| John Watson - 1894 - 236 pages
...rest. When the bedrel had finished his work and the turf had been spread, Lord Kilspindie spoke : " Friends of Drumtochty, it would not be right that...secured for him a valuable post in his younger days, and he preferred to work among his own people ; and I wished to do many things for him when he was... | |
| Ian Maclaren - 1894 - 344 pages
...rest. When the bedrel had finished his work and the turf had been spread, Lord Kilspindie spoke : " Friends of Drumtochty, it would not be right that...secured for him a valuable post in his younger days, and he preferred to work among his own people ; and I wished to do many things for him when he was... | |
| Ian Maclaren - 1894 - 340 pages
...rest. When the bedrel had finished his work and the turf had been spread, Lord Kilspindie spoke: " Friends of Drumtochty, it would not be right that...day, but no man in the trenches of Sebastopol carried himTHE MOURNING OF THE GLEN 321 self more knightly than William MacLure. You will never have heard... | |
| Ian Maclaren - 1895 - 224 pages
...When the bedrel had finished his work and 205 , the turf had been spread, Lord Kilspindie spoke : " Friends of Drumtochty, it would not be right that...secured for him a valuable post in his younger days, and he preferred to work among his own people ; and I wished to do many things for him when he was... | |
| 1895 - 460 pages
...rest. " When the bedrel had finished his work and the turf had been spread, Lord Kilspindie spoke : " ' Friends of Drumtochty, it would not be right that...secured for him a valuable post in his younger days, and he preferred to work among his own people ; and I wished to do many things for him when he was... | |
| Ian Maclaren - 1896 - 368 pages
...to rest. When the bedrel had finished his work and the turf had been spread, Lord Kilspindie spoke: "Friends of Drumtochty, it would not be right that...Sebastopol carried himself more knightly than William • . THE PUBLIC LIBRARY ASTOK, T1LDEN R MacLure. You will never have heard from his lips what I may... | |
| Ian Maclaren - 1896 - 360 pages
...rest. When the bedrel had finished his work and the turf had been spread, Lord Kilspindie spoke : " Friends of Drumtochty, it would not be right that...man in the trenches of Sebastopol carried himself mpre knightly than William MacLure. You will never have heard from his lips what I may tell you to-day,... | |
| 1920 - 656 pages
...vain. His reward lies come ower late, ower late." When the tnrf had been spread, Lord Kilspindie spoke: ''Friends of Drumtochty, it would not be right that...trenches of Sebastopol carried himself more knightly than Dr. William MacLure. "Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends."... | |
| 1899 - 586 pages
...this man had done from youth to old age, not for himself but for others." And his friend said of him, "I have seen many brave men in my day, but no man...carried himself more knightly than William MacLure. He will never be forgotten while one of us lives, and I pray that all doctors everywhere may share... | |
| 1904 - 476 pages
...should part in silence and no man say what is in every heart. We have buried the remains of one that has served this Glen with a devotion that has known no...reserve, and a kindliness that never failed, for more that forty years. I have seen many brave men in my day, but no man in the trenches of Sebastapol carried... | |
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