| Henry Hallam - Constitutional history - 1849 - 800 pages
...particular resolution," he says in a letter to Digby, March 26, 1646, " it is this. I am endeavoring to get to London, so that the conditions may be such...gentleman may own, and that the rebels may acknowledge nie king; being not without hope that I shall bo able so to draw either the Presbyterians or Independents... | |
| Henry Hallam - Constitutional history - 1850 - 750 pages
..." Now for my own particular resolution," he says in a letter to Digby, March 26. 1646, "it is this. I am endeavouring to get to London, so that the conditions...being not without hope that I shall be able so to draw cither the presbyterians or independents to side with me for extirpating the one or the other, that... | |
| Oliver Cromwell, Thomas Carlyle - Great Britain - 1850 - 444 pages
...Scotch Camp, to raise Treaties and Caballings there, had said, " — 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 another, that I shall be really King again."1... | |
| Isaac Disraeli - Great Britain - 1851 - 606 pages
...strange message to London, yet whatever comes of me, I must not forget my friends wherever they are. " I am endeavouring to get to London, so that the conditions...or Independents to side with me for extirpating one or the other, that I shall be really King again. " Howsoever, I desire you to assure all my friends,... | |
| Thomas Carte - Ireland - 1851 - 634 pages
...this. I am endevouring to get to London, soe that the conditions may bee such as a gentleman may owne, and that the rebels may acknowledge me king, being...with me for extirpating one the other, that I shall be really king again. Howsoeuer, I desise you to assure all my freinds, that, if I cannot live as king,... | |
| Richard Cattermole - Great Britain - 1852 - 412 pages
...strange message to London ; yet whatever becomes of me, I must not forget my friends, wherever they are. "I am endeavouring to get to London, so that the conditions...or Independents to side with me for extirpating one or the other, that I shall be really king again. " Howsoever, I desire you to assure all my friends,... | |
| Guizot (M., François) - Great Britain - 1854 - 494 pages
...without hope," he wrote to Lord Digby, on the 26th of March, a few days before he left Oxford, — " I am not without hope that I shall be able so to draw either the Presbyterians or the Independents to side with me for extirpating one the other, that I shall be really King again."1... | |
| François Pierre G. Guizot - 1854 - 520 pages
...without hope," he wrote to Lord Digby, on the 26th of March, a few days before he left Oxford, — " I am not without hope that I shall be able so to draw either the Presbyterians or the Independents to side with me for extirpating one the other, that I shall be really King again."1... | |
| John Lingard - Great Britain - 1855 - 354 pages
...tiii. 27, 97. Baillie, ii. 161, 162, 166, 171, 186, 188. 3 " I am not without hope that I shall be able to draw either the Presbyterians or Independents to side with me for extirpating the one the other, that I shall be really king again." — Carte's Ormond, iii. 462. AD 1645.] THE... | |
| Henry Hallam - Constitutional history - 1855 - 486 pages
..." Now lor my own particular resolution," he says in a letter to Digby, March 26, 1646, "It la this. I am endeavouring to get to London, so that the conditions may he such as a gentleman may own, and that the rebels may acknowledge me king; being not without hope... | |
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