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" Though the loss of Bristol be a great blow to me, yet your surrendering it as you did is of so much affliction to me, that it makes me not only forget the consideration of that place, but is likewise the greatest trial of my constancy that hath yet befallen... "
The History of the Rebellion and Civil Wars in England: Begun in the Year 1641 - Page 93
by Edward Hyde Earl of Clarendon - 1888
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The History of the Rebellion and Civil Wars in England ..., Volume 2, Part 2

Edward Hyde Earl of Clarendon - Great Britain - 1707 - 300 pages
...Letter te Ршкс Rupert. Hereford i±& Sept. i6tf. Nephew, n» Ki*&'' "THOUGH the lofs ofBriftol be a great blow to me, yet your Surrendering it: as you did, is offo much affliction to " " after one that is fo near me as You are, both in Blood and " Friendfl]<p,...
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Original letters, illustrative of English history; with notes and ..., Volume 3

sir Henry Ellis - Great Britain - 1824 - 428 pages
...14»' Sept. ' NEPHEW 1645 ' THOUGH the loss of Bristol be a great blow to me, yet your sur' rendering it as you did, is of so much affliction to me, that it makes me ' not only forget the consideration of that place, but is likewise the greatest • trial of my constancy...
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To 1726

Sir Henry Ellis - Great Britain - 1824 - 430 pages
...14th Sept. ' NEPHEW 1645 ' THOUGH the loss of Bristol be a great blow to me, yet your sur* rendering it as you did, is of so much affliction to me, that it makes me ' not only forget the consideration of that place, but is likewise the greatest ' trial of my constancy...
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Original Letters, Illustrative of English History: To 1726

Henry Ellis - Great Britain - 1824 - 434 pages
...your sur' rendering it as you did, is of so much affliction to me, that it makes me ' not only forget the consideration of that place, but is likewise the greatest ' trial of rny constancy that hath yet befallen me ; for what is to be done, * after one that is so near me as...
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To 1726

Henry Ellis - Great Britain - 1825 - 438 pages
...your sur' rendering it as you did, is of so much affliction to me, that it makes me ' not only forget the consideration of that place, but is likewise the...that hath yet befallen me ; for what is to be done, 1 after one that is so near me as you are, both in blood and friendship, sub' mils himself to so mean...
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The Eclectic review. vol. 1-New [8th], Volume 23

1825 - 604 pages
...military skill many of the monarch's misfortunes may be attributed. ' Nephew, " Though the loss of Bristol be a great blow to me, yet your surrendering it as...did, is of so much affliction to me that it makes me not only forget the consideration of that place, but is likewise the greatest trial of my constancy...
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The Eclectic Review, Volume 23

English literature - 1825 - 624 pages
...military skill many of the monarch's misfortunes may be attributed. ' Nephew, ' Though the loss of Bristol be a great blow to me, yet your surrendering it as...did, is of so much affliction to me that it makes me not only forget the consideration of that place, but is likewise the greatest trial of my constancy...
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Memoirs of the Court of King Charles the First, Volume 2

Lucy Aikin - Great Britain - 1833 - 636 pages
...in," he thence addressed to Rupert the following bitter letter. " Nephew! Though the loss of Bristol be a great blow to me, yet your surrendering it as...did, is of so much affliction to me that it makes me not only forget the consideration of that place, but is likewise the greatest trial of my constancy...
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Biographia Borealis: Or, Lives of Distinguished Northerns

Hartley Coleridge - Biography - 1833 - 764 pages
...those who ignorantly imagine that Kings have no hearts : — " Nephew, Though the loss of Bristol IK; a great blow to me, yet your surrendering it as you...did is of so much affliction to me, that it makes me not only forget the consideration of that place, but is likewise the greatest trial of my constancy...
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1669-1683

Edmund Lodge - Great Britain - 1835 - 312 pages
...whom he had loved and indulged with the tenderness of a parent. " Nephew, " Though the loss of Bristol be a great blow to me, yet your surrendering it as...did is of so much affliction to me that it makes me not only forget the consideration of that place, but is likewise the greatest trial of my constancy...
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