessary; necessity; negotiation; neighbours; new; night; nimeguen; notice; occasion; offer; offer'd; offices; old; open; opinion; orange; orders; paces; parliament; particular; parties; parts; pass'd; passports; past; peace; pensioner; people; person; pleas'd; point; pope; positive; posture; powers; present; pretence; pretended; pretensions; prince; private; progress; propos'd; provinces; publick; purpose; quarrel; rais'd; ready; reason; refus'd; resolution; rest; restitution; return; return'd; rhine; safety; said; satisfaction; scene; second; secretary; seem'd; self; separate; separate peace; service; set; short; sides; siege; small; spain; spaniards; spanish; states; stay; subject; successes; sudden; summer; swedes; swedish; t'other; terms; text; thing; thought; time; towns; treasurer; treaties; treaty; troops; true; usual; vienna; violent; visit; want; war; way; winter; world; writ; year; young cache: A64312.xml plain text: A64312.txt item: #12 of 15 id: A96487 author: Wild, Robert, 1609-1679. title: The poor distressed people of Holland their humble thanks and acknowledgement for His Majesties gracious favours profer'd them in his late declaration date: 1672.0 words: 1360 flesch: 66 summary: Copies of the texts have been issued variously as SGML (TCP schema; ASCII text with mnemonic sdata character entities); displayable XML (TCP schema; characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or text strings within braces); or lossless XML (TEI P5, characters represented either as UTF-8 Unicode or TEI g elements). Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 151450) keywords: acknowledgement; books; characters; declaration; early; eebo; encoding; english; favours; gracious; holland; humble; image; late; majesties; online; oxford; partnership; phase; profer'd; tcp; tei; text; thanks; xml cache: A96487.xml plain text: A96487.txt item: #13 of 15 id: B02065 author: Charles II, King of England, 1630-1685. title: His Majesties gracious declaration, for the encouraging the subjects of the United Provinces of the Low-Countreys, to transport themselves with their estates, and to settle in this His Majesties kingdom of England. / Published by the advice of his Privy Council. date: 1672.0 words: 1757 flesch: 58 summary: (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. B02065) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 175795) Users should bear in mind that in all likelihood such instances will never have been looked at by a TCP editor. keywords: books; characters; countries; early; eebo; england; english; estates; gracious; kingdom; low; majesties; majesty; online; persons; phase; provinces; ships; subjects; tcp; tei; text; time; united; whatsoever; works cache: B02065.xml plain text: B02065.txt item: #14 of 15 id: B02119 author: Charles II, King of England, 1630-1685. title: A proclamation, for publishing the peace between His Majesty and the States General of the United Netherlands. date: 1674.0 words: 1322 flesch: 64 summary: (EEBO-TCP ; phase 1, no. B02119) Transcribed from: (Early English Books Online ; image set 179373) Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). keywords: books; characters; charles; day; early; eebo; english; general; image; netherlands; online; oxford; partnership; peace; phase; states; subjects; tcp; tei; text; works; xml cache: B02119.xml plain text: B02119.txt item: #15 of 15 id: B03312 author: England. Curia Regis. title: At the Court at Whitehall, the fifteenth of May, 1672. Whereas his Majesty did the seventeenth of March past, upon the reading in Council his declaration of war against the States General of the United Provinces of the Low Countries ... propose the observance ... for withdrawing the persons and goods of all Dutch subjects which were found here ... date: 1672.0 words: 1561 flesch: 61 summary: Text selection was based on the New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature (NCBEL). Title from caption and first lines of text. keywords: books; characters; council; declaration; dutch; earl; eebo; english; fit; general; goods; lord; majesties; majesty; online; oxford; partnership; persons; phase; provinces; said; states; tcp; tei; text; walker; war cache: B03312.xml plain text: B03312.txt