| John Mackintosh - 1884 - 538 pages
...us all through the streets a mile out of the town, encompassing us with foot soldiers and horsemen, all the people gazing and mourning as at the saddest...us a mile without the town, he then declared what farther he had in commission, that we should not dare to meet again above three in number, and that... | |
| James Mackenzie - 1890 - 672 pages
...now to get sore confounded, "a mile out of the town, encompassing us with musketeers and horsemen, all the people gazing and mourning as at the saddest...declared what further he had in commission, — that we should not dare to meet any more above three in number, and that, against eight o'clock to-morrow,... | |
| Marjory G. J. Kinloch - 1898 - 368 pages
...Protestation of this unheard of and unexampled violence, we did rise and follow him ; he led us all through the whole streets a mile out of the town, encompassing us with foot-companies of musquetiers and horsemen without; all the people gazing and mourning as the saddest... | |
| Henry Thomas Buckle - 1901 - 702 pages
...through the whole streets a myle ont of th towne, encompassing us witli foot-companies of musquctcirs, and horsemen without all the people gazing and mourning as at the saddest spectacle they had ever SVCL When he had ledd us a mylo without the towne, he then declared what further h had in commission.... | |
| Henry Thomas Buckle - 1913 - 290 pages
...myle out of the towne, encompassing us with foot-companies of musqueteirs, and horsemen without j- all the people gazing and mourning as at the saddest spectacle they had ever seen. When he had ledd us a myle without the towne, he then declared what further he had in commission, That we should... | |
| Henry Martyn Beckwith Reid - 1923 - 406 pages
...the towne, encompassing us with foot-companies of musqueteirs, and horsemen without (on the flanks) ; all the people gazing and mourning as at the saddest spectacle they had ever seen." Baillie goes on to describe Cotterill's orders to the ministers, by authority of the Parliament. They... | |
| Samuel Greatheed, Daniel Parken, Theophilus Williams, Josiah Conder, Thomas Price, Jonathan Edwards Ryland, Edwin Paxton Hood - 1843 - 846 pages
...through the whole streets a myle out of the towne, encompassing us with foot-companies of musquetcirs, and horsemen without ; all the people gazing and mourning...saddest spectacle they had ever seen. When he had ledd us a mylc without the towne, he then declared what further he had in commission, That we should... | |
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