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" I am endeavouring to get to London , so that the conditions may be such as a gentleman may own , and that the rebels may acknowledge me king, being not without hope that I shall be able so to draw either the presbyterians or independents to side with... "
Memoirs of the Court of King Charles the First - Page 478
by Lucy Aikin - 1833
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Montrose and Covenanters: Their Characters and Conduct ..., Volume 2

Mark Napier - Covenanters - 1838 - 620 pages
...March that Charles wrote to Lord Digby a letter in which he speaks of endeavouring to get to London, " being not without hope that I shall be able so to draw either the Presbyterians or the Independents to side with me, for extirpating one or the other, that I shall be really King again....
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The History of England, Volume 2

Thomas Keightley - Great Britain - 1839 - 566 pages
...intrigued with all these parties. " I am not without hope," he writes to Digby, " that I shall be able to draw either the presbyterians or independents to...side with me for extirpating one the other that I should be really king again." He used Montreuil, the French envoy, as his agent in his dealings with...
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The History of England under the House of Stuart, including the Commonwealth ...

Robert Vaughan - Great Britain - 1840 - 506 pages
...the intentions with which it was accompanied. " Now for my own particular resolution," he writes, " I am endeavouring to get to London, so that the conditions...king, being not without hope that I shall be able to draw either the presbyterians or independents to side with me for extirpating one the other, that...
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The History of England, Volume 2

Thomas Keightley - Great Britain - 1840 - 576 pages
...intrigued with all these parties. " I am not without hope," he writes to Digby, " that I shall be able to draw either the presbyterians or independents to...side with me for extirpating one the other ; that 1 should be really king again." He used Montreuil, the French envoy, as his agent in his dealings with...
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Oliver Cromwell's Letters and Speeches: with Elucidations, Volume 1

Oliver Cromwell - Great Britain - 1845 - 598 pages
...Scotch Camp, to raise Treaties and Caballings there, had said, " — endeavoring to get to London ; being not without hope that I shall be able so to draw either the Presbyterians or the Independents to side with me for extirpating one another, that I shall be really King again."*...
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The Statesmen of the Commonwealth of England: With a Treatise on the Popular ...

John Forster - Great Britain - 1846 - 738 pages
...object, it was afterward found he had written thus to Digby : " Now, for my own particular resolution, I am endeavouring to get to London, so that the conditions...with me for extirpating one the other, that I shall be really king again. I will conclude with this assurance, that whatsoever becomes of me, by the grace...
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Letters of the Kings of England: Now First Collected from Royal ..., Volume 2

James Orchard Halliwell-Phillipps - Great Britain - 1846 - 520 pages
...message to London. Yet, whatever becomes of me, I must never forget my friends, wherever they are. I am endeavouring to get to London, so that the conditions...gentleman may own, and that the rebels may acknowledge me as king, being not without hope that I shall be able so to draw either the Presbyterians or Independents...
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Letters of the Kings of England: Now First Collected from the ..., Volume 2

James Orchard Halliwell-Phillipps - Great Britain - 1846 - 522 pages
...message to London. Yet, whatever becomes of me, I must never forget my friends, wherever they are. I am endeavouring to get to London, so that the conditions...gentleman may own, and that the rebels may acknowledge me as king, being not without hope that I shall be able so to draw either the Presbyterians or Independents...
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Letters of the Kings of England: Now First Collected from the ..., Volume 2

James Orchard Halliwell-Phillipps - Great Britain - 1848 - 516 pages
...message to London. Yet, whatever becomes of me, I must never forget my friends, wherever they are. I am endeavouring to get to London, so that the conditions may be such as a gentleman may own, and that the rebel s may acknowledge me as king, being not without hope that I shall be able so to draw either the...
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The History of the Church of England, Volume 2

John Bayly Somers Carwithen - 1849 - 632 pages
...increased, they were the more, averse to go into the army." — Baxter's Life and Times, p. 57. • "... .being not without hope that I shall be able so to...Independents to side with me, for extirpating one The English nation was now clearly divided into two religious factions, the Presbyterians and the Independents'....
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