| George Francis Dawson - Soldiers - 1887 - 652 pages
...for better and worse, and so many leagues offensive and defensive, as if he thought himself obliged to love all his friends and to make war. upon all...those he looked upon as his enemies with the utmost rigor and animosity, and was not easily induced to a reconciliation. And yet there arr some examples... | |
| United States. 49th Congress, 2d session, 1886-1887 - 1887 - 236 pages
...for better and worse, and so many leagues offensive and defensive, as if he thought himself obliged to love all his friends and to make war upon all they...angry with, let the cause be what it would. And it can not be denied that he was an enemy in the same excess, and prosecuted those he looked upon as his... | |
| Edward Hyde Earl of Clarendon - Great Britain - 1888 - 670 pages
...leagues offensive and defensive ; as if he thought himself obliged to love all his friends, and to mate war upon all they were angry with, let the cause be...rigour and animosity, and was not easily induced to a reconciliation. And yet there were some examples of his receding in that particular. And in highest... | |
| Edward Hyde Earl of Clarendon - Great Britain - 1888 - 664 pages
...and defensive ; as if he thought himself obliged to love all his friends, and to make war upon aU. they were angry with, let the cause be what it would....rigour and animosity, and was not easily induced to a reconciliation. And yet then; were some examples of his receding in that particular. And in highest... | |
| Edward Hyde Earl of Clarendon - Literary Criticism - 1889 - 398 pages
...for better and worse, and so many leagues offensive and defensive; as if he thought himself obliged to love all his friends, and to make war upon all...rigour and animosity, and was not easily induced to a reconciliation. And yet there were some examples of his receding in that particular. And in the highest... | |
| Thomas Longueville, Romish recusant - Laud, William - 1894 - 534 pages
...for better and worse, and so many leagues offensive and defensive ; as if he thought himself obliged to love all his Friends, and to make war upon all...were angry with, let the cause be what it would." 2 It was not until a year after the time with which I am now dealing (1620-21), that Laud's great intimacy... | |
| Early English newspapers - 1895 - 654 pages
...affection to his friends was so vehement that it was so many marriages for better and worse. . . . And it cannot be denied that he was an enemy in the same excess . . . and was not easily induced to a reconciliation." Too proud, as he was too open-hearted to stoop to dissimulation... | |
| Edward Boucher James - Isle of Wight (England) - 1896 - 730 pages
...for better and worse, and so many leagues offensive and defensive ; as if he thought himself obliged to love all his friends, and to make war upon all...were angry with, let the cause be what it would.' With this disposition he was eager to serve his relations, his flatterers, and his servile creatures.... | |
| Philip Gibbs - Great Britain - 1908 - 512 pages
...for better or worse, and so many leagues, offensive and defensive ; as if he thought himself obliged to love all his friends, and to make war upon all...rigour and animosity, and was not easily induced to a reconciliation. And yet there were some examples of his receding in that particular. And in the highest... | |
| Philip Gibbs - Great Britain - 1908 - 506 pages
...for better or worse, and so many leagues, offensive and defensive; as if he thought himself obliged to love all his friends, and to make war upon all...rigour and animosity, and was not easily induced to a reconciliation. And yet there were some examples of his receding in that particular. And in the highest... | |
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