Transactions, 第 15~16 巻1890 |
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... island in Loch Lundie , a mile or two further up the glen . There is no trace on the island of its having been inhabited , nor , with the exception of a few doubtful chisel or hammer marks , is there any such evidence at the cave . The ...
... island in Loch Lundie , a mile or two further up the glen . There is no trace on the island of its having been inhabited , nor , with the exception of a few doubtful chisel or hammer marks , is there any such evidence at the cave . The ...
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66 an published his History of the Western Highlands and Islands fifty- two years ago . The story , as told by Gregory , is that in 1603 " The Clanranald of Glengarry , under Allan Macranald of Lundie , made an irruption into Brae ...
66 an published his History of the Western Highlands and Islands fifty- two years ago . The story , as told by Gregory , is that in 1603 " The Clanranald of Glengarry , under Allan Macranald of Lundie , made an irruption into Brae ...
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... island fastness immediately after the raid . He had not been long at Lundie when , according to local tradition , a strong body of Kintail Mackenzies surrounded the Loch and attempted to capture him in the night time . Allan was alone ...
... island fastness immediately after the raid . He had not been long at Lundie when , according to local tradition , a strong body of Kintail Mackenzies surrounded the Loch and attempted to capture him in the night time . Allan was alone ...
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... islands on Loch Lundie through the kindness of Mr Malcolm , Invergarry , who placed a guide and a boat at our disposal . One at least of the islands on the Loch is artificial , and another , a larger island , is joined by an artificial ...
... islands on Loch Lundie through the kindness of Mr Malcolm , Invergarry , who placed a guide and a boat at our disposal . One at least of the islands on the Loch is artificial , and another , a larger island , is joined by an artificial ...
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... Islands . He was weary with travel and exposure , and had not tasted food for forty - eight hours . His clothes , insufficient at their best to protect him from the rigours of the climate to which he was now exposed at all hours , were ...
... Islands . He was weary with travel and exposure , and had not tasted food for forty - eight hours . His clothes , insufficient at their best to protect him from the rigours of the climate to which he was now exposed at all hours , were ...
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agus Alexander Allan ancient Ardnagrask Assynt Badenoch bard battle beag bhean bheil bhiodh Brodick cairn called Cameron Castle ceann Celtic Celts Cha'n chaidh chur Church Clan Clan Chattan dhomh dhuit district ditto Donald duine Edinburgh eile English esan fhein fhuair Fionn Fort-William Fraser gach Gael Gaelic glen Glengarry Glenmoriston Goidels gu'm gu'n Highland hill Inverness Ireland Irish island John Kelts Kilmallie King Kingussie Laggan land language leam leat Letterfearn Loch Lochaber Lochranza Macdonald Macdonell Mackay Mackenzie Mackintosh Macleod Macpherson Minister mise Morar mountain Norse Norsemen North North Uist noun Nuair parish Pennyland Pictish Picts Ranald Reay Country river robh Scotland Scotos Scottish sheiling sibh signifies Society song stone Strathardle thainig thig thuirt tighinn tradition uair word writer
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188 ページ - Saxon gentlemen are laughing," he said, " because a poor man, such as me, thinks my life, or the life of six of my degree, is worth that of Vich Ian Vohr, it's like enough they may be very right ; but if they laugh because they think I would not keep my word, and come back to redeem him, I can tell them they ken neither the heart of a Hielandman, nor the honour of a gentleman.
182 ページ - And, besides, to take a tree from the forest, a salmon from the river, a deer from the hill, or a cow from a Lowland strath, is what no Highlander need ever think shame upon.
214 ページ - Upon another occasion the same person was in the forest, and having got within shot of a hind on the hill called the Doune, he took aim, but when ready to fire, he observed that it was a young woman that was before him. He immediately took down his gun, and then it was a deer. He took aim again, and then it was a woman, but when the gun was lowered it became a deer. At last he fired, and the deer fell in the actual shape of a deer. No sooner had he slain the hind than he was overpowered with sleep,...
214 ページ - ... milking the hinds. These he knew at once to be fairies, and one of them had a hank of green yarn thrown over her shoulder, and when in the act of milking the deer the animal made a grab at the yarn with its mouth, and swallowed it. The fairy, in apparent rage, struck the hind with the bond with which she had its hind legs tied, saying at the same time, may a dart from Murdoch's quiver pierce your side before night.
213 ページ - ... he proceeded home, a distance of about twelve miles of dreary hill, where he arrived early in the morning; but the fright had nearly cost him his life, for he fell into a fever, and it was many weeks before he recovered. " This Macpherson of Braekaely was commonly called Callum Beg, or Little Malcolm ; and there is reason to believe that he was one of those who fought in the famous battle of the Inch of Perth, in the reign of Robert the Third.
182 ページ - Tell me where is fancy bred, Or in the heart or in the head? How begot, how nourished! Reply, reply. It is engendered in the eyes. With gazing fed ; and fancy dies In the cradle where it lies. Let us all ring fancy's knell : I'll begin it, — Ding, dong, bell.
230 ページ - Scottish people, they breathe a spirit at once of patriotism, and of that candour which renders patriotism unselfish and liberal. We have no hesitation in attesting our belief that Mrs. Grant's writings have produced a strong and salutary effect upon her countrymen, who not only found recorded in them much of national history and antiquities, which would otherwise have been forgotten, but found them combined with the soundest and best lessons of virtue and morality.
236 ページ - The Hittites were a people with yellow skins and ' Mongoloid ' features, whose receding foreheads, oblique eyes, and protruding upper jaws, are represented as faithfully on their own monuments as they are on those of Egypt, so that we cannot accuse the Egyptian artists of caricaturing their enemies.
250 ページ - Yoruba, languages, the Ebo, Ashantee, and Fantee,. Kossa, Fulah. " The Vasco-Kolarian has tree and house conforming to village and grove. The roots for tooth and bone supply names for implements. The names for beasts are based on those for the dog, and altogether the early elements appear to belong to a stage when men were passing from an age of stone to one of bone, and from caves to tree dwellings.
230 ページ - ... Hittites ugly, it was because they were so in reality. The Amorites, on the contrary, were a tall and handsome people. They are depicted with white skins, blue eyes, and reddish hair, all the characteristics, in fact, of the white race. Mr. Petrie points out their resemblance to the Dardanians of Asia Minor, who form an intermediate link between the white-skinned tribes of the Greek seas and the fair-complexioned Libyans of Northern Africa. The latter are still found in large numbers in the mountainous...