Part II: 1625
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This chapter marks second Stuart successions 1625 in poems, by some of the greatest writers of the age. These writers include John Rous, James Shirley, John Donne, and George Eglisha. The succession of 1625 was in most respects extremely straightforward. Indeed one of the great attractions of the Stuarts in 1603 was that James had three children, including two boys, as a result virtually securing a clear dynastic line of succession. In the series of conflicts that would become known in retrospect as the Thirty Years War (1618-48), James I had positioned himself as a monarch committed to peace. But King Charles was determined to take a different stance. At the death of James, observers watched keenly for signs of Charles's intentions; and his shift in subsequent years away from his father's Calvinism, towards doctrines loosely labelled 'Arminian', in many respects precipitated the national divisions of the 1630s and 1640s.

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