Memoirs of the Rebellion in 1745 and 1746Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, 1821 - 456 من الصفحات |
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الصفحة xxix
... road to wealth and importance ; to retard the advance of civilization , and to induce them to augment the number of their followers by every possible means . In England , the Tories and the High - Church- men , after the danger which ...
... road to wealth and importance ; to retard the advance of civilization , and to induce them to augment the number of their followers by every possible means . In England , the Tories and the High - Church- men , after the danger which ...
الصفحة xxxvii
... road to the Low - country open to them . In two days after crossing the Forth , they became masters of the metropolis of Scot- land . Cope sailed from Aberdeen to Dunbar , and having formed a junction with the rest of the King's forces ...
... road to the Low - country open to them . In two days after crossing the Forth , they became masters of the metropolis of Scot- land . Cope sailed from Aberdeen to Dunbar , and having formed a junction with the rest of the King's forces ...
الصفحة xxxix
... road , ) to see the Pretender and Highlanders as they passed . " But the English aristocracy , though they would willingly have joined the Pretender , if they had seen that he could support himself without them , resolved not to stir ...
... road , ) to see the Pretender and Highlanders as they passed . " But the English aristocracy , though they would willingly have joined the Pretender , if they had seen that he could support himself without them , resolved not to stir ...
الصفحة 10
... roads to the north of Scotland , he chose that which goes along the eastern coast ; whilst the Prince , having certain information of the rout taken by General Cope , made choice of the road across the mountains , by Blair of Athol , by ...
... roads to the north of Scotland , he chose that which goes along the eastern coast ; whilst the Prince , having certain information of the rout taken by General Cope , made choice of the road across the mountains , by Blair of Athol , by ...
الصفحة 11
... road to Inverness leaves the military road ; and the enemy , who immediately learned from a deserter that he had turned his back on them , having deliberated whether they should pur- sue him , or get between him and Inverness by cutting ...
... road to Inverness leaves the military road ; and the enemy , who immediately learned from a deserter that he had turned his back on them , having deliberated whether they should pur- sue him , or get between him and Inverness by cutting ...
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عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
aide-de-camp alarm appeared arms arrived artillery attack battle of Culloden Carlisle castle cavalry chiefs clan command conduct Cousselain danger Derby detachment Duke of Cumberland Duke of Perth Edinburgh enemy England English army entered escape exposed Falkirk father favour field of battle fire fortune France gave Gladsmuir head Highlanders honour horse hour house of Hanover house of Stuart hundred immediately inclosure informed Inverness Jacobites join King knew Lady Jane Douglas land leagues Lillie London Lord George Murray Lord John Drummond Lord Loudon Louisbourg Macdonald manner Marshal Wade miles mind morning Nairn never o'clock obliged officers passed the night Peggy person possessed Prince Charles prisoners Rebellion rebels received regiment remained retreat road says scaffold Scotland Scots sent ship Sir John Cope situation soldiers soon Stirling sword taken thing thousand told took town troops victory whilst whole wished
مقاطع مشهورة
الصفحة xxxix - I heard three sensible middle-aged men, when the Scotch were said to be at Stamford, and actually were at Derby, talking of hiring a chaise to go to Caxton (a place in the high-road) to see the Pretender and Highlanders as they passed.
الصفحة 102 - The children immediately left the press where she had concealed them, and threw themselves at his feet. They affirmed in the newspapers of London that we had dogs in our army trained to fight, and that we were indebted for our victory at Gladsmuir to these dogs, who darted with fury on the English army.
الصفحة 203 - Our separation at Ruthven was truly affecting. We bade one another an eternal adieu. No one could tell whether the scaffold would not be his fate. The Highlanders gave vent to their grief in wild howlings and lamentations; the tears flowed down their cheeks when they thought that their country was now at the discretion of the Duke of Cumberland, and on the point of being plundered; whilst they and their children would be reduced to slavery, and plunged, without resource, into a state of remediless...
الصفحة liii - He was vigilant, active, and diligent; his plans were always judiciously formed, and he carried them promptly and vigorously into execution. However, with an infinity of good qualities, he was not without his defects : — proud, haughty, blunt, and imperious ; he wished to have the exclusive ordering of every thing, and, feeling his superiority, he would listen to no advice.
الصفحة liii - He was tall and robust, and brave in the highest degree; conducting the Highlanders in the most heroic manner, and always the first to rush sword in hand into the midst of the enemy. He used to say, when we advanced to the charge, ' I do not ask you, my lads, to go before, but merely to follow me...
الصفحة 186 - Had Prince Charles slept during the whole of the expedition," says the Chevalier Johnstone, " and allowed Lord George Murray to act for him according to his own judgment, there is every reason for supposing he would have found the crown of Great Britain on his head when he awoke.
الصفحة 122 - The most singular and extraordinary combat immediately followed. The Highlanders, stretched on the ground, thrust their dirks into the bellies of the horses. Some seized the riders by their clothes, dragged them down, and stabbed them with their dirks; several, again, used their pistols; but few of them had sufficient space to handle their swords.
الصفحة 101 - Lochiel entered the lodgings assigned to him, his landlady, an old woman, threw herself at his feet, and with uplifted hands and tears in her eyes, supplicated him to take her life, but to spare her two little children. He asked her if she was in her senses, and told her to explain herself; when she answered, that every body said the Highlanders ate children, and made them their common food. Mr. Cameron having assured her that they would not injure either her, or her little children, or any person...
الصفحة 85 - As your Royal Highness is always for battles, be the circumstances what they may, I now offer you one, in three hours from this time, with the army of Marshal Wade, which is only about two miles distant from us.
الصفحة 146 - There he laid an ambuscade, posting six of his companions, on each side of the highway, to wait the arrival of the detachment of Lord Loudon, enjoining them not to fire till he should tell them, and then not to fire together, but one after another. When the head of the detachment of Lord Loudon was opposite the twelve men, about eleven o'clock in the evening, the blacksmith called out with a loud voice, " Here come the villains; who intend carrying off our Prince ; fire, my lads, do not spare them...