's "Letters to His
Gardener"_ 74
1736. THE PORTEOUS RIOTS _Carlyle's "Autobiography"_ 77
1742. THE "CAMBUSLANG WARK" _"Statistical Account of
Scotland"_ 81
THE "FORTY-FIVE":
1745. A. PRINCE CHARLES LANDS IN
SCOTLAND _"Culloden Papers"_ 83
B. RAISING THE PRINCE'S STANDARD _Murray's "Memorials"_ 85
C. THE CAPTURE OF EDINBURGH _Home's "History"_ 86
D. PRINCE CHARLES AT HOLYROOD _Home's "History"_ 89
E. THE BATTLE OF PRESTONPANS _Murray's "Memorials"_ 91
F. "JOHNNIE COPE" _Mackay's "Jacobite Songs"_ 95
G. INVASION OF ENGLAND _Blaikie's "Itinerary"_ 97
1746. H. THE BATTLE OF FALKIRK _"Lockhart Papers"_ 99
I. RETREAT TO THE NORTH _"The Lyon in Mourning"_ 102
J. THE EVE OF CULLODEN _"Memoirs of Strange and
Lumisden"_ 104
K. THE BATTLE _"Memoirs of Strange and
Lumisden"_ 107
L. THE PRINCE A FUGITIVE _"The Lyon in Mourning"_ 111
M. FLORA MACDONALD _"The Lyon in Mourning"_ 113
N. CHARLES AT CLUNY'S "CAGE" _Home's "History"_ 117
THE JACOBITE REBELLIONS
(1689-1746)
STATE OF PARTIES IN SCOTLAND (1689).
+Source.+--_Memoirs of Great Britain and Ireland, from the
Dissolution of the Last Parliament of Charles II. until the
Sea-Battle off La Hogue_, vol. i., p. 215, by Sir John Dalrymple,
Bart. (London and Edinburgh: 1771.)
Of those who had offered their services to William for the settlement of
Scotland, three were eminent above the rest: the Duke of Hamilton, the
Marquis of Athole, and Lord Stair. The Duke of Hamilton had disapproved
of the measures of the late reign, but without publicly opposing them.
He had observed the same cautious conduct with regard to the parties of
his countrymen. He took advantage of his rank to attend none of those
public cabals in which all party-measures had been conducted in
Scotland, from the time of the tables of the covenant; and, by
|