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War & Peace Quote by William Laud

"The Lord receive my soul, and have mercy on me, and bless this kingdom with peace and charity, that there may not be this effusion of Christian blood amongst them"

About this Quote

A man about to be executed tries to turn his death into a final sermon - and a final alibi. William Laud, Archbishop of Canterbury and one of the most polarizing clerics of the English Civil War era, frames his last words as a private prayer, but it’s staged for a public audience hungry for meaning. The opening plea - "receive my soul" - does the required work of Christian humility. Then the sentence pivots into politics: "bless this kingdom with peace and charity". That "kingdom" is doing heavy lifting. Laud isn’t just asking for personal salvation; he’s insisting on national unity under the religious order he spent his career enforcing.

The sharpest phrase is "effusion of Christian blood". It’s a grim euphemism that both acknowledges the coming violence and narrows the tragedy to an intra-Christian civil conflict, not a battle between faith and unbelief. Subtext: the war is especially obscene because it’s fratricidal, and the people driving it are failing at the most basic Christian duty. It also subtly reframes his enemies as the true extremists: if Christians are slaughtering Christians, someone has abandoned "charity."

Context makes the restraint pointed. Laud was impeached by Parliament, blamed for "popish" innovations and for tightening royal control over worship. His prayer sidesteps the charges and claims the moral high ground: whatever his policies, he meets death as a pastor asking for mercy and peace. It’s both genuine devotion and strategic legacy management - sanctifying his own exit while warning that the nation will pay for tearing itself apart.

Quote Details

TopicPrayer
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Laud, William. (2026, January 16). The Lord receive my soul, and have mercy on me, and bless this kingdom with peace and charity, that there may not be this effusion of Christian blood amongst them. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-lord-receive-my-soul-and-have-mercy-on-me-and-100248/

Chicago Style
Laud, William. "The Lord receive my soul, and have mercy on me, and bless this kingdom with peace and charity, that there may not be this effusion of Christian blood amongst them." FixQuotes. January 16, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-lord-receive-my-soul-and-have-mercy-on-me-and-100248/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"The Lord receive my soul, and have mercy on me, and bless this kingdom with peace and charity, that there may not be this effusion of Christian blood amongst them." FixQuotes, 16 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-lord-receive-my-soul-and-have-mercy-on-me-and-100248/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.

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William Laud (October 7, 1573 - January 10, 1645) was a Clergyman from England.

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