The history of Scotland, during the reigns of queen Mary and of king James vi. To which is prefixed An account of the life and writings of the author, by D. Stewart, Volume 1 |
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Page 116
... Protestant reli- 66 " " " gion , they are not inferior to any of their prede- cessors , co - operating heartily with the other pro- moters of that bill , my curiosity to know pre- cisely the nature and extent of the indulgence " granted ...
... Protestant reli- 66 " " " gion , they are not inferior to any of their prede- cessors , co - operating heartily with the other pro- moters of that bill , my curiosity to know pre- cisely the nature and extent of the indulgence " granted ...
Page 266
... Protestant opinions , he was equally formi- dable to both . Henry was afraid that this general dissatisfaction of his people might encourage his enemies on the continent to invade his kingdom . He knew that both the Pope and the Emperor ...
... Protestant opinions , he was equally formi- dable to both . Henry was afraid that this general dissatisfaction of his people might encourage his enemies on the continent to invade his kingdom . He knew that both the Pope and the Emperor ...
Page 268
... Protestant opinions were spreading fast throughout the nation ; and that an universal defection from the established church would be the consequence of giving the smallest de- gree of encouragement to these principles . For these ...
... Protestant opinions were spreading fast throughout the nation ; and that an universal defection from the established church would be the consequence of giving the smallest de- gree of encouragement to these principles . For these ...
Page 301
... Protestant doctrine , and , in his first parliament , consented to an act , by which the laity were permitted to read the scrip- tures in a language which they understood . Truth h Keith , p . 36 , 37 . II . BOOK needed only a fair ...
... Protestant doctrine , and , in his first parliament , consented to an act , by which the laity were permitted to read the scrip- tures in a language which they understood . Truth h Keith , p . 36 , 37 . II . BOOK needed only a fair ...
Page 302
... Protestant religion was not long proof against his fear . He publicly abjured the doctrine of the Reformers in i The pretensions of the Earl of Lennox to the succession were thus founded . Mary , the daughter of James II . was mar- ried ...
... Protestant religion was not long proof against his fear . He publicly abjured the doctrine of the Reformers in i The pretensions of the Earl of Lennox to the succession were thus founded . Mary , the daughter of James II . was mar- ried ...
Expressions et termes fréquents
Advocate affairs ambition ancient Andrew's appeared army Assembly authority B O O K barons bestowed BOOK character Charles church Church of Scotland clergy conduct court crown Crown Matrimonial danger David Hume death dignity Duke Duke of Albany Earl Earl of Lennox ecclesiastical Edinburgh endeavoured England English established Europe execution favour former France French friends genius George Wishart hands Henry historians History of Scotland honour house of Guise Hume influence interest James James VI judge King King's kingdom land laws less letter liberty Lord manner Mary Mary of Guise ment merit ministers monarchs nation natural nobility nobles obliged occasion opinion parliament party period person possessed present Prince Protestant Queen Regent racter Reformation reign religion rendered respect Robert Robertson Scots Scottish sentiments sion society soon spirit success tion treaty troops utmost vassals vigour writing zeal
Fréquemment cités
Page 157 - Strahan, who thence suspects villany among his prentices and journeymen ; and has sent me very earnestly to know the gentleman's name, that he may find out the grocer, and trace the matter to the bottom. In vain did I remonstrate that this was sooner or later the fate of all Authors, serius, ocyus, sors exitura. He will not be satisfied ; and begs me to keep my jokes for another occasion.
Page 172 - I will frankly own that my pride is elated, as often as I find myself ranked in the triumvirate of British Historians of the present age, and though I feel myself the Lepidus, I contemplate with pleasure the superiority of my colleagues. Will you be so good as to assure Dr A. Smith of my regard and attachment. I consider myself as writing to both, and will not fix him for a separate answer. My direction is, A Monsieur Monsieur Gibbon d Lausanne en Suisse.
Page 175 - be sorry to see further advanced by a writer of your just " reputation. The tendency of the mode to which I allude " is, to establish two very different idioms amongst us, " and to introduce a marked distinction between the En" glish that is written and the English that is spoken.
Page 66 - I am perfectly sensible of the very flattering distinction I have received in your thinking me worthy of so noble a present as that of your History of America. I have, however, suffered my gratitude to lie under some suspicion, by delaying my acknowledgment of so great a favour. But my delay was only to render my obligation to you more complete, and my thanks, if possible, more merited. The close of the session brought a great deal of very troublesome though not important business on me at once....
Page 154 - ... expressed your wish that I should not write this period. I could not write downward. For when you find occasion, by new discoveries, to correct your opinion with regard to facts which passed in Queen Elizabeth's days, who, that has not the best opportunities of informing himself, could venture to relate any recent transactions ? I must, therefore, have abandoned altogether this scheme of the English history, in which I had proceeded so far, if I had not acted as I did. You will see what light...
Page 68 - But now the great map of mankind is unrolled at once, and there is no state or gradation of barbarism, and no mode of refinement, which we have not at the same moment under our view...
Page 95 - Robertson's works have been allowed, by the most competent judges, to be remarkably free ; but to an occasional substitution of general or of circuitous modes of expression, instead of the simple and specific English phrase. An author who lives at a distance from the acknowledged standard of elegance, writes in a dialect different from that in which he is accustomed to speak ; and is naturally led to evade, as much as possible, the hazardous use of idiomatical phrases, by the employment of such as...
Page 181 - ... there are some circumstances concerning the worship of God and government of the church, common to human actions and societies, which are to be ordered by the light of nature, and Christian prudence, according to the general rules of the word, which are always to be observed.
Page 153 - September 1572. He was then sent into Scotland. It there appears that the Regents, Murray and Lennox, had desired Mary to be put into their hands, in order to try her and put her to death. Elizabeth there offers to Regent Mar to deliver her up, provided good security were given, " that she should receive that she hath deserved there by order of justice, whereby no further peril should ensue by her escaping, or by setting her up again.
Page 176 - But the allowances to necessities ought not to grow into a practice. Those portents and prodigies ought not to grow too common. If you have, here and there, (much more rarely, however, than others of great and not unmerited fame,) fallen into an error, which is not that of the dull or careless, you have an author who is himself guilty, in his own tongue, of the same fault, in a very high degree. No author thinks more deeply, or paints more strongly ; but he seldom or ever expresses himself naturally.