[The History of England in Three Volumes, Vol.I., Part F. by David Hume]@TWC D-Link book
The History of England in Three Volumes, Vol.I., Part F.

CHAPTER LXXI
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The national debt at the revolution amounted to one million fifty-four thousand nine hundred and twenty-five pounds.[****] The militia fell much to decay during these two reigns, partly by the policy of the kings, who had entertained a diffidence of their subjects, partly by that ill-judged law which limited the king's power of mustering and arraying them.

In the beginning, however, of Charles's reign, the militia was still deemed formidable.

De Wit having proposed to the French king an invasion of England during the first Dutch war, that monarch replied, that such an attempt would be entirely fruitless, and would tend only to unite the English.

In a few days, said he, after our landing, there will be fifty thousand men at least upon us.[v] * Danby's Memoirs, p.

7.
** Danby's Memoirs, p.


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