Page:Men of Kent and Kentishmen.djvu/138

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124
MEN OF KENT

the esteem with which she was held by her contemporaries:—

"Underneath this sable herse
 Lies the subject of all verse;
Sydney's sister, Pembroke's mother;
 Death, ere thou hast slain another,
Fair and learn'd and good as she,
 Time shall throw his dart at thee."

[See "Zouch's Memoirs," "Ballard's Memoirs," and "Royal and Noble Authors."]

Algernon Sidney,

REPUBLICAN, STATESMAN, AND SOLDIER,

Was the grand-nephew of Sir Philip, being the son of Robert, second Earl of Leicester, who was the son of Sir Robert Sidney, Sir Philip's second brother. He was born at Penshurst in 1621, or 1622. His mother was Dorothy, daughter of Henry Percy, Earl of Northumberland. He was trained for military life, and accompanied his father when appointed Lord Lieutenant to Ireland. When the civil war broke out, he joined the Parliamentary Army, and served under the Earl of Manchester and Fairfax, and subsequently under his brother, Lord Lisle, in Ireland. In 1648 he was nominated a member of the Commission for the trial of the King, in which, however, he took no part. During the Protectorate he retired from public life, and lived at Penshurst, but, on the restoration of the Long Parliament, he was nominated a member of the Council of State. At the King's restoration he was absent on an embassy in Sweden, and did not return to England till