Their numberless peculations, and short-comings at critical moments, had exasperated him into a conviction that they were necessary evils, and rascals to a man by right of office, and only to be dealt with as such.
Holy Thursday, he was interrupted by a mob, who demanded that he should confirm the appointment of a favourite magistrate, and his silence only exasperated them.
The insults of the papacy had exasperated the king of England, and as he could not punish Clement, he took his revenge on the cardinal.
Frank, courageous, and proud, she did not conceal the pleasure she found in such reading; her boldness astonished the courtiers, and exasperated the clergy.
Such boldness--most extraordinary at that time-- exasperated the clergy beyond all bounds.
This so exasperated the chancellor, that, giving way to his passion, he treated Tyndale as if he had been a dog.
This proceeding of the queen's, her pride and firmness, troubled her enemies, and in their vexation they grew exasperated against her.
When the Castilian king sent two ambassadors to Seville to collect his tribute, one of them, a Jew, conducted himself so haughtily that the exasperated Moslems stabbed him to death, letting the Christians escape without serious injury.
Exasperated strangers have been heard to declare that in southern Spain you hear of but two things--Toros y Moros.
The numbness of his faculties and senses alike exasperated him, filling him with a persuasion he would say precisely those things wisdom would counsel to leave unsaid.
This exasperated them still further, and there was an universal outcry that he should beg pardon on his knees.
This exasperated the judges still more, and they condemned him to drink hemlock.
Jupiter, who had previously counselled moderation, launches his thunderbolt, and significantly causes it to fall at the feet of Minerva, who thereupon gives at once the required caution to the exasperated sovereign.
This represents the violence of the Pagan party upon its defeat, being exasperated to the exercise of greater opposition and cruelty wherever the means and the power were still in their hands.
John Hilten censured the most flagrant abuses of the monastic life, and the exasperated monks threw him into prison and treated him shamefully.
As soon as Christianity began to gain a foothold in the Roman Empire, the priests and supporters of Paganism were exasperated to the last degree, and they determined to crush out the Christian religion.
It appears from the description that this was about the last great public effort the dragon made to overwhelm the church and that he was exasperated to this supreme effort by the humiliating defeat he had suffered.
What was formerly a compliance with policy and superstition has been exasperated into a gratification of vengeance.
This treatment of his subjects and ignominious punishment of his friend outraged the pride and exasperated the passions of Philip.
These rebellious practices of Glyndwr so exasperated King Henry against the Welch people, that he enacted laws which in effect took away all their liberties.
Only the consciousness of its increasing power exasperated it against the resistance of the king; but it dared not overthrow him.
Not understanding them, they sought in vain to direct the course of events, were exasperated at their failure, and finally committed every species of violence.
He could have almost found it in his heart to strike her, but for her defenceless attitude, so exasperatedwas he, so maddened by the torrent of her words.
The defenders had set the example of merciless bloodshed, and the Romans, exasperatedto cruelty, now took no prisoners and gave no quarter.
This exasperated the two officers, and they seized him each by an arm.
At last, with great coaxing and expostulation, this state of things was reduced to the most awkward attempt at a trot, which the exasperated animal persisted in, though his efforts were broken up at every other step.
The name partially suppressed, the false history of her position, all would go to prove complicity with the criminal whom she had just exasperated into a bitter enemy.
This quite exasperated the mountaineer: almost suffocated with rage, he shook the Gipsy from his person, with the utmost disdain, and demanded the colt he had stolen from him.
From Capua to Rome six thousand crosses, each bearing a captured slave, showed how carefully and ruthlessly the man- hunt had been pursued by the frightened and exasperated Romans.
Exasperated by their treatment they were ready for any desperate enterprise against their conquerors, but Polybius endeavored to restrain them.
The support thus received from the aristocratic Fabii encouraged the commons, and the sacrifice of the family exasperated them.
He recovered sufficiently to take dinner that night, was full of his adventures, inclined perhaps to exaggerate his peril, pardonably exasperatedagainst the man who had led him through so many dangers, real and imaginary.
Then the exasperated soldiers fired into the crowd, killing five and wounding half a dozen more.
Measures so decided, policies so radical, and conduct so high-handed could not fail to arouse against Jackson a deep and exasperated opposition.
These exasperated their feelings to such a pitch that they determined to go back to their own country.
A strong rumour to the effect that Mahatma Gandhi was imprisoned spread over all parts of India and exasperated the populace.
The combination, as it was expressed in his face, might have arrested the attention of a less exasperated reasoner.
Longmore had at any rate an exasperated sense that this nobleman thought rather the less of their interesting friend on account of that very same fine difference of nature which so deeply stirred his own sympathies.
His heart, torn by sorrow, exasperated with anger, starting away from Herefordshire, he did not thus interrogate.
See now,' quod I, 'how +many men holden of this the contrary.
And whan this tree suche greetnesse hath caught as I have rehersed, the braunches than, that the frute shulde forth-bringe, 15 speche must they be nedes, in voice of prayer in complayning wyse used.
If we go further afield, we soon find several more authors, all distinct from those above-mentioned, from each other, and from Chaucer.