Characters from 17th Century Histories and Chronicles eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 391 pages of information about Characters from 17th Century Histories and Chronicles.

Characters from 17th Century Histories and Chronicles eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 391 pages of information about Characters from 17th Century Histories and Chronicles.
  The wish’d occasion of the Plot he takes;
  Some Circumstances finds, but more he makes. 
  By buzzing Emissaries, fills the ears
  Of listning Crouds, with Jealousies and Fears
  Of Arbitrary Counsels brought to light,
  And proves the King himself a Jebusite
  Weak Arguments! which yet he knew full well,
  Were strong with People easie to Rebel. 
  For, govern’d by the Moon, the giddy Jews
  Tread the same Track when she the Prime renews: 
  And once in twenty Years, their Scribes Record,
  By natural Instinct they change their Lord.
  Achitophel still wants a Chief, and none
  Was found so fit as Warlike Absalon
  Not, that he wish’d his Greatness to create,
  (For Polititians neither love nor hate:)
  But, for he knew, his Title not allow’d,
  Would keep him still depending on the Croud: 
  That Kingly pow’r, thus ebbing out, might be
  Drawn to the Dregs of a Democracie.

70.

THE DUKE OF BUCKINGHAM.

George Villiers, second Duke 1628.

Born 1628.  Died 1687.

By BURNET.

The first of these was a man of noble presence.  He had a great liveliness of wit, and a peculiar faculty of turning all things into ridicule with bold figures and natural descriptions.  He had no sort of literature:  Only he was drawn into chymistry:  And for some years he thought he was very near the finding the philosopher’s stone; which had the effect that attends on all such men as he was, when they are drawn in, to lay out for it.  He had no principles of religion, vertue, or friendship.  Pleasure, frolick, or extravagant diversion was all that he laid to heart.  He was true to nothing, for he was not true to himself.  He had no steadiness nor conduct:  He could keep no secret, nor execute any design without spoiling it.  He could never fix his thoughts, nor govern his estate, tho’ then the greatest in England.  He was bred about the King:  And for many years he had a great ascendent over him:  But he spake of him to all persons with that contempt, that at last he drew a lasting disgrace upon himself.  And he at length ruined both body and mind, fortune and reputation equally.  The madness of vice appeared in his person in very eminent instances; since at last he became contemptible and poor, sickly, and sunk in his parts, as well as in all other respects, so that his conversation was as much avoided as ever it had been courted.  He found the King, when he came from his travels in the year 45, newly come to Paris, sent over by his father when his affairs declined:  And finding the King enough inclined to receive ill impressions, he, who was then got into all the impieties and vices of the age, set himself to corrupt the King, in which he was too successful, being seconded in that wicked design by the Lord Percy.  And to compleat the matter, Hobbs was brought to him, under the pretence of instructing him in mathematicks:  And he laid before him his schemes, both with relation to religion and politicks, which made deep and lasting impressions on the King’s mind.  So that the main blame of the King’s ill principles, and bad morals, was owing to the Duke of Buckingham.

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Characters from 17th Century Histories and Chronicles from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.