. The life of Edward, Earl of Clarendon, Lord High Chancellor of England, and Chancellor of the University of Oxford ... the Prince : And this was thelafl Time the Chancellor ever faw that graciousand excellent King. I t was upon the 4th of March, in the Year 1644, Mi cbancd-that the Prince parted from the King his Father. JBgJ*He lodged that Night vxFarringdon; having made/^^*his Journey thither, in one continued Storm of Rain, j^^^from the Minute He left Oxford: And from thence tytktGtukwent the next Day, to the Garrifon of the Devizes jand the third to the City of Bath ?> which being afa


. The life of Edward, Earl of Clarendon, Lord High Chancellor of England, and Chancellor of the University of Oxford ... the Prince : And this was thelafl Time the Chancellor ever faw that graciousand excellent King. I t was upon the 4th of March, in the Year 1644, Mi cbancd-that the Prince parted from the King his Father. JBgJ*He lodged that Night vxFarringdon; having made/^^*his Journey thither, in one continued Storm of Rain, j^^^from the Minute He left Oxford: And from thence tytktGtukwent the next Day, to the Garrifon of the Devizes jand the third to the City of Bath ?> which being afafe Place, and within feven, or eight Miles ofBrif- tol\ i^s *fo LIFE of Part III. tol; He ftaid there two, or three Days. And in thisJourney the Chancellor was firft afTaulted with theGout; having never had the leaft Apprehenfion ofit before; but from his coming to Batb, He wasnot able to ftand; and fo went by Coach to Brijiol ?,where in few Days He recovered that firft Lame-nefs; which ever after afflicted him too fo the Year 1644 ended, which (hall concludethis Part. Montpclier, 6tb November, The ( *9S ) The LIFE of Edward Earl of Clarendon From his Birth to the Reftoration of theRoyal Family in 1660. PART the FOURTH. A Very particular Memorial of all materialAffairs in the Weft, during the fubfequentYear of 1645, during the Princes Refi-dence in the Weft—The State and Temper of thatCountry, after the Defeat of his Majeftys Army atNafeby—The feveral Plots and Devices of the LordGoring, to get the Prince into his Power—TheDebauchery of that Army, and amongft the Officersof it; and the Defeats it fuffered from the Enemy,through that Debauchery—Gorings Departure outof the Kingdom ; and the Pofture he left his Armyin—The beating up of their Quarters afterwards—The entering of Fairfax into the Weft with his Ar-my •, and his fudden taking the Towns there—The mutinous Behaviour of Sir Richard Greenvil,and the Quarrels and Conflicts between the Troops


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