Montrose |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 35
Page 7
... clear from these dim memories ; there was a warm affection and regard between tutor and pupil . Years afterwards , when Montrose had burned his boats by the victory of Tippermuir , one of his first acts was to send for Master Forrett ...
... clear from these dim memories ; there was a warm affection and regard between tutor and pupil . Years afterwards , when Montrose had burned his boats by the victory of Tippermuir , one of his first acts was to send for Master Forrett ...
Page 10
... clear from an entry in his tutor's accounts of the sum of twenty - nine shillings paid to " a scholar who writes my lord's notes in the school . " But we may suppose that his studies were directed more by his own tastes and dispositions ...
... clear from an entry in his tutor's accounts of the sum of twenty - nine shillings paid to " a scholar who writes my lord's notes in the school . " But we may suppose that his studies were directed more by his own tastes and dispositions ...
Page 13
... clearly father to the stately armoured man who had risked all for his king , and was to lose all 1 In the spring of 1633 Montrose left Scotland for the customary period of foreign travel . He was absent three years , but the barest ...
... clearly father to the stately armoured man who had risked all for his king , and was to lose all 1 In the spring of 1633 Montrose left Scotland for the customary period of foreign travel . He was absent three years , but the barest ...
Page 14
... clear fresh colour which is often found with red hair ; his nose was aquiline , his eyes gray , bright , and keen . Though not strictly a handsome man , his appearance in later life at least must have been striking , dignified , and ...
... clear fresh colour which is often found with red hair ; his nose was aquiline , his eyes gray , bright , and keen . Though not strictly a handsome man , his appearance in later life at least must have been striking , dignified , and ...
Page 15
... clear that there was something in Mon- trose's manner that did not please all tastes , and perhaps seemed fantastic to some . " He was of most resolute and undaunted spirit , " writes one of his friends , " which began to appear in him ...
... clear that there was something in Mon- trose's manner that did not please all tastes , and perhaps seemed fantastic to some . " He was of most resolute and undaunted spirit , " writes one of his friends , " which began to appear in him ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
2nd Edit 3rd Edit 4th Edit Aberdeen Aboyne Argyll Argyll's arms army authority Baillie battle BIOGRAPHY Bishop BOOK BOTANY Campbells Castle cavalry Charles CHEMISTRY CHURCH commission Covenant Covenanters Crown Dean CHURCH Earl Edinburgh ELEMENTARY enemy ENGLAND ENGLISH ESSAYS Estates F. D. MAURICE F. T. PALGRAVE force friends Globe 8vo GOLDEN TREASURY Gordon Graham GREEK Hamilton hands HENRY Highlanders HISTORY horse House Huntly Illustrated Introduction J. A. SYMONDS James John JULIAN CORBETT King King's KINGSLEY Kinnaird Castle knew lands Lectures Leslie letter LITERATURE Lord Lowlands loyal Macdonald MACMILLAN Marquis matters MAURICE Memoir ment Montrose Montrose's Napier Nathaniel Gordon nobles numbers Ogilvy PALGRAVE Parliament Philiphaugh Poems POLITICAL Portrait PRIMER prisoner Prof promised religion royal Royalists Scotland Scottish SERIES Sermons sewed side soldiers STEWART story T. H. HUXLEY THEOLOGY tion Transl Translated victory vols WALTER CRANE YONGE young
Popular passages
Page 188 - Great, good, and just ! could I but rate My griefs, and thy too rigid fate ; I'd weep the world to such a strain, As it should deluge once again ; " But since thy loud-tongued blood demands supplies, More from Briareus' hands than Argus' eyes ; I'll sing thy obsequies with trumpet sounds, And write thy epitaph with blood and wounds.
Page 221 - PITT. By Lord ROSEBERY. TIMES. — " Brilliant and fascinating. . . . The style is terse, masculine, nervous, articulate, and clear ; the grasp of circumstance and character is firm, penetrating, luminous, and unprejudiced ; the judgment is broad, generous, humane, and scrupulously candid. ... It is not only a luminous estimate of Pitt's character and policy, it is also a brilliant gallery of portraits. The portrait of Fox, for example, is a masterpiece.
Page 16 - HOMER. — THE ODYSSEY DONE INTO ENGLISH PROSE, by SH BUTCHER, MA, and A. LANG, MA Cr. 8vo. 6s. THE ODYSSEY. Books I.— XII. Transl. into English Verse by EARL OF CARNARVON. Cr. 8vo. js. 6d. THE ILIAD DONE INTO ENGLISH PROSE, by ANDREW LANG, WALTER LEAF, and ERNEST MYERS.
Page 8 - BACON'S ESSAYS AND COLOURS OF GOOD AND EVIL. With Notes and Glossarial Index. By W. ALDIS WRIGHT, MA THE PILGRIM'S PROGRESS from this World to that which is to come.
Page 9 - Guesses at Truth. By Two BROTHERS. New Edition. The Cavalier and his Lady. Selections from the Works of the First Duke and Duchess of Newcastle. With an Introductory Essay by EDWARD JENKINS, Author of "Ginx's Baby,
Page 223 - III. Elementary School Readings on the Principles of Agriculture for the third stage, is.
Page 17 - Gordon.— LAST LETTERS FROM EGYPT, to which are added Letters from the Cape. By LADY DUFF GORDON. With a Memoir by her Daughter, Mrs. Ross, and Portrait engraved by JEENS.
Page 17 - HORACE'S LIFE AND CHARACTER. An Epitome of his Satires and Epistles. By RM HOVENDEN. Extra fcap. 8vo. . 4?. 6d. WORD FOR WORD FROM HORACE. The Odes literally Versified.