Monk's Contemporaries: Biographic Studies on the English RevolutionBohn, 1851 - 195 pages |
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Page 3
... feelings , which were destined subsequently to make him one of the most active founders of that great Whig party , which has done so much for the credit of the British nobility , and for the liberty of the English people . It was in ...
... feelings , which were destined subsequently to make him one of the most active founders of that great Whig party , which has done so much for the credit of the British nobility , and for the liberty of the English people . It was in ...
Page 29
... feeling . Providence seemed to have prepared for him an easy and pleasant destiny . He was endowed with an upright heart , a resolute character , a robust body , an active and inge- nious mind . He was born in 1620 , among the best ...
... feeling . Providence seemed to have prepared for him an easy and pleasant destiny . He was endowed with an upright heart , a resolute character , a robust body , an active and inge- nious mind . He was born in 1620 , among the best ...
Page 31
... feelings held sway in his soul ; in- dignation mingled with surprise at the obstacles raised up against the good cause ; hateful distrust of the king , as prin- cipal author of these obstacles , and unalterable conviction that neither ...
... feelings held sway in his soul ; in- dignation mingled with surprise at the obstacles raised up against the good cause ; hateful distrust of the king , as prin- cipal author of these obstacles , and unalterable conviction that neither ...
Page 33
... feeling that the crisis was at hand - and being more- over convinced that this crisis was uncertain , in spite of his efforts to foresee and guard all its issues - desired that a con- ference might be held between some of his party and ...
... feeling that the crisis was at hand - and being more- over convinced that this crisis was uncertain , in spite of his efforts to foresee and guard all its issues - desired that a con- ference might be held between some of his party and ...
Page 56
... feelings , the immediate results of its enterprise , or the justice of the means it adopted . It had obstinately shut its eyes to the rights which it violated , the resistance which it encountered , the reverses which it ex- perienced ...
... feelings , the immediate results of its enterprise , or the justice of the means it adopted . It had obstinately shut its eyes to the rights which it violated , the resistance which it encountered , the reverses which it ex- perienced ...
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Common terms and phrases
afterwards ambassador answer appeared army Biographia Britannica Bishop BRIDGEWATER TREATISES Burnet Cardinal de Bouillon cause Cavaliers character Charles Charles II civil Clarendon Colonel Hutchinson Comenge conduct Council court Cromwell death declared desired Duplessis Mornay Earl Edition Edmund Ludlow Eikon Basilikè enemies England English factions Fairfax faithful father favour feelings France friends Gauden give Henry History honour House of Commons interests James James II John Lilburne judges justice king king's letter liberty Lilburne's lived London Long Parliament Lord Hollis Louis XIV Ludlow Ludlow's Memoirs Majesty manuscript matter Memoirs of Colonel ment mind Monk moral narrative nation never opinion Owthorpe party passions peace political Portrait Presbyterians present Prince prisoner refused republican Restoration revolution of 1688 Royalists says sent sincere Sir John Reresby soon Star Chamber things Thomas thought tion told took Translated truth Vevey Warwick wife wished write
Popular passages
Page 181 - The particular you mention has indeed been mentioned to me, as a secret ; I am sorry I ever knew it ; and when it ceases to be a secret, it will please none but MR. MILTON...
Page 68 - ... he fell from his duty, and all his former friends, and prostituted himself to the vile office of celebrating the infamous acts of those who were in rebellion against the King ; which he did so meanly, that he seemed to all men to have lost his wits when he left his honesty; and so shortly after died miserable and neglected, and deserves to be forgotten.
Page 77 - I knew not, very ordinarily apparelled, for it was a plain cloth suit, which seemed to have been made by an ill country tailor : his linen was plain and not very clean, and I remember a speck or two of blood upon his little band, which was not much larger than his collar : his hat was without a hat-band, his stature was of a good size, his sword stuck close to his side, his countenance swollen and reddish, his voice sharp and untunable, and his eloquence full of fervour, for the subjectmatter would...
Page 32 - high carriages' of Holies and Company, he whispers Edmund Ludlow who sat by him, " These men will never leave till the Army pull them out by the ears...
Page 121 - I entertained myself with elder company, to whom I was very acceptable ; and living in the house with many persons that had a great deal of wit, and very profitable serious discourses being frequent at my father's table and in my mother's drawing-room, I was very attentive to all, and gathered up things that I would utter again to great admiration of many that took my memory and imitation for wit.
Page 42 - That which we fought for,' said I, ' that the nation might be governed by its own consent.' ' I am,' said he, ' as much for a government by consent as any man ; but where shall we find that consent...