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HAMBDEN

Volume 8 · 349 words · 1797 Edition

(John), a celebrated patriot, descended of the ancient family of Hambden in Buckinghamshire, was born in 1594. From the university he went to the inns of court, where he made a considerable progress in the study of the law. He was chosen to serve in the parliament which began at Westminster February 5, 1626; and served in all the succeeding parliaments in the reign of Charles I. In 1636 he became universally known, by his refusal to pay ship-money, as being an illegal tax; upon which he was prosecuted, and his carriage throughout this transaction gained him a great character. When the long parliament began, the eyes of all men were fixed on him as their pater patriæ. On January 3, 1642, the king ordered articles of high treason and other misdemeanours to be prepared against Lord Kimbolton, Mr Hambden, and four other members of the House of Commons, and went to that house to seize them; but they were then retired. Mr Hambden afterwards made a speech in the house to clear himself of the charge laid against him. In the beginning of the wars he commanded a regiment of foot, and did good ser- Hamburg, vice to the parliament at the battle of Edge-hill. He received a mortal wound in an engagement with Prince Rupert, in Chalgrove-field in Oxfordshire, and died in 1643. He is said to have had the art of Socrates to a great degree, of interrogating, and under the notion of doubts, infirmating objections, so that he infused his own opinions into those from whom he pretended to learn and receive them. He was, say his panegyrist, a very wise man and of great parts; and possessed of the most absolute spirit of popularity to govern the people, that ever was in any country: He was master over all his appetites and passions, and had thereby a very great ascendant over other men's: He was of an industry and vigilance never to be tired out, of parts not to be impeded upon by the most subtle, and of courage equal to his best parts.