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t cannot be believed but that they will do all that lies in their power to hinder it"--_Swift_. By delivering him up for money. Hellish Scottish dogs! _Ibid_. [par. 31] _Clarendon_. If he [Montrevil] were too sanguine ... when he signed that engagement upon the first of April, etc.--_Swift_. April fool.[6] [Footnote 6: The words quoted are the side note, which is not printed in the edition of 1888 [T.S.]] P. 17 [par. 33] _Clarendon_. In this perplexity, he [the King] chose rather to commit himself to the Scots army--_Swift_. To be delivered up for money. _Ibid_. [ditto] _Clarendon_. He left Oxford, ... leaving those of his council in Oxford who were privy to his going out, not informed whether he would go to the Scots army, etc.--_Swift_. Which would betray him, though his countrymen. _Ibid_. [ditto] _Clarendon_ [The King,] in the end, went into the Scots army before Newark--_Swift_. Prodigious weakness, to trust the malicious Scotch hell-hounds. P. 17. [par. 34.] _Clarendon_. The Scottish commissioners at London [assured the Parliament] ... that all their orders would meet with an absolute obedience in their army.--_Swift_. No doubt of it. P. 18. [par. 35.] _Clarendon_, in the text of the sermon preached at Newark before the King:--"And all _the men of Judah_ answered the men of Israel, Because the King is near of kin to us: wherefore then be ye angry for this matter?"--_Swift._ Scotch, (opposite to Judah). P. 21. [par. 41.] _Clarendon_, Lord Digby and Lord Jermin said:--that there should be an army of thirty thousand men immediately transported into England, with the Prince of Wales in the head of them.--_Swift_. Gasconade. P. 23. [par. 50.] _Clarendon_. The Parliament made many sharp instances that the King might be delivered into their hands; and that the Scots army would return into their own country, having done what they were sent for, and the war being at an end.--_Swift_. By the event they proved true Scots. _Ibid_. [par. 51.] _Clarendon_. [The Scots] made as great profession to him [the King,] of their duty and good purposes, which they said they would manifest as soon as it should be _seasonable_.--_Swift_. See the event;--still Scots. _Ibid_. [par. 52.] _Clarendon_, the Marquess of Montrose.--_Swift_ The only honest Scot. P. 24. [par. 53.] _Clarendon_. [It] is still believed, that if his Majesty would have been induced to have satisfied them in that particular [the extirpation of
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