| Edward Hyde Earl of Clarendon - Great Britain - 1826 - 628 pages
...misery in view, which shortly after fell out. It could never be hoped, that more sober and dispassionate men would ever meet together in that place, or fewer who brought ill purposes with them ; nor could any man imagine what offence they had given, which put the king upon?... | |
| Samuel March Phillipps - Crime - 1826 - 510 pages
...misery in view, which shortly after fell out. It could never be hoped, that more sober and dispassionate men would ever meet together in that place, or fewer who brought ill purposes with them ; nor could any man imagine what offence they had given, which put the King upon... | |
| Edward Hyde (1st earl of Clarendon.) - 1826 - 624 pages
...misery in view, which shortly after fell out. It could never be hoped, that more sober and dispassionate men would ever meet together in that place, or fewer who brought ill purposes with them ; nor could any man imagine what offence they had given, which put the king upon... | |
| George William Johnson - Great Britain - 1835 - 398 pages
...weeks. The same historian remarked that, " it could never be hoped that more sober and dispassionate men would ever meet together in that place, or fewer who brought ill-purposes with them ; nor could any man imagine what offence they had given which put the king upon... | |
| George William Johnson - Great Britain - 1835 - 426 pages
...Table Talk, s. Ship Money. remarked that, " it could never be hoped that more sober and dispassionate men would ever meet together in that place, or fewer who brought ill-purposes with them ; nor could any man imagine what offence they had given which put the king upon... | |
| Benjamin Martyn, Andrew Kippis - Great Britain - 1836 - 464 pages
...mons. Lord Clarendon acknowledges, " that it could never be hoped that more sober and dispassionate men would ever meet together in that place, or fewer who brought ill purposes with them ;" and no one could imagine what offence they had given, which put the king upon... | |
| Benjamin Martyn - 1836 - 882 pages
...mons. Lord Clarendon acknowledges, " that it could never be hoped that more sober and dispassionate men would ever meet together in that place, or fewer who brought ill purposes with them ;" and no one could imagine what offence they had given, which put the king upon... | |
| Thomas Babington Macaulay Baron Macaulay - English essays - 1840 - 512 pages
...him service.' ' It could never be hoped,' he observes elsewhere, ' that more sober or dispassionate men would ever meet together in that place, or fewer who brought ill purposes with them.' In this Parliament Hampden took his seat as member for Buckinghamshire ; and thenceforward,... | |
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