English civil war revolutionary dialogue

How would a girl revolutionary in a story set in the English civil war react if she feared that the pro-democracy Parliamentary army had lost the war?

In the story, she sees a wounded soldier of the Parliamentary army whose uniform is so torn and faded that she fears he is retreating from a lost battle against the Royalist forces of the King. An irrational conclusion maybe, but possible.
Here’s her reaction, her dialogue, when she sees the soldier, which I’ve used in a story about the English civil war that I’m writing.
“Pray God our Parliamentary army hath not met defeat at the hands of the tyrant King.”
This tells us three things about her: that she is devout, that she strongly identifies with the Parliamentary army, and that she regards the King as a tyrant.
The last sentiment is what I’ve called revolutionary dialogue; it isn’t based on facts, it’s based on personal prejudice.
The King wasn’t a tyrant, he was just obstinate. He believed that he had a divine right to rule, a view that was opposed by Parliament and the Parliamentary army
But this is a girl who is aged about 20, she is young and is fired with revolutionary zeal.
To her, the King is a tyrant.
Because she wants to believe that he is a tyrant.