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قراءة كتاب The Lyon in Mourning, Vol. 1 or a collection of speeches, letters, journals, etc. relative to the affairs of Prince Charles Edward Stuart
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The Lyon in Mourning, Vol. 1 or a collection of speeches, letters, journals, etc. relative to the affairs of Prince Charles Edward Stuart
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Poem on a late defeat, 1746, said to have been composed by a Scots gentleman, an officer in the Dutch service,
A Paraphrase upon Psalm CXXXVII., by Willie Hamilton,
Ode on the 20th of December 1746,
Ode on the 10th of June 1747,
Soliloquy, September, 29th 1746,
Lines upon the different accounts of the behaviour of the two executed lords, Kilmarnock and Balmerino, taken out of an English newspaper,
These lines turned into the form of an inscription,
Lines on Lord Balmerino,
Lines on the death of Sir Alexander MacDonald,
Lines spoken extempore on Lovat's execution, by a lover of all those who will and dare be honest in the worst of times,
Lines on a young lady, who died on seeing her lover, Mr. Dawson, executed on 30th July 1746,
The contrast set in its proper light; said to be done by a lady,
A Catch, 1746,
Lines by the Rev. Mr. Thomas Drummond, Edinburgh, on Mr. Secretary Murray's turning evidence,
Satan transformed into an angel of light, or copy of a letter from Mr. Evidence Murray, to his nephew, Sir David Murray, of seventeen or eighteen years of age, in jail in the city of York, 1747,
Copy of the Prince's summons to the city of Edinburgh to surrender,
Narrative by Mr. Alexander Murray, printer in Edinburgh,
Letter from Charles Gordon of Terperse to his own lady,
Letter, which served as a cover to the above, from Mr. Patrick Gordon, minister at Rhynie,
Letter, said to be written by Lord George Murray or one of his friends, as to the battle of Culloden,
Conversation with Captain John Hay,
Some omissions in Donald MacLeod's Journal,
Letter to Mr. Robert Forbes, containing a true and genuine account of the case of poor William Baird,
Reply to the above letter, wherein a character of honest Donald MacLeod,
Letter from Malcolm MacLeod to Mr. Robert Forbes, and the reply,
Lines by a lady, extempore, upon the ribband which the Prince wore about his head when obliged to disguise himself in a female dress under the name of Betty Burke,