claims, and many writings? For present are all the necessary elements of an
autonomous nation with respect to the fourth or fifth part of obedience to
the pope,
31
just as with the Gallic nation, whether a nation be understood as
a people distinguished from another by its blood relationships and habit of
unity or according to the diversity of its languages, which are the strongest
and truest proofs of nationhood and its essential nature according to both
divine and human law (as will be said later) or whether a nation should be
understood as it ought to be as a territory equal even to the French nation in
that it is one of four or five nations in obedience to the pope. The glorious
English or British nation is of as great vigour and authority, if we may speak
all the same without making comparison or prejudice against anyone, as the
glorious Gallic nation . . .
Also, whereas the Gallic nation has for the most part a single language
intelligible among the people on the whole at any rate or in part through
the whole extent of the nation, the glorious English or British nation has in,
of, and under its power five languages, nations which cannot understand one
another, namely English (which the English and Scots share), Welsh, Irish,
Gascon, and Cornish. And so with every right it should be able to represent
as many nations as it has distinct languages.
Also, by the most powerful right it ought to represent as a single principal
nation the fourth or fifth part in obedience to the pope in the general
council and in other places, especially since in itself the English or British
nation has equality in size and nature but also in extent of lands, kingdoms,
dukedoms, counties, baronies, and other temporal dominions, and also in
the excellence and size of its cathedrals, monasteries, colleges, and parochial
churches, and other respects, and speaking without prejudice, just as the
Gallic nation has in and of itself.
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