The Scotish Gaël: Or, Celtic Manners, as Preserved Among the Highlanders, Being an Historical and Descriptive Account of the Inhabitants, Antiquities, and National Peculiarities of Scotland; More Particularly of the Northern, Or Gaëlic Parts of the Country, where the Singular Habits of the Aboriginal Celts are Most Tenaciously Retained, المجلد 1Smith, Elder, 1831 |
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الصفحة ix
... language , their singular manners , and peculiar cus- toms , will have become extinct and unknown , save in the traditions of the people , or the partial records of the historian . This race , which for so many ages preserved inviolate ...
... language , their singular manners , and peculiar cus- toms , will have become extinct and unknown , save in the traditions of the people , or the partial records of the historian . This race , which for so many ages preserved inviolate ...
الصفحة xi
... language , poetry , music , & c . , and remained for many ages little known to the rest of the kingdom . The more Southern Scots were , in- deed , aware of their existence . The troops and hosts of hardy warriors that often swelled the ...
... language , poetry , music , & c . , and remained for many ages little known to the rest of the kingdom . The more Southern Scots were , in- deed , aware of their existence . The troops and hosts of hardy warriors that often swelled the ...
الصفحة xiv
... by elucidating in the sober language of history those manners so beautifully blended with fiction by the novelists , and those circumstances which are introduced with so much effect , and so materially xiv INTRODUCTION .
... by elucidating in the sober language of history those manners so beautifully blended with fiction by the novelists , and those circumstances which are introduced with so much effect , and so materially xiv INTRODUCTION .
الصفحة xv
... language , the religion , form of govern- ment , and peculiar usages of the Scots to their origin ; to shew their identity with those of the aborigines of Britain , and their resemblance to those of the remaining branches of the Celtic ...
... language , the religion , form of govern- ment , and peculiar usages of the Scots to their origin ; to shew their identity with those of the aborigines of Britain , and their resemblance to those of the remaining branches of the Celtic ...
الصفحة xvii
... language of this peo- ple , " of always hearing the Romans quoted , when the commencement of our civilization is spoken of ; while no- thing is said of our obligations to the Celts . It was not the Latins , it was the Gauls who were our ...
... language of this peo- ple , " of always hearing the Romans quoted , when the commencement of our civilization is spoken of ; while no- thing is said of our obligations to the Celts . It was not the Latins , it was the Gauls who were our ...
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
Aberdeenshire ages ancient antiquity appear appellation arms army arrows attack bards battle believed Bello Gall belt body breacan Britain British Britons Cæsar Caledonians called carried celebrated Celta Celtæ Celtiberians Celtic Celtic nations Celts century chief Cimbri clan cloth Cluverius colours common continued custom derived describes Diodorus dirk dress enemy formed Gaël Gaëlic Gauls Germans Getæ Giraldus Cambrensis Greeks hair Herodotus Highlanders Hist honour horses inhabitants Ireland Irish island Isles king known land language Mac Donald Mac Pherson manner ment military nations native Nervii observed occasion origin ornament Ossian Pausanias peculiar person Picts plaid Pliny Plutarch Polybius possession preserved princes proof race remains remarkable represented resemblance Romans rude Saxon says Scotish Scotland Scots Scythians Scyths shew shield similar singular sometimes spear stones Strabo sword Tacitus Tanaist tartan term tion trees tribes troops various warriors weapon Welsh woods wore worn writer
مقاطع مشهورة
الصفحة 125 - 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 377 - Through all the Northern parts of Scotland, a particular kind of earthy iron ore, of a very vitrescible nature, much abounds. This ore might have been accidentally mixed with some stones at a place where a great fire was kindled, and, being fused by the heat, •would cement the stones into one solid mass, and give the first hint of the uses to which it might be...
الصفحة 226 - ... that pleases the eye and appears beautiful, but one that is woven by shuttles, filled with threads of purple and various other colours, flying from side to side...
الصفحة 364 - I never yielded, king of spears!' replied the noble pride of Carthon: 'I have also fought in war; I behold my future fame. Despise me not, thou chief of men! my arm, my spear is strong. Retire among thy friends, let younger heroes fight.
الصفحة 146 - By God himself, and as I shall answer to God at the great day, I shall speak the truth: if I do not, may I never thrive while I live; may I go to hell and be damned when I die; may my land bear neither grass nor corn; may my wife and bairns never prosper; may my cows, calves, sheep, and lambs, all perish...
الصفحة 29 - The ancient dialects of Italy, the Sabine, the Etruscan, and the Venetian, sunk into oblivion; but in the provinces, the east was less docile than the west, to the voice of its victorious preceptors. This obvious difference...
الصفحة 334 - Halidownehill, in the year 1402 ; "where," in the words of an old historian, " the Lord Percie's archers did withall deliver their deadly arrows so lively, so courageously, so grievously, that they ranne through the men of armes, bored the helmets, pierced their very swords, beat their lances to the earth, and easily shot those who were more slightly armed, through and through*.
الصفحة 230 - ... some the same custom is observed to this day; but for the most part now they are brown, most near to the colour of the hadder, to the effect when they lie among the...
الصفحة 108 - Britons and inhabitants of Ireland wore their hair long, and allowed their beards to grow only on the upper lip. Even until a later period, the Irish strictly adhered to this ancient practice, which was at last abolished by Act of Parliament, a statute being passed, ordaining none to wear their beards in that manner.* " A thicke curled bush of haire hanging downe over their eyes, and monstrously disguising them,
الصفحة 144 - ... his own mossy hill blue-shielded Trenmor came down. He led wide-skirted battle, and the strangers failed. Around him the dark-browed warriors came : they struck the shield of joy. Like a pleasant gale, the words of power rushed forth from Selma of kings. But the chiefs led, by turns, in war, till mighty danger rose : then was the hour of the king to conquer in the field.