The Works of Lord Macaulay: History of EnglandLongmans, Green, 1875 |
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Muita painoksia - Näytä kaikki
Yleiset termit ja lausekkeet
appeared arms army Athol Avaux Balcarras battle battle of Killiecrankie Bill Bishops Burnet Caermarthen Castle Celts CHAP chief Church Citters clans clergy command Commons Convention Council courage Court Covenanters Crown debate declared divines Dublin Dundee Edinburgh enemy England English Estates Ewan Cameron force French friends Gaelic head Highlands History honour House House of Stuart hundred Ireland Irish Irish army Jacobites Journals July Killiecrankie kingdom land Lauzun letter Leven Limerick Lochiel London Gazette Lord Louvois Luttrell's Diary Macdonalds Mackay Mackay's Mackay's Memoirs Marlborough Mary Memoirs ment military ministers nation never nonjurors oaths opinion Parliament party passed person Presbyterian Prince Prince of Orange Protestant regiments Revolution royal Rye House Plot Saint Saxon scarcely Schomberg Scot Scotland Scottish sent Sir Ewan Cameron soldiers soon Sovereign thought thousand Tillotson tion Tories troops victory vote Whigs whole William СНАР
Suositut otteet
Sivu 538 - going to fight under the eyes of the French and Irish troops who had been assembled for the purpose of subjugating England, pulled manfully and with loud huzzas towards the six huge wooden castles which lay close to Fort Lisset. The French, though an eminently brave people, have always been more liable to sudden panics than
Sivu 73 - was no more. At the beginning of the action he had taken his place in Death of front of his little band of cavalry. He bade them follow him, Dundee. and rode forward. But it seemed to be decreed that, on that day, the Lowland Scotch should in both armies appear to
Sivu 601 - of the Boyal Exchange. Jonathan's and Garraway's were in a constant ferment with brokers, buyers, sellers, meetings of directors, meetings of proprietors. Time bargains soon came into fashion. Extensive combinations were formed, and monstrous fables were circulated, for the purpose of raising or depressing the price of shares. Our country witnessed for the first time those
Sivu 601 - essentially the same with those of the mania of 1720, of the mania of 1825, of the mania of 1845, seized the public mind. An impatience to be rich, a contempt for those slow but sure gains which are the proper reward of industry, patience, and thrift, spread through society. The spirit of the cogging dicers of
Sivu 606 - Not less gloomy was the view which George Grenville, a minister eminently diligent and practical, took of our financial situation. The nation must, he conceived, sink under a debt of a hundred and forty millions, unless a portion of the load were borne by the American colonies. The attempt to lay a portion of the load
Sivu 445 - Catholic than in favour of the Independent or the Baptist. The great party which traces its descent through the Exclusionists up to the Roundheads continued, during thirty years, in spite of royal frowns and popular clamours, to demand a share in all the benefits of our free constitution for those Irish Papists whom the
Sivu 269 - On the twenty-fourth of June, the tenth day after William William's landing, he marched southward from Loughbrickland with all his forces. He was fully determined to take the first opportunity of fighting. Schomberg and several other officers recommended caution and delay. But the King answered that he had not come to Ireland to let the
Sivu 627 - exclaiming against the new censor as a second Lestrange, he was requested to authorise the publication of an anonymous work entitled King William and Queen Mary Conquerors.* He readily and indeed eagerly complied. For there was between the doctrines which he had long professed and the doctrines which were propounded in this treatise a coincidence
Sivu 539 - few minutes the batteries did some execution among the crews of our skiffs: but the struggle was soon over. The French poured fast out of their ships on one side : the English poured in as fast on the other, and, with loud shouts, turned the captured guns against the shore. The batteries were speedily silenced. James and Melfort, Bellefonds and
Sivu 513 - kind. His design was to butcher the whole race of thieves, the whole damnable race. Such was the language in which his hatred vented itself. He studied the geography of the wild country which surrounded Glencoe, and made his arrangements with infernal skill. If possible the bl->w must be quick, and