In a word, he was a man, that whoever shall, after him, deserve best of the English nation, he can never think himself undervalued, when he shall hear, that his courage, virtue, and fidelity, is laid in the balance with, and compared to, that of the lord... Memoirs of Prince Rupert, and the Cavaliers: Including Their Private ... - Página 398de Eliot Warburton (i.e. Bartholomew Elliott George) - 1849Vista completa - Acerca de este libro
| John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell, Henry T. Steele - 1852 - 610 páginas
...and Church triumphant. " Lord Clarendon's conclusion needs no comment, nor admits of any addition : ' . From the extracts we have given, our readers will see that the language can never think himself undervalued when he shall hear that bis courage, virtue, and fidelity is laid... | |
| George Bellett - 1856 - 290 páginas
...and of the Christian courage with which he submitted to it, thus sums up his description of him :—" In a word, he was a man, that whoever shall after...shall hear that his courage, virtue, and fidelity is laid in the balance with, and compared to that of Lord Capel." .. Vol. in, p. 273. "appoint, and... | |
| Edmund Lodge - 1859 - 914 páginas
...Westminster, 9 March 1648 — 9 ; leaving behind him a reputation on which Lord Clarendon remarks, " Whoever shall after him deserve best of the English...shall hear that his courage, virtue, and fidelity is kid in the balance with, and compared to that of the Lord Capel." Sir Henry Capel, his second son,... | |
| William Lennox Lascelles Fitzgerald Baron De Ros - 1866 - 358 páginas
...with the same cheerfulness to obey the first summons when he was called out, which was quickly after. In a word, he was a man, that whoever shall, after...shall hear, that his courage, virtue, and fidelity, is laid in the balance with, and compared to, that of the Lord Capel." COLONEL BLOOD'S ATTEMPT TO STEAL... | |
| Joseph Hughes - 1866 - 332 páginas
...enterprises of the greatest hazard and danger, and continued to the end without ever making one false step. " In a word, he was a man, that whoever shall, after...of the English nation, he can never think himself but tell them, that the question was now, whether they would preserve the most bitter and most implacable... | |
| 1890 - 552 páginas
...less beautiful : ' In a word, he was a man that whoever shall after deserve best in this nation shall never think himself undervalued when he shall hear that his courage, virtue, and fidelity is laid in the balance with and compared to that of the Lord Capel ' (xi. 267). There is one set of... | |
| John Holmes Agnew, Walter Hilliard Bidwell, Henry T. Steele - 1877 - 812 páginas
...wisdom to use a silent scorn." It was of this model Christian gentleman that Lord Clarendon wrote : " He was a man that whoever shall after him deserve...laid in the balance with, and compared to, that of the Lord Capel." Lord Capel's saying may be termed a familiar scriptural maxim inculcated from the... | |
| Walter Money - 1881 - 286 páginas
...with exemplary firmness died on the scaffold, March 9th, 1648-9. "He was a man," says Lord Clarendon, "that, whoever shall after him deserve best of the...nation, he can never think himself undervalued when we shall hear that his courage, virtue, and fidelity is laid in the balance with, and compared to,... | |
| Walter Money - 1884 - 328 páginas
...with exemplary firmness died on the scaffold, March 9th, 1648-9. "He was a man," says Lord Clarendon, "that, whoever shall, after him, deserve best of the...shall hear, that his courage, virtue, and fidelity, is laid in the balance with, and compared to, that of the Lord Capell." LOKD HOPTON. Ralph Hopton,... | |
| Walter Money - 1884 - 450 páginas
...with exemplary firmness died on the scaffold, March 9th, 1648-9. "He was a man," says Lord Clarendon, "that, whoever shall, after him, deserve best of the English nation, he can never think himself under- valued, when he shall hear, that his courage, virtue, and fidelity, is laid in the balance with,... | |
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