History of Stirlingshire. Corrected and brought down to the present time by W.M. Stirling |
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Page 6
... the fol- lowing inscription : MATRIBVS , MILITES , LEG . XXVI BRITTON . V. S. L. P. M. " p . 33. Sir Robert does not give Having removed the rubbish , they discovered sundry apartments built 6 [ Sect . I. Forts HISTORY OF.
... the fol- lowing inscription : MATRIBVS , MILITES , LEG . XXVI BRITTON . V. S. L. P. M. " p . 33. Sir Robert does not give Having removed the rubbish , they discovered sundry apartments built 6 [ Sect . I. Forts HISTORY OF.
Page 14
... give it the form of a village . As * ( SEE , at the end of the volume , Note A , by the Editor . ) ( We take the liberty of differing from the Author ; and will state our reasons in Note B. Editor . ) the old Britons usually ...
... give it the form of a village . As * ( SEE , at the end of the volume , Note A , by the Editor . ) ( We take the liberty of differing from the Author ; and will state our reasons in Note B. Editor . ) the old Britons usually ...
Page 18
... which , thirty years after , was presented , in consistent detail , by Mr George Chalmers . See Caledonia , Vol . I. pp . 103-114 . Editor . ) gives its countenance , when it speaks of an- chors 18 [ Sect . I. Forts HISTORY OF.
... which , thirty years after , was presented , in consistent detail , by Mr George Chalmers . See Caledonia , Vol . I. pp . 103-114 . Editor . ) gives its countenance , when it speaks of an- chors 18 [ Sect . I. Forts HISTORY OF.
Page 19
William Nimmo (minister of Bothkennar.) William MacGregor Stirling. gives its countenance , when it speaks of an- chors having been found in the neighbour- hood , and some of them within the memory of people yet alive . Not many years ...
William Nimmo (minister of Bothkennar.) William MacGregor Stirling. gives its countenance , when it speaks of an- chors having been found in the neighbour- hood , and some of them within the memory of people yet alive . Not many years ...
Page 34
... gives of the sixth campaign of Agri- cola , which seems to imply , that the route the army was to hold in their march , had been distinctly settled before they set out , which could not be done without some stated road , in a country so ...
... gives of the sixth campaign of Agri- cola , which seems to imply , that the route the army was to hold in their march , had been distinctly settled before they set out , which could not be done without some stated road , in a country so ...
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Common terms and phrases
Abbey Airth Alexander ancient appears Argyle army Bannockburn barons battle Bishop Bishop of Dunkeld borough brother Bruce Buchanan Caledonia called Cambuskenneth Camelon Cardross Carron Castlecary century chapel Charles charter church command daughter David David II death Douglas Douglas's Peerage Drummond Drymen Duke Duke of Albany Dunblane Earl of Levenax Earl of Marr east Edinburgh Editor Edward England English erected Erskine Esqr Falkirk father Gargunnock Glasgow Graham hath heir highlanders hill History honour House of Stuart Inchmahome James James III Keith Kilsyth King King's kingdom Kippen Lady lands late Lennox Linlithgow Lord MacGregor Malcolm March married mentioned miles monarch Monteith Montrose Nimmo parish parliament Perth Perthshire Prince Queen Regent reign river Robertson's Index Roman royal Rymer says Scotland Scots Scottish shire Sir John Sir Robert Sir William St Ninian's Stewart Stirling castle Stirlingshire stone Strivelyn tion town wall Wallace
Popular passages
Page 472 - To the very moment that he bade me tell it; Wherein I spake of most disastrous chances, Of moving accidents by flood and field, Of hair-breadth 'scapes i...
Page 708 - I have, I will erect the royal standard, and proclaim to the people of Britain, that Charles Stuart is come over to claim the crown of his ancestors ; to win it, or...
Page 312 - And the Lord visited Sarah as he had said, and the Lord did unto Sarah as he had spoken ; for Sarah conceived, and bare Abraham a son in his old age, at the set time of which God had spoken to him.
Page 564 - The pious mother, doom'd to death, Forsaken, wanders o'er the heath, The bleak wind whistles round her head, Her helpless orphans cry for bread ; Bereft of shelter, food, and friend, She views the shades of night descend, And, stretch'd beneath the' inclement skies, Weeps o'er her tender babes and dies. While the warm blood bedews my veins, And unimpair'd remembrance reigns, Resentment of my country's fate, Within my filial breast shall beat...
Page 166 - As that which with our neighbours oft we wage. A river here, there an ideal line, By fancy drawn, divides the sister kingdoms. On each side dwells a people similar, As twins are to each other; valiant both; Both for their valour famous thro
Page 336 - I protest before God and your lordships, that I profess and allow with my heart the true religion presently professed within this realm, and authorized by the laws thereof; I shall abide thereat and defend the same to my life's end, renouncing the Roman religion called papistry.
Page 166 - Valour famous through the world, Yet will they not unite their kindred arms, And, if they must have war, wage distant war, But with each other fight in cruel conflict. Gallant in strife, and noble in their ire, The battle is their pastime. They go forth Gay in the morning, as to summer sport; When ev'ning comes, the glory of the morn, The youthful warrior, is a clod of clay.
Page 721 - And I consent to the registration hereof in the books of council and session, or any other judges books competent; therein to remain for preservation; and thereto I constitute my procurators, &c.
Page 567 - Pretender came to her house in the evening, without giving her any preparatory information, and entered the room when she had a pretty large company with her, and was herself playing at cards. He was announced by the servant under another name : she thought the cards would have dropped from her hands on seeing him ; but she had presence enough of mind to call him by the name he assumed, to ask him when he came to England, and how long he intended to stay there.
Page 511 - I have a thousand thanks to give you for your insertion of the paper in the London Chronicle, and for the part you propose to act in regard to Henry. I could wish that you knew for certain his being in London before you strike the first blow. An inquiry at Cadell's will give this. When you have an enemy to attack, I shall in return give my best assistance, and aim at him a mortal blow, and rush forward to his overthrow, though the flames of hell should start up to oppose me.