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That which distinguished the present from the late form of government was the return which it made towards the more ancient institutions of the country. Merc. Polit. No. 369. Parl. Hist. iii. 1514, and Prestwick's Relation, App. to Burton's Diary, ii. 511. Most of the officers took the oath of fidelity to the protector.

These are the English Virginia Company, the Dutch West India Company, and the French Company of New France. This charter is printed in Stith, Hist, of Virginia, App. The company was chartered under the name, "The Treasurer and Company of Adventurers and Planters of the City of London for the First Colony in Virginia."

On the contrary, to the leaders in London, the danger of losing Ireland became a source of the most perplexing solicitude. Iren. i. 166. Walsh, App. 43-64. Whitelock, 391. Charles approved and promised to observe this peace.

But Home, in his History of the Rebellion, speaks of Lords Tullibardine and Seaforth as coming from a different quarter. "Most of these persons," he says, "came privately from France." Athol Correspondence. Printed for the Abbotsford Club. App. 229. Home's History of the Rebellion, p. 19. Home, pp. 22, 23. Jacobite Memoirs. Glenfinnin is in the shire of Inverness, and the parish of Glenelg.

She only sent Lord Delawar, Sir Ralph Sadler, Sir Thomas Bromley, and Dr. * Camden, p. 440. Strype, vol. ii. App. p. 23. Digges, p. 16, 107. Strype, vol. ii. p. 51, 52. * Digges, p. 194, 208, 209. Strype, vol. ii. p. 40, 51. Camden, p. 442. v D'Ewes, p. 207, 208, etc. v* D'Ewes, p. 219, 241.

But the Scotsman may like to think that mediæval Scotland was not divided by an abrupt racial line, and that the political unity and independence which it obtained at so great a cost did correspond to a natural and a national unity which no people can, of itself, create. But, as Mr. Mr. Cf. App. Cf. App. I, cc. vii, viii, ix. Cf. App. App. I. Cf. App. Cf. App. Cf. App. Cf. App.

This letter was written by General Lafayette, while on his journey to Newport R.I., whither he has been sent with full instructions to conduct measures of co-operation with the French Generals De Rochambeau and De Ternay. A copy of these instructions is given in Sparks' History of Washington, Vol. 7, App. III. See also the answer of Washington to La Layette, ib. p. 117.

His writings include Vision of Columbus , afterwards expanded into the Columbiad , The Conspiracy of Kings , and The Hasty Pudding , a mock-heroic poem, his best work. These are generally pompous and dull. In 1811 he was app. ambassador to France, and met his death in Poland while journeying to meet Napoleon.

Gasquet-Bishop, op. cit., 69-77. Leach, /Eng. Schools at the Reformation/, 1-7. Gasquet-Bishop, op. cit., 92-96. /Cambridge Mod. History/, ii., 477. Gasquet-Bishop, op. cit., 83 sqq. Dixon, /History of the Church/, ii., 476. Gasquet-Bishop, op. cit., chap. ix. Dodd-Tierney, ii., app. ix. Gasquet-Bishop, op. cit., chap. x. Rose-Troup, /The Western Rebellion of 1549/, 1913.

in maquiztli tlazotetl, the beloved jewels, a phrase which indicates that the broken stones and splintered emeralds referred to are the young warriors who fall in battle, the pride of their parents' hearts, who are destroyed in the fight. Hist. de Nueva España. Lib. II, App. Tezozomoc mentions it as handed to the mourners at funeral ceremonies. Cronica Mexicana, cap. 55.