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" Paris do not poetise) as will show that honourable thoughts are sometimes found in the hearts of men whose fortunes are far from honour. For having first drawn a deep sigh, he said, " Do with me what ye please, and God have mercy on my soul; but as the... "
Journal of the British Archaeological Association - Page 56
by British Archaeological Association - 1867
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The British Admirals: With an Introductory View of the Naval ..., Volume 1

Robert Southey, Robert Bell - 1833 - 454 pages
...sigh, he said, " Do with me what ye please, and God have mercy on my soul; but as the Lord liveth, I will never make iron shackles for him, but will rather die the worst death that is. Is not this that Hubert who restored England to England ? He who faithfully and constantly served John in Gascony,...
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The Early Naval History of England

Robert Southey - 1835 - 376 pages
...sigh, he said, " Do with me what ye please, and God have mercy on my soul ; but as the Lord liveth, I will never make iron shackles for him, but will rather die the worst death that is. Is not this that Hubert who restored England to England1? He who faithfully and constantly served John in Gascony,...
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Half hours of English history, selected and illustr. by C. Knight, Volume 1

English history - 1851 - 706 pages
...sigh, he said, " Do with me what ye please, and God have mercy on my soul ; but as the Lord liveth, I will never make iron shackles for him, but will rather die the worst death that is. Is not this that Hubert that restored England to England Î He who faithfully and constantly served John in Gaacouy,...
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Select specimens of English prose [ed.] by E. Hughes

Edward Hughes - 1853 - 766 pages
...sigh, he said, " Do with me what ye please, and God have mercy on my soul ; but as the Lord liveth, I will never make iron shackles for him, but will rather die the worst death that is. Is not this that Hubert that restored England to England ? He who faithfully and constantly served John in Gascony,...
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Half Hours of English History: From the Roman Period to the Death of ...

1865 - 708 pages
...sigh, he said, " Do with me what ye please, and God have mercy on my soul ; but as the Lord liveth, I will never make iron shackles for him, but will rather die the worst death that is. Is not this that Hubert that restored England to England ? He who faithfully and constantly served John in Gascony,...
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Half Hours of English History: From the Roman Period to the Death of Elizabeth

Charles Knight - 1866 - 704 pages
...sigh, he said, " Do with me what ye please, and God have mercy on my soul ; but as the Lord liveth, I will never make iron shackles for him, but will rather die the worst death that is. Is not this that Hubert that restored England to England ? He who faithfully and constantly served John in Gascouy,...
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History of Battle Abbey

Catherine Lucy Wilhelmina Powlett Duchess of Cleveland, Catherine Lucy W. Powlett (duchess of Cleveland.) - 1877 - 378 pages
...years afterwards, of the feeling with which the people regarded this naval victory. Hubert de Burgh, who had been Regent of England, and husband of a Queen,...said : " I will never make iron shackles for him, but rather die the worst death that is. Is not this Hubert, who restored England to England ?"'—Speed,...
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From Edenvale to the Plains of York: Or, A Thousand Miles in the Valleys of ...

Edmund Bogg - 1894 - 370 pages
...sigh, he said : " Do with me what you please, and God have mercy on my soul ; but, as the Lord liveth, I will never make iron shackles for him, but will rather die the worst death that is. Is not this that Hubert who restored England to England ; he who faithfully served John in Gascony, Normandy, and...
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Marsh-country Rambles

Herbert Winckworth Tompkins - 1904 - 330 pages
...Burgh he refused to do so. We read that the Essex smith, sighing heavily, said : ' As the Lord liveth, I will never make iron shackles for him, but will rather die the worst death that is ! ... God be judge between him and you for using him so unjustly and inhumanly !' The story was told...
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