| Edward Hyde Earl of Clarendon - 1889 - 398 Seiten
...complied with his good pleasure, and courted his protection, he used a wonderful civility, generosity, and bounty. To reduce three nations, which perfectly...denied him. To manifest which, there needs only two instances. The first is, when those of the Valley of Lucerne had unwarily rebelled against the duke... | |
| Sir Henry Craik - 1894 - 628 Seiten
...complied with his good pleasure and courted his protection, he used a wonderful civility, generosity, and bounty. To reduce three nations, which perfectly...denied him. To manifest which there needs only two instances. The first is when those of the valley of Lucerne had unwarily rebelled against the Duke... | |
| Sir Henry Craik - 1894 - 624 Seiten
...complied with his good pleasure and courted his protection, he used a wonderful civility, generosity, and bounty To reduce three nations, which perfectly...denied him. To manifest which there needs only two instances. The first is when those of the valley of Lucerne had unwarily rebelled against the Duke... | |
| George Henry Clark - 1895 - 360 Seiten
...where his friendship was current at the value he put upon it. As they did all sacrifice their honor and their interest to his pleasure, so there is nothing...denied him. To manifest which, there needs only two instances. The first is when those of the valley of Lucerne had unwarily rebelled against the Duke... | |
| John Clark Ridpath - 1898 - 536 Seiten
...where his friendship was current at the value he put upon it. As they did all sacrifice their honor and their interest to his pleasure, so there is nothing...that either of them would have denied him. . . . To conclude his character : Cromwell was not so far a man of blood as to follow Machiavel's method ; which... | |
| Frederic Harrison - 1898 - 248 Seiten
...hard to discover," wrote Clarendon, " which feared him most, France, Spain, or the Low Countries ; " " There is nothing he could have demanded that either of them would have denied him." But, as in his own age, so perhaps still, the memory of Cromwell has impressed itself on the imagination... | |
| David Josiah Brewer, Edward Archibald Allen, William Schuyler - 1900 - 464 Seiten
...where his friendship was current at the value he put upon it. As they did all sacrifice their honor and their interest to his pleasure, so there is nothing...denied him. To manifest which there needs only two instances. The first is when those of the valley of Lucerne had unwarily rebelled against the Duke... | |
| Harry Thurston Peck - 1901 - 444 Seiten
...where his friendship was current at the value he put upon it. As they did all sacrifice their honor and their interest to his pleasure, so there is nothing...that either of them would have denied him. . . . To conclude his character : Cromwell was not so far a man of blood as to follow Machiavel's method; which... | |
| John Clark Ridpath - 1903 - 542 Seiten
...where his friendship was current at the value he put upon it. As they did all sacrifice their honor and their interest to his pleasure, so there is nothing...demanded that either of them would have denied him. . . . those, and extirpate their families, who are friends to the old one. It was confidently reported... | |
| Henry Smith Williams - 1904 - 710 Seiten
...but a shadow of the glory he had abroad. It was hard to discover, which feared him most, France, or Spain, or the Low Countries, where his friendship...demanded, that either of them would have denied him. To conclude his character, Cromwell was not so far a man of blood, as to follow Machiavel's method; which... | |
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