Prose Life of StraffordPublisht for The Browning Society by K. Paul, Trench, Trübner, 1892 - 319 pages |
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Page vii
... truth from age to age . " Is it not clear that the passage in italics is a poet's conception , and not a historian's ? Is it not clear that Browning had thought of a character - study of Strafford , Eliot and Vane , a monodrama of each ...
... truth from age to age . " Is it not clear that the passage in italics is a poet's conception , and not a historian's ? Is it not clear that Browning had thought of a character - study of Strafford , Eliot and Vane , a monodrama of each ...
Page ix
... truth seemed likely to fall in his way , his pen infallibly waddled off from it . " : On p . 6 , I think this opinion of James I is also Browning's " He was not an absolute fool , and little more can be said of him . " Also , above it ...
... truth seemed likely to fall in his way , his pen infallibly waddled off from it . " : On p . 6 , I think this opinion of James I is also Browning's " He was not an absolute fool , and little more can be said of him . " Also , above it ...
Page xvi
... truth . To judge Strafford fairly and to represent him truly , we have to take into account what he aimed at , as well as what he achieved , and to consider his political creed in close relation to the conditions of his time , and the ...
... truth . To judge Strafford fairly and to represent him truly , we have to take into account what he aimed at , as well as what he achieved , and to consider his political creed in close relation to the conditions of his time , and the ...
Page xxiv
... truth was rapidly becoming a mere phrase . / " Divide not , " he warned the Irish Parliament , " between the interests of the King and his people , as if there were one being of the King , and another being of his people . This is the ...
... truth was rapidly becoming a mere phrase . / " Divide not , " he warned the Irish Parliament , " between the interests of the King and his people , as if there were one being of the King , and another being of his people . This is the ...
Page xxviii
... truth in this protest . Wentworth did not share his master's dread and hatred of parliaments . He thought that a temporary intermission of such assemblies was necessary until the " peccant humour " was purged forth , " that once rightly ...
... truth in this protest . Wentworth did not share his master's dread and hatred of parliaments . He thought that a temporary intermission of such assemblies was necessary until the " peccant humour " was purged forth , " that once rightly ...
Other editions - View all
Prose Life of Strafford Robert Browning,Fellow and Tutor in Philosophy John Foster,John Foster No preview available - 2016 |
Common terms and phrases
affairs amongst answer army assured beseech betwixt bill of attainder blessing Browning Buckingham cause charge Charles Clarendon common conceive consider Cottington council counsel court crown Custos Rotulorum David Foulis deputy's desire despatch duty earl of Strafford England English father favour Foulis friends give grace hand hath hear honour hope humbly impeachment Ireland Irish judge judgment justice king king's kingdom lady Laud letter Loftus London lord deputy lord Wentworth lordship majesty majesty's master means ment minister Mountnorris never observes occasion opinion parliament party passed person Petition of Right pleased present proceedings protest reason refused respect Rushworth S. R. Gardiner Savile secretary sir George Radcliffe sir John Savile sir Thomas Wentworth Strafford Papers sure thing Thomas Wentworth thought tion trust truth unto Wandesford Wentworth Woodhouse wisdom words writes wrote Yorkshire
Popular passages
Page 240 - You need not use all this art to tell me that you have a mind to leave us. But remember what I tell you : you are going to be undone. And remember also, that though you leave us, I will never leave you while your head is upon your shoulders...
Page 274 - I should have spoken to my Lord's Grace of Canterbury. You shall desire the Archbishop to lend me his prayers this night, and to give me his blessing when I do go abroad to-morrow; and to be in his window, that by my last farewell I may give him thanks for this and all his other former favors.
Page 268 - I will not say that your complying with me in this my intended mercy, shall make me more willing, but certainly it will make me more cheerful in granting your just grievances. But if no less than his life can satisfy my people, I must say Fiat Justitia.
Page 277 - I have done 5 one stroke will make my wife husbandless, my dear children fatherless, and my poor servants masterless, and separate me from my dear brother and all my friends ; but let God be to you and them all in all.
Page 264 - ... abilities of his, whereof God hath given him the use, but the devil the application. In a word, I believe him to be still that grand apostate to the Commonwealth, who must not expect to be pardoned in this world till he be dispatched to the other. And yet let me tell you, Mr. Speaker, my hand must not be to that dispatch. I protest, as my conscience stands informed, I had rather it were off.
Page 257 - You have an army in Ireland that you may employ to reduce this kingdom to obedience.
Page 161 - He wrote in the same strain to his friend Laud. " I can now say the King is as absolute here as any prince in the whole world can be, and may be still if it be not spoiled on that side.
Page 248 - that, having tried the affections of his people, he was to do everything that power would admit ; and that His Majesty had tried all ways and was refused, and should be acquitted towards God and man ; and that he had an army in Ireland which he might employ to reduce this kingdom.
Page 268 - I did yesterday satisfy the justice of the kingdom, by passing of the bill of attainder against the earl of Strafford ; but mercy being as inherent and inseparable to a king as justice, I desire at this time, in some measure, to show that likewise, by suffering that unfortunate man to fulfil the natural course of his life in a close imprisonment...
Page 292 - ... look equally on both, weave, twist these two together in all their counsels ; study, labour, to preserve each without diminishing or enlarging either ; and by running in the worn wonted channels, treading the ancient bounds, cut off early all disputes from betwixt them. For whatever he be which ravels forth into questions the right of a king and of a people shall never be able to wrap them up again into the comeliness and order he found them.