Charles II

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Osmund Airy 1904
English
  • Ch. 1: Prince of Wales, Pt. 1
  • Ch. 1: Prince of Wales, Pt. 2
  • Ch. 1: Prince of Wales, Pt. 3
  • Ch. 1: Prince of Wales, Pt. 4
  • Ch. 1: Prince of Wales, Pt. 5
  • Ch. 1: Prince of Wales, Pt. 6
  • Ch. 1: Prince of Wales, Pt. 7
  • Ch. 2: Scotland, Exile, and Restoration, Pt. 1
  • Ch. 2: Scotland, Exile, and Restoration, Pt. 2
  • Ch. 2: Scotland, Exile, and Restoration, Pt. 3
  • Ch. 2: Scotland, Exile, and Restoration, Pt. 4
  • Ch. 2: Scotland, Exile, and Restoration, Pt. 5
  • Ch. 2: Scotland, Exile, and Restoration, Pt. 6
  • Ch. 2: Scotland, Exile, and Restoration, Pt. 7
  • Ch. 3: Charles and Clarendon, Pt. 1
  • Ch. 3: Charles and Clarendon, Pt. 2
  • Ch. 3: Charles and Clarendon, Pt. 3
  • Ch. 3: Charles and Clarendon, Pt. 4
  • Ch. 3: Charles and Clarendon, Pt. 5
  • Ch. 3: Charles and Clarendon, Pt. 6
  • Ch. 3: Charles and Clarendon, Pt. 7
  • Ch. 4: Charles, Louis, and Parliament, Pt. 1
  • Ch. 4: Charles, Louis, and Parliament, Pt. 2
  • Ch. 4: Charles, Louis, and Parliament, Pt. 3
  • Ch. 4: Charles, Louis, and Parliament, Pt. 4
  • Ch. 4: Charles, Louis, and Parliament, Pt. 5
  • Ch. 4: Charles, Louis, and Parliament, Pt. 6
  • Ch. 4: Charles, Louis, and Parliament, Pt. 7
  • Ch. 4: Charles, Louis, and Parliament, Pt. 8
  • Ch. 5: The Popish Terror and the Triumph of the Court, Pt. 1
  • Ch. 5: The Popish Terror and the Triumph of the Court, Pt. 2
  • Ch. 5: The Popish Terror and the Triumph of the Court, Pt. 3
  • Ch. 5: The Popish Terror and the Triumph of the Court, Pt. 4
  • Ch. 5: The Popish Terror and the Triumph of the Court, Pt. 5
  • Ch. 5: The Popish Terror and the Triumph of the Court, Pt. 6
  • Ch. 5: The Popish Terror and the Triumph of the Court, Pt. 7
  • Ch. 5: The Popish Terror and the Triumph of the Court, Pt. 8
This engaging book is an inestimable resource for any student of the merry monarch, Charles II. "Odd's fish," he said "I am an ugly fellow!" Yet, as Airy writes, "his power of imagination, his intuitive perception of character, his faculty of statecraft, enabled him to gauge the strength or weakness of an opponent or the frailty of an adherent, and to slip by difficulties which it was inconvenient to meet." But alas, Charles's moral languor led to the dominance of French gold in English affairs, and to parliamentary factions and courtly intrigues, which culminated in the judicial murders of the Popish Plot. (Summary by Pamela Nagami, M.D.)

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