The Miscellaneous Prose Works of Sir Walter Scott...R. Cadell, 1847 |
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Page ii
... Parliament -Differences between the Scottish Peers and Commoners -Reconciliation between them in consequence of the Discussion of the Peerage Question . - Debate on the Malt Tax - Motion for the Abolition of the Union - nega- tived by a ...
... Parliament -Differences between the Scottish Peers and Commoners -Reconciliation between them in consequence of the Discussion of the Peerage Question . - Debate on the Malt Tax - Motion for the Abolition of the Union - nega- tived by a ...
Page 20
... Parliament . The members of the Commission , though se- lected as favourable to King William , proved of a different opinion from the apologist of the Secre- tary of State , and reported , that the letters and instructions of Stair to ...
... Parliament . The members of the Commission , though se- lected as favourable to King William , proved of a different opinion from the apologist of the Secre- tary of State , and reported , that the letters and instructions of Stair to ...
Page 21
... Parliament should ad- dress his Majesty to send home Glenlyon and the other murderers to be tried , or should do other- wise as his Majesty pleased . The Secretary , being by this unintelligible mode of reasoning thus exposed to the ...
... Parliament should ad- dress his Majesty to send home Glenlyon and the other murderers to be tried , or should do other- wise as his Majesty pleased . The Secretary , being by this unintelligible mode of reasoning thus exposed to the ...
Page 22
... Parliament to which his rank entitled him ; and he died in 1707 , on the very day when the treaty of Union was signed , not without suspicion of suicide . Of the direct agents in the massacre , Hamilton absconded , and afterwards joined ...
... Parliament to which his rank entitled him ; and he died in 1707 , on the very day when the treaty of Union was signed , not without suspicion of suicide . Of the direct agents in the massacre , Hamilton absconded , and afterwards joined ...
Page 30
... Parliament , and afterwards a charter from the crown , for creating a corporate body , or stock company , by name of the Company of Scotland trading to Africa and the Indies , with power to plant colonies and build forts in places not ...
... Parliament , and afterwards a charter from the crown , for creating a corporate body , or stock company , by name of the Company of Scotland trading to Africa and the Indies , with power to plant colonies and build forts in places not ...
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Common terms and phrases
Act of Security advantage Argyle's arms arrived Athole attack betwixt body Britain called castle cause Chevalier de St chiefs Church clans command considerable court crown Darien disposed Duke of Argyle Duke of Hamilton Earl of Mar Edinburgh enemy engaged England English escape estates expected favour force Forster France Fraser friends frith gentlemen Glencoe Government Highlanders honour hopes horse House House of Hanover hundred Huntly insurgents insurrection Jacobite James James II join Kenmure kingdom land Lord Lowland MacIntosh Mar's army massacre of Glencoe Master of Sinclair measure ment military ministers nation occasion Parliament party peers person Perth political possessed Prince prisoners proposed purpose Queen Anne rank rebels received regiment Scotland Scots Scottish members Seaforth secure seemed sent soldiers squadron St George Stair Stewart Stirling succession sword thousand tion took Tories town treason treaty of Union troops Whigs
Popular passages
Page 7 - I do not come to you at four, you are not to tarry for me, but fall on. This is by the King's special command, for the good and safety of the country, that these miscreants be cut off root and branch. See that this be put...
Page 266 - I'll put it in execution, let my loss be what it will, that it may be an example to others. You are to tell the gentlemen that I expect them in their best accoutrements on horseback, and no excuse to be accepted of.
Page 3 - As for Mac Ian of Glencoe and that tribe, if they can be well distinguished from the other Highlanders, it will be proper, for the vindication of public justice, to extirpate that set of thieves.
Page 78 - For I was ashamed to require of the king a band of soldiers and horsemen to help us against the enemy in the way : because we had spoken unto the king, saying, " The hand of our God is upon all them for good that seek him ; but his power and his wrath is against all them that forsake him.
Page 248 - To drive the deer with hound and horn Earl Percy took his way ; The child may rue that is unborn The hunting of that day.
Page 12 - The hand that mingled in the meal, At midnight drew the felon steel, And gave the host's kind breast to feel Meed for his hospitality! The friendly hearth which...
Page 12 - ... the evening preceding the slaughter ; and had he reached the eastern passes out of Glencoe by four in the morning, as he calculated, he must have intercepted and destroyed all those who took that only way of escape from Glenlyon and his followers. But as this reinforcement arrived so late as eleven in the forenoon, they found no MacDonald alive in Glencoe, save an old man of eighty, whom they slew ; and after burning such houses as were...
Page iv - Maclan was repeatedly heard to say, he dreaded mischief from no man so much as from the Earl of Breadalbane. Yet this unhappy chief was rash enough to stand out to the last moment, and decline to take advantage of King William's indemnity, till the time appointed by the proclamation was wellnigh expired. The displeasure of the Earl of Breadalbane seems speedily to have communicated itself to the Master of Stair, who, in his correspondence with...
Page 7 - You are to have especial care that the old fox and his cubs do on no account escape your hands ; you are to secure all the avenues, that no man escape. This you are to put in execution at...
Page 3 - Glencoe and his tribe would be sheltered under this mitigation of the intended severities, since he had already come in and tendered his allegiance, without waiting for the menace of military force. A second set of instructions were, therefore, made out on the 16th January. These held out the same indulgence to other clans, who should submit themselves at the very last hour (a hypocritical pretext, for.