At he outbreak of the Civil War in 1642 he at once joined Charles, and was made major-general of the foot. His characteristic battle-prayer at the Battle of Edgehill has become famous: "O Lord, Thou knowest how busy I must be this day. If I forget Thee, do not forget me. March on, boys!" At Gloucester he cornmanded a division, and at the first Battle of Newbury (1643)[?] he led the infantry of the royal army. With Ralph Hopton, in 1644, he served at Arundel and Cheriton[?]. At the second Battle of Newbury (1644)[?] he made a gallant and memorable defence of Shaw House. He was made a baron by the king, and at the Battle of Naseby he once more commanded the main body of the foot. He afterwards served in the west, and with 1500 men fought stubbornly but vainly at the last battle for the king at Stow-on-the-Wold (March 1646).
His scrupulous sense of honour forbade him to take any part in the Second Civil War, as he had given his parole at Stow-on-the-Wold; but he had to undergo his share of the discomforts that were the lot of the vanquished royalists. He died in February 1651/2. The barony became extinct in 1668.
Text originally from Britannica 1911
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