Tales of a Grandfather;: Being Stories Taken from Scottish History. Humbly Inscribed to Hugh Littlejohn, Esq. in Three Vols. .... Second series..Cadell and Company Edinburgh; Simpkin and Marshall, London; and John Cumming, Dublin., 1829 - Aristocracy (Social class) - 340 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 21
Page 5
... severity ; and as the refusal to bear evidence against a person accused of treason , was made to amount to a crime equal to treason itself , the lands and life of every one seemed to be exposed to the machinations of the corrupt ...
... severity ; and as the refusal to bear evidence against a person accused of treason , was made to amount to a crime equal to treason itself , the lands and life of every one seemed to be exposed to the machinations of the corrupt ...
Page 6
... severe penalties denounced on all having inter- course with such delinquents . This general scene of oppression would , it was supposed , notwithstanding the general show of sub- mission , lead to an universal desire to shake off the ...
... severe penalties denounced on all having inter- course with such delinquents . This general scene of oppression would , it was supposed , notwithstanding the general show of sub- mission , lead to an universal desire to shake off the ...
Page 10
... severe blow before the royal forces could have assembled together , if the invaders could have determined among themselves where to aim at . Argyle proposed marching to Inverary , to attack the Laird of Ballechan , who was lying there ...
... severe blow before the royal forces could have assembled together , if the invaders could have determined among themselves where to aim at . Argyle proposed marching to Inverary , to attack the Laird of Ballechan , who was lying there ...
Page 38
... severe and harsh character . The pu- nishments for assisting at the celebration of the mass , were , for the first offence , confisca tion and corporal punishment ; for the second banishment , and to the third the pains of treason were ...
... severe and harsh character . The pu- nishments for assisting at the celebration of the mass , were , for the first offence , confisca tion and corporal punishment ; for the second banishment , and to the third the pains of treason were ...
Page 47
... severe against the Covenanters that he received the name of the Bloody Mac- Kenzie , refused to countenance the revoca- tion of the penal laws , and was , like Queens- berry , deprived of his office . Sir James Stewart of Goodtrees ...
... severe against the Covenanters that he received the name of the Bloody Mac- Kenzie , refused to countenance the revoca- tion of the penal laws , and was , like Queens- berry , deprived of his office . Sir James Stewart of Goodtrees ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
Act of Security advantages afterwards alarm amongst Argyle arms army attached Breadalbane burgh called Cameronians castle Catholic church clan Colonel Hill command Commissioners Convention coun court crown Darien death declared desired Duke of Gordon Duke of Hamilton Earl Edinburgh enemies England English Episcopal execution favour force friends gentleman Glencoe Glenlyon hand Highland chiefs honour hopes House hundred Jacobite James II joined Keppoch King James King James's King William King's kingdom kingdoms of England land laws Lord MacDonalds MacIan MacIntosh MacKay massacre of Glencoe measure ment military monarch nation oath officers Papists party persons possessed Presbyterians Prince of Orange proclamation proposed Protestant purpose Queen received regiment reign religion Revolution royal scheme Scot Scotland Scottish Parliament seemed sent soldiers subjects sword tain throne tion took Tories trade treaty of Union troops Viscount of Dundee Whigs
Popular passages
Page 316 - 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 218 - 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 212 - 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 157 - ... amongst cataracts and waterfalls which the eye can scarcely discern, while a series of precipices and wooded mountains rise on the other hand ; the road itself is the only mode of access through the glen, and along the valley which lies at its northern extremity. The path was then much more inaccessible than at the present day, as it ran close to the bed of the river, and was narrower and more rudely formed.
Page 225 - Thus ended this horrible deed of massacre. The number of persons murdered was thirty-eight ; those who escaped might amount to a hundred and fifty males, who, with the women and children of the...
Page 225 - Duncanson, agreeably to the plan .expressed in his orders to Glenlyon, had not failed to put himself in motion, with four hundred men, on 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...
Page 263 - Nothing1 could be heard throughout Scotland but the language of grief and of resentment. Indemnification, redress, revenge, were demanded by every mouth, and each hand seemed ready to vouch for the justice of the claim. For many years, no such universal feeling had ' occupied the Scottish nation.
Page 163 - Observing the stand made by the two English regiments already mentioned, he galloped towards the clan of MacDonald, and was in the act of bringing them to the charge, with his right arm elevated, as if pointing the way to victory, when he was struck by a bullet beneath the armpit, where he was unprotected by his cuirass. He tried to ride on, but being unable to keep the saddle, fell mortally wounded, and died in the course of the night.
Page 222 - Reassured by this communication, the young men retired to rest, but were speedily awakened by an old domestic, who called on the two brothers to rise and fly for their lives. "Is it time for you...
Page 157 - ... with them. Nevertheless, Dundee resolved to preserve the castle of Blair, so important as a key to the Northern Highlands, and marched to protect it with a body of about two thousand Highlanders, with whom he occupied the upper and northern extremity of the pass between Dunkeld and Blair. In this celebrated defile, called the Pass of Killiecrankie, the road runs for several miles along the banks of a furious river, called the Garry, which...