Memorials of Montrose and His Times, Volume 1Mark Napier Maitland club, 1848 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 38
Page xxxiv
... going gave me his picture , which I caused put in a gold case of the same bigness I desire yours . " The late Mr Murray of Broughton acquired a portrait of THORST'S POR- Montrose , which passed for a Van Dyck . It was so entered in the ...
... going gave me his picture , which I caused put in a gold case of the same bigness I desire yours . " The late Mr Murray of Broughton acquired a portrait of THORST'S POR- Montrose , which passed for a Van Dyck . It was so entered in the ...
Page 28
... going ) to be heir precisly upon the sixteene day of this instant . I have appointed Claverhous to meet you heir that same day ; becaus there are many things to do I wald have your meeting soner than wes appoynted when yee wer heir ...
... going ) to be heir precisly upon the sixteene day of this instant . I have appointed Claverhous to meet you heir that same day ; becaus there are many things to do I wald have your meeting soner than wes appoynted when yee wer heir ...
Page 31
... going , yet never went ; and the Scots themselves , none of the most candid interpreters of this King's actions , looke upon it no otherwayes than as a meer mockery . The truth is , the King had no great stomach to the journey . For as ...
... going , yet never went ; and the Scots themselves , none of the most candid interpreters of this King's actions , looke upon it no otherwayes than as a meer mockery . The truth is , the King had no great stomach to the journey . For as ...
Page 38
... going on at the very time of the assas- sination of Buckingham , yet Lord Napier does not allude to the fact . The warrants are dated at Southwick , on the fifth day after the murder which so powerfully af- fected the King . ' At this ...
... going on at the very time of the assas- sination of Buckingham , yet Lord Napier does not allude to the fact . The warrants are dated at Southwick , on the fifth day after the murder which so powerfully af- fected the King . ' At this ...
Page 48
... going from dinner ; he beckened to me , and I followed him into his Bed - chamber : And being alone with him , Sir , ( said I , ) I have receaved your pleasure by Sir Archibald Acheson , and humbly thanks your Majestie for giving me a ...
... going from dinner ; he beckened to me , and I followed him into his Bed - chamber : And being alone with him , Sir , ( said I , ) I have receaved your pleasure by Sir Archibald Acheson , and humbly thanks your Majestie for giving me a ...
Common terms and phrases
advyse aith anent answer ARCHIBALD FIRST LORD August befoir bein bissines brocht charter-chest Commissioner Committee Court Covenant Covenanters crymes day given declaired deponer desyre Dyck Earl of Airth Earl of Argyle Edinburgh Erle of Montrois Erle of Traquair Estaittis faction father favour foirsaid frome generall Graham hand honour instructiounes Item given John justice Keir Kincardin King Charles King's Kingdome kirk Lady laird letter Lord Annan Lord Napier Lord's Lords horse Lordship Luss Majestie Majestie's Majesty's maner mater Meuros micht Monteith Montrose's never nobleman painted Parliament PORTRAIT OF MONTROSE Prince publict qucho quhilk receave saidis sall samen Scotland servants Sir Archibald Sir Archibald Napier Sir James Sir Thomas Hope sould St Andrews Stirling sum poor supra thair thay ther Thesaurer thing thir tion Traquair trose tyme unto uther Van Dyck vpon wald Walter Stewart warrand whilk yeirs
Popular passages
Page 134 - I'll make thee glorious by my pen, And famous by my sword. I'll serve thee in such noble ways Was never heard before : I'll crown and deck thee all with bays, And love thee evermore.
Page 217 - The Covenant which I took I own it and adhere to it. Bishops, I care not for them. I never intended to advance their interest. But when the King had granted you all your desires, and you were every one sitting under his vine and under his...
Page 112 - Even such is time, that takes in trust Our youth, our joys, our all we have, And pays us but with earth and dust ; Who, in the dark and silent grave, When we have wandered all our ways, Shuts up the story of our days ; But from this earth, this grave, this dust. My God shall raise me up, I trust ! ELIZABETHAN MISCELLANIES.
Page 112 - Maker 1 in that crimson lake ; Then place my parboiled head upon a stake« Scatter my ashes— strew them in the air; Lord ; since thou knowest where all these atoms are, I'm hopeful thou'lt recover once my dust. And confident thou'lt raise me with the just...
Page 239 - Alexander I will reign, And I will reign alone ; My thoughts did evermore disdain A rival on my throne. He either fears his fate too much, Or his deserts are small, Who dares not put it to the touch, To gain or lose it all.
Page xxiii - 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 207 - France and Italy, where he made it his work to pick up the best of their qualities necessary for a person of honour. Having rendered himself perfect in the academies, his next delight was to improve his intellectuals, which he did by allotting a proportionable time to reading and conversing with learned men, yet still so that he used his exercise as he might not forget it.
Page 255 - Covenant which we have soe solemnlie sworne and already signed, to wed and study all public ends which may tend to the safety both of Religion, Laws, and Liberties, of this poor Kingdom ; and, as we are to make an account before that Great Judge at the last day, that we shall contribute one with another, in a unanimous and joint way, in whatsomever may concern the Public, or this Cause, to the hazard of our lives, fortunes, and estates, neither of us doing, consulting, nor...
Page 266 - ... who answered, his father was absent, and he left no such commission with him as to render his house to any subjects, and that he would defend the samen to his power whyle his father's return from England.