| David Lindsay (of the Mount.) - 1871 - 456 pages
...thee, War I one man, to heir the birdis sounde, Quhilk doith agane thy royall roche redounde. Adew, Lythquo! quhose Palyce of plesance Mycht be one patrone in Portingall or France ! Fair weill, Falkland ! the fortrace of Fyfe, Thy polyte park, under the Lowmound Law! Sayand, thy... | |
| John Merry Ross - Dialect literature, Scottish - 1884 - 456 pages
...thee, War I one man, to heir the birdis sounde, Quhilk doith agane thy royall roche redounde. Adew, Lythquo ! quhose Palyce of plesance Mycht be one patrone in Portingall or France ! Fair weill, Falkland ! the fortrace of Fyfe, Thy polyte park, under the Lowmound Law ! Sum tyme in... | |
| Ninian Winzet - Catholic Church - 1888 - 282 pages
...(chap. v.), in which William Allan becomes "Abbot Eustatius," and Edward Glendinning "Abbot Ambrosius." II.— SCHOOLMASTER OF LINLITHGOW. The biography of...had houses, the 1 Winzet, 'Certain Tractates,' vol. i. p 23. STS Ed. military order of St Lazarus had a hostelry, and the Knights of St John had tenements.... | |
| James Cranstoun - Satire, Scottish - 1893 - 400 pages
...feelingly addressed by Sir David Lyndsay in ' The Testament and Complaynt of the Papyngo' — " Adew ! Lythquo ! quhose Palyce of plesance Mycht be one patrone in Portingall or France." —LI. 638, 639. Here James V. and Mary Queen of Scots were born ; and in the High Street of the town... | |
| James Cranstoun - Satire, Scottish - 1893 - 412 pages
...addressed by Sir David Lyndsay in ' The Testament and Complaynt of the Papyngo' — " Adew 1 Lythquo 1 quhose Palyce of plesance Mycht be one patrone in Portingall or France." —L1. 638, 639. Here James V. and Mary Queen of Scots were born ; and in the High Street of the town... | |
| Kenneth Grant Tremayne Webster - English poetry - 1916 - 462 pages
...I one man, to heir the hirdis sonnde, Quhilk doith agane thy royall roche redounde. Adew, Lythquol* quhose Palyce of plesance Mycht be one patrone * in Portingall or France ! Fair-weill, Falkland 1 the fortrace of Fyfe, Thy polyte park, under the Lowmound Sum-tyme in thee... | |
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