The Political Career of Oliver St. John, 1637-1649

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University of Delaware Press, 1993 - Biography & Autobiography - 153 pages
"The present study describes the political career of Oliver St. John (1598-1673), a pivotal figure in the English Revolution of 1640 to 1660. First as a member of Parliament, and then as its leader, St. John used his leadership abilities and political know-how to direct a parliamentary victory in the war." "The English Revolution was precipitated largely by a clash between King Charles I (1625-49) of England and a parliament that reacted violently against a number of Charles's fiscal and religious policies, and eventually stripped the monarchy of several of its principal powers. It was the first great clash between those defending the rights of representative assemblies and those defending the prerogatives of kings." "As a member of Parliament, Oliver St. John played a key role in the revolutionary events of the 1640s. His opposition to monarchical policies culminated in his speech supporting the execution of the King's most trusted servant, the earl of Strafford, when St. John described Strafford as "vermin" and claimed for Parliament the right to remove corrupting influences on the Crown two years before the first treatise on parliamentary sovereignty - Philip Hunton's Treatise on Monarchy - appeared." "Until 1643 Parliament's main leader was John Pym. Pym, however, died in 1643, and St. John advanced from being a stalwart defender of the constitution to a practical man of politics as he moved in the next two years into the power vacuum left by Pym. In 1642 civil war had broken out between King and Parliament, and by 1643 the war was going very badly for Parliament. St. John performed a vital service by luring the Scots into the war on Parliament's side without committing Parliament to the Presbyterian church structure favored by the Scots, but opposed by a majority in Parliament. St. John also succeeded in removing the stodgy earl of Essex as commander of the parliamentary army and replacing him with the more aggressive and resourceful Oliver Cromwell. With the appointment of Cromwell, St. John laid the groundwork for the formation of a new, better-funded fighting force, the New Model Army." "In the end the political skill of St. John would be overshadowed by the military genius of Cromwell - a genius well-suited to controlling the various agendas of postwar radical groups. Nevertheless, from 1643 to 1645, it was St. John's leadership and political abilities that delivered the military force responsible for winning the war for Parliament. Though he lost control of the revolution, then, St. John's revolutionary contributions demand recognition. William Palmer - in the first ever book-length study of the man's career - seeks to meet that demand."--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved

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Contents

Theme and Variations St Johns Early Career and the Ship Money Case
20
Coming of Age in the Short and Long Parliaments
33
Rendering to Caesar and Parliament
54
The Coming of the Civil War
67
The Reign of King John
80
Against the Current St John and Holless Ascendancy
90
Decline and Disillusion
103
Conclusion
114
Notes
120
Bibliography
140
Index
149
Copyright

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Page 51 - It was true, we give law to hares and deer, because they be beasts of chase ; but it was never accounted either cruelty, or foul play, to knock foxes and wolves on the head as they can be found, because they be beasts of prey.
Page 36 - You know what my manner of life hath been. Oh, I lived in and loved darkness, and hated light; I was a chief, the chief of sinners. This is true: I hated godliness, yet God had mercy on me.
Page 39 - { " who ' answered, " That the same that troubled him, he believed, " troubled most good men: that in such a time of confusion, so wise " a Parliament, which alone could have found remedy for it, was so
Page 35 - The Lord accept me in His Son, and give me to walk in the light, — and give us to walk in the light, as He is the light! He it is that enlighteneth our blackness, our darkness, I dare not say, He hideth His face from me. He giveth me to see light in His light. One beam in a dark place hath exceeding much refreshment in it: — blessed be His Name for shining upon so dark a heart as mine!
Page 41 - ... the first entrance upon any business that was assumed ; but a very weighty speaker ; and after he had heard a full debate, and observed how the house was like to be inclined, took up the argument, and shortly, and clearly, and craftily so stated it, that he commonly conducted it to the conclusion he desired ; and if he found he could not do that, he was never without the dexterity to divert the debate to another time, and to prevent the determining any thing in the negative, which might prove...
Page 77 - ... what they do herein hath the stamp of the royal authority, although His Majesty, seduced by evil counsel, do in his own person oppose or interrupt the same ; for the King's supreme and royal pleasure is exercised and declared in this High Court of law and council, after a more eminent and obligatory manner than it can be by personal act or resolution of his own.
Page 35 - I thankfully acknowledge your love in your kind remembrance of me upon this opportunity. Alas, you do too highly prize my lines, and my company. I may be ashamed to own your expressions, considering how unprofitable I am, and the mean improvement of my talent.
Page 39 - John, who had naturally a great cloud in his face and very seldom was known to smile, but then had a most cheerful aspect, and seeing the other melancholic, as in truth he was from his heart, asked him 'What troubled him?' who answered, 'That the same...
Page 71 - I did not dream that we should remonstrate downward, tell stories to the People, and talk of the King as of a third person.
Page 77 - This erroneous maxim being infused into princes, that their kingdoms are their own, and that they may do with them what they will, as if their kingdoms were for them, and not they for their kingdoms, was, they said, the root of all the subjects...

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