This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.
identifier | question |
---|---|
13781 | What shall I say to persuade you? 13781 And what think ye of sin to be your continual life-- always blaspheming the glorious name of God? 13781 And what think ye of your final condition-- to be in continual torment-- always weeping and gnashing your teeth? 13781 Could I ever have thought that the fear of suffering and death could be so taken from me? 13781 Friends, will ye close with Christ? 13781 How can they be poor who have Christ for their riches? 13781 Oh what shall I say? 13781 Oh, find you any of this irresistible power of Christ? 13781 Oh, then, sirs, what think ye of Christ? 13781 Oh, what say ye to it? 13781 Oh, what will ye say, and how will ye meet with God, when He comes to count with you for a preached gospel? 13781 Oh, will ye bestow them on precious Christ? 13781 Oh, will ye quit all other things, and seek to be interested in Him? 13781 Think ye that ye love him? 13781 What shall I say of it? 13781 What think ye of devils to be your continual company? 13781 What think ye of eternal exclusion from the presence and comfort of God? 13781 What think ye of hell, where there is nothing but utter darkness, weeping and wailing for evermore, to be your dwelling- place? 13781 What was the ground of such dislike and hostility? 13781 Will ye lay all at his feet, and count it your honour and joy that He dispose of the same as He pleaseth? 13781 Will ye not, at_ this time_, say, He is your Beloved and your Friend? 13781 Will ye then show that? 13781 Would ye make a happy choice? 12381 10, 11,And now, O our God, what shall we say after this? |
12381 | 15,"Shall he prosper? |
12381 | 16, 17--"God says to the wicked, What hast thou to do to take my covenant in thy mouth?" |
12381 | 18, 19, 20--"Who is a God like unto thee, that pardoneth iniquity, and passeth by the transgression of the remnant of his heritage?" |
12381 | 20--"Wherefore, if ye be dead with Christ from the rudiments of the world; why as though living in the world, are ye subject to ordinances? |
12381 | Are Reformed Presbyterians covenanters at all? |
12381 | Are not the most of the three kingdoms in one great combination against it, by this cope- stone of defection, this incorporating union? |
12381 | But to what purpose do we repeat these instances? |
12381 | How could this be, since Seceders have all along rejected"the civil part of the Covenants?" |
12381 | Is baptism a mere ceremony, involving no obligation upon the children of believers? |
12381 | These explanations were then necessary to clear that question of questions--"Shall the throne of iniquity have fellowship with thee?" |
12381 | Where are there any acts of Assemblies, or proceedings of the church, which discover any due concern or zeal for the covenanted interests? |
12381 | Yet who at that juncture appeared to assist them in their laudable undertakings? |
12381 | [ Footnote 2: On what principle does this minister dispense the ordinance of baptism to subjects in their minority? |
12381 | how insignificant were the endeavours then used to prevent that course, and preserve the privileges of the Parliament and liberties of this kingdom? |
12381 | how little conscience hath been made of this duty? |
12381 | or shall he break the covenant and be delivered?" |
12381 | shall he escape that doth such things? |
46345 | Ails me? |
46345 | And what is it like? 46345 And what is your errand, pray?" |
46345 | And what may Andrew Gibb be wanting? |
46345 | And what would you do? |
46345 | And what''s your errand? |
46345 | And you? |
46345 | Anne,I would say,"I love you dearly; may I think that you love me likewise?" |
46345 | Are you dull here, Anne? |
46345 | Are you one of the hill- men? |
46345 | But will he no''be a guid hand at the swird? 46345 Do you never wish to go elsewhere and see the world?" |
46345 | Do you seek to visit the widows and fatherless in their affliction? |
46345 | Have I done it well? |
46345 | Have ye come far the day? |
46345 | How feel you? |
46345 | Is France, that you love so well, more beautiful than this, M. de Rohaine? |
46345 | Oh, and why will you go? |
46345 | Oh, how shall I tell of it? |
46345 | Peace with your nonsense, sirrah,I said sternly;"what man are you who come and prate before your guests, instead of fetching their supper? |
46345 | Thae twae sants, Maister Lambert and Maister Semple,''ill ha''e made some kind o''covenant wi''you? 46345 The hills beyond the little green ridge you mean?" |
46345 | Wha are ye that comes dirlin''here on sic a nicht? |
46345 | What ails you, Henry? 46345 What ails you?" |
46345 | What hills are yonder? |
46345 | Where away so early, John? |
46345 | Where away so early, Mistress Anne? |
46345 | Where is Anne? |
46345 | Who in the devil''s name are you? |
46345 | Why, what would you do with the loaf? |
46345 | Will we ha''e muckle wark wi''him, think ye? |
46345 | Will_ you_ bide wi''the lass? 46345 You, you bastard Frenchman,"he cried,"would you dare to insult a captain of the king''s dragoons? |
46345 | ***** Of the rest of that night how shall I tell? |
46345 | As for Master Henry, what shall I say of him? |
46345 | But how feel you now? |
46345 | But how is the minister?" |
46345 | But perhaps,"and he hesitated,"you are not of them?" |
46345 | But tell me what''s to become o''my bairn? |
46345 | But was I not bound by all the ties of gratitude to grant my host''s request? |
46345 | But what''s to become o''Anne? |
46345 | But whence have you come? |
46345 | Could I ever leave my love for some tawdry honor? |
46345 | Faugh? |
46345 | God grant I may be faithful to my trust, and may he send a speedy end to your exile?" |
46345 | Had the Lord not foreordained that she should be mine, I should ne''er have lifted up my eyes to her, for who am I?" |
46345 | Had you traveled far? |
46345 | If I left the place at once and forever, then indeed my honor would be kept, but yet not all; for my plighted word-- where would it be? |
46345 | If they came back, was not the fate of the girl more hard than words could tell? |
46345 | Is''t no''better to be hunkering in a moss- hole and communing with the Lord than waxing fat like Jeshurun in carnal corruption? |
46345 | Madman that I was, were it not better to be a beggar in France than a horse- captain in any other place? |
46345 | Mayhap I may yet show you your errors?" |
46345 | Shall I call her to you?" |
46345 | Then he spoke out suddenly:"See you yon tuft of willows by the water? |
46345 | There''ll be no such doings in your land, M. de Rohaine? |
46345 | Though I am of the true faith, I think it no shame that my sympathy was all with these rebels, for had I not seen something of their misery myself? |
46345 | We''re men, and can warstle through ills; but oh, what am I to dae wi''the bit helpless lassie? |
46345 | Were it not passing hard that I should perish in this wise? |
46345 | Whae''s to see to her, when the dragoons come riding and cursing about the toon? |
46345 | What brings you here, and how have you fared?" |
46345 | What deterred me? |
46345 | What did the lass with a light, for''twas near midnight? |
46345 | What hindered me to take her to France, the land of mirth and all pleasant things, and leave the North and its wild folk behind forever? |
46345 | What saith the wise man,''He that hath no rule over his own spirit is like a city that is broken down and without walls''? |
46345 | What will Anne dae? |
46345 | When her lover returned, if he ever came, what story would she have to tell? |
46345 | Where was I to go, and what might my purpose be in this wilderness which men call the world? |
46345 | Who is that man?" |
46345 | Who knew what fine things I might come to yet, though now I was solitary in a strange land? |
46345 | Will you take any food before you leave?" |
46345 | Ye''ll no''say me nay?" |
46345 | Ye''ve heard my news richt, ye''re shure?" |
46345 | You say she is well?" |
46345 | You will ask, whoever may chance to read this narrative, why, in Heaven''s name, I did not turn and go back to Ayr, the port from which I had come? |
46345 | You''ll be the foreigner whae stops at the manse the noo?" |
46345 | _ Diable!_ How shall I tell my disappointment? |
46345 | _ Mon Dieu!_ Who will gainsay me? |
21738 | A''safe at the ferm? |
21738 | After what ye''ve said, hoo am I to coont on yer helpin''me e''noo? |
21738 | Am I the first, mither? |
21738 | An''what if they sud fin''yer hoose an''the bairns unproteckit? |
21738 | An''what pairt did_ you_ tak''in these doin''s? |
21738 | An''ye promise no''to try to get away when you''re tied to-- when_ I''m_ tied to_ you_? |
21738 | And pray, who are you, that ye seem so anxious to catch the rebels? |
21738 | And yours? |
21738 | Are not you a minister? |
21738 | Are ye ane o''the persecuted remnant? |
21738 | Are ye no feared,asked Jean, with an anxious look in her companion''s face,"that some of your auld enemies may recognise you? |
21738 | Are you well acquainted with this man Black? |
21738 | But what for d''ye no speer after Jean? |
21738 | But why came you here, uncle? |
21738 | Can you tell me, sir, if a Mr. David Spence and a Mrs. Wallace have arrived from that quarter? |
21738 | Comin''this way, lad? |
21738 | Could ye no''waylay somebody an''rob them? 21738 Did Jean give you any hope yesterday?" |
21738 | Did onybody see you do that? |
21738 | Did ye see my auld man? |
21738 | Did you see the path that diverges to the left and takes down to the thicket in the hollow? |
21738 | Div ye think it''s likely I''ll staund before you in fair fecht, as you ca''d-- you wi''a swurd, and me wi''a bit stick, my lad? 21738 Div ye think, lad,"returned Black, impressively,"that naebody''s been born wi''a high respec''for law but yersel''? |
21738 | Div''ee no see that I''m a shepherd? 21738 Do ye know them?" |
21738 | Eh, Sandy, are ye sae far gane? |
21738 | Eh? |
21738 | Excuse me, gentlemen,said the officer in command of the soldiers,"did you see two shepherds run past here?" |
21738 | Hae ye nae mair? |
21738 | Have ye a garret, wummin-- onywhere to hide? |
21738 | Hoo mony years, think ye, are folk to submit to tyranny an''wrang an''fierce oppression for nae sin whatever against the laws o''God or the land? 21738 I suppose, then,"said the officer,"that your guiding us so willingly to his cottage is in part payment of this unsettled debt?" |
21738 | I''m lookin''for-- I was thinkin''--Did''ee see a man--? |
21738 | In that case, Mr. Welsh,replied Cargill,"what comes of their testimony for the truth? |
21738 | Is that sae? |
21738 | Is that you, Peter? |
21738 | Is there nobody in the house but you? |
21738 | Losh, man, is that you? |
21738 | Shall we not rescue him? |
21738 | So, my young bantam cock,exclaimed a trooper, striding towards him, and bending down to make sure,"we''ve got hold of you at last?" |
21738 | Tell me,said Glendinning, grasping Peter savagely by one ear,"where is your master?" |
21738 | Then he has left the hidy- hole by this time, I suppose? |
21738 | Uncle dear, is not the Lord our hiding- place until these calamities be overpast? |
21738 | Weel, what d''ye think o''me? |
21738 | Weel, what luck? |
21738 | Wha am I? |
21738 | Wha''ll they be, noo? |
21738 | Wha''s that? |
21738 | Whae? |
21738 | Whar''ll they be sleepin''the nicht? |
21738 | What can they be doing in this direction, I wonder? |
21738 | What do I see? |
21738 | What is the matter with your hands, uncle? |
21738 | What think ye noo? |
21738 | What thinkest thou of thy husband now, woman? |
21738 | What want ye here, callant? |
21738 | What want ye here? |
21738 | What was their crime? |
21738 | Whaur''s Quentin? |
21738 | Wheesht, mither,whispered the dying woman, slowly opening her eyes;"it is the Lord''s doing-- shall not the Judge of a''the earth do right? |
21738 | When will Quentin Dick be ready to start? |
21738 | Where are the rest of your household hidden? 21738 Where did ye tether my horse?" |
21738 | Where''s Peter and Bruce? |
21738 | Where? |
21738 | Which is to be drooned? |
21738 | Who was the old man I found in what you call your hidy- hole? |
21738 | Wull ye fecht? |
21738 | Wull ye gang wi''me? |
21738 | Ye was up in the ither dungeon last night,he said, turning to the man who had aided him;"what was a''the groans an''cries aboot?" |
21738 | You know the pestilent fanatic well, I suppose? |
21738 | You''re a precious scoundrel, are n''t you? |
21738 | ------------------------------------------------------------------------ But what of the fortunes of those whose adventures we have followed so long? |
21738 | An''what could I say? |
21738 | Are n''t these laws we_ ought_ to defy, but havena properly defied yet, laws illegally made by a perjured King and an upstart Cooncil?" |
21738 | Are twunty, thretty, or forty years no''enough to warrant oor claim to lang- sufferin''? |
21738 | Are you sure it was him ye saw?" |
21738 | But d''ye think the wundy''s big enough to let ye through?" |
21738 | But no response came from the old woman, save that once or twice she looked up feebly and said,"Jean, dear, what ails ye?" |
21738 | But tell me-- my mother-- and yours?" |
21738 | Ca''ye_ that_ law or legally constituted authority?" |
21738 | Cameron?" |
21738 | Can this be_ you_?" |
21738 | Did ye say that the sodgers ill- used the bairns?" |
21738 | Hae ye ony parritch i''the hole? |
21738 | Have ye fairly settled to tak''to Uncle Andrew''s trade?" |
21738 | I suppose ye admit that the King is bound to respec''the law as weel as the people?" |
21738 | Is not Christ King in his own household? |
21738 | Jock Mitchell, is that you? |
21738 | May I ask what ye expect?" |
21738 | McCubine, can that be you?" |
21738 | Might not this dying woman, he thought, be his own mother? |
21738 | Need we say that there were rejoicing and thankful hearts in Candlemaker Row that night? |
21738 | Now, sir,"( turning to Black),"answer promptly-- Will you subscribe the oath of the King''s supremacy?" |
21738 | She bids me hope, indeed, in the Lord-- an''she''s right there; but as for man, what can we hope frae_ him_?" |
21738 | The quastion noo is, Div ye want to escape and wull ye trust me?" |
21738 | They were gey hard on them, I dar''say?" |
21738 | Think ye that we are sufferers? |
21738 | Wallace?" |
21738 | We are inclined to ask, with some surprise, Why should he wish to acquit him? |
21738 | Whar''s Marion an''Is''b''l?" |
21738 | What ails ye, lad? |
21738 | What brings ye here?" |
21738 | What hae ye seen?" |
21738 | What would you have me do?" |
21738 | What''s yer name?" |
21738 | Whaur are thae pestiferous rebels?" |
21738 | Where from and where away now?" |
21738 | Where is it?" |
21738 | are my een leein''? |
21738 | div''ee railly think the news can be true?" |
21738 | is''t possable? |
30749 | ''The question,''said Lord Dundee to his Majesty,''is, whether you shall stay in England or go to France? 30749 Am na I their mither, have na I a right to speer?" |
30749 | And do they mean to daunt us from doing justice against seditious schismatics? |
30749 | And ha''e ye been there? |
30749 | And how got he the ear of the Earl,said my grandfather,"not having the sign?" |
30749 | And if they do not, what shall I then be? 30749 And wha made me familiar wi''her, Dame Lugton, tell me that?" |
30749 | And what business then hae ye to come to snool me? |
30749 | And what could her Highness answer to this? |
30749 | And what has been the answer? |
30749 | And what passed? |
30749 | Are there but the magistrates? |
30749 | Are ye no frighted, Marion, to speer sic a question, when ye think how ye left them, and what for ye did sae? |
30749 | Aye, aye,interposed Mr Jaddua Fyfe,"it was a great thing to converse wi''a prince; and how did he behave himself,--that''s in the way o''manners?" |
30749 | But their retinue-- when have delinquents come to trial so attended? |
30749 | But what''s said? |
30749 | But your brother; he was of course younger than you? |
30749 | Can I tell, who was not there? |
30749 | Did na ye sign the remonstrance to the laird against the curate''s coming; ca''ye that naething? 30749 Do ye no ken Hallowe''en? |
30749 | Do ye think I''ll e''er gae back to that havering, daunering cuif o''a creature, the Crail bailie? |
30749 | Do you mean then to deny,said Murray,"that the late rebellion was not a rebellion?" |
30749 | Do you mean to justify the manner of the death of the Archbishop? |
30749 | Do you mean to say that she''s a witch? |
30749 | Do you say so to me, after I kept you from being hanged? |
30749 | Gilhaize,said the Earl,"how is this? |
30749 | Had ye no better gang out and see for Ecclesfield? |
30749 | How fares it with you? |
30749 | How is it, then, that you wear his livery, and that I saw you, with Sir David Hamilton, enter the garden of that misguided woman? |
30749 | How, in the name of the saints and souls, did ye think, in going frae Glasgow to Kilmarnock, o''taking the road to Paisley? |
30749 | I hope,replied Mr Witherspoon,"that there''s no symptom of a laxity of principle among them?" |
30749 | I''m glad o''that,replied my grandfather;"what is''t?" |
30749 | In the name of Heaven,exclaimed Mr Witherspoon,"who and what are you that walk with us?" |
30749 | Is yours ony better? |
30749 | Pray, have you heard any thing of Argyle lately? |
30749 | Sarah Lochrig,said I, for I knew my wife''s gentle pressure,--"How is it that you are with me in this doleful place? |
30749 | Saw ye twa fellows ganging this gait? |
30749 | Say you so, my Lord? |
30749 | Say? 30749 The walls of Jericho,"said one of the travellers,"fell at the sound but of ram''s horns, and shall yon Babel withstand the preaching of John Knox?" |
30749 | Then it''s no you that was sent to the Earl of Eglinton? |
30749 | Then ye acknowledge the murder of the Archbishop to have been murder? |
30749 | Well, Glencairn,said she,"what has brought you hither from the west at this time? |
30749 | Well, well, no matter as to that; but where is he? |
30749 | Wha do ye want? |
30749 | What do you see? |
30749 | What does he say? |
30749 | What has He commanded, father? |
30749 | What has befallen Bell? |
30749 | What has brought you here? |
30749 | What has happened? |
30749 | What is it? |
30749 | What like were they? |
30749 | What mean you, Ringan? |
30749 | What''s te prelates, Robin Fullarton? |
30749 | Wherefore, honest man,rejoined his Lordship kindly,"would you make a distinction that may bring harm on your own head? |
30749 | Why do you fly so fast from us? |
30749 | Will you allow,exclaimed her Highness,"that they shall take my sword in their hands?" |
30749 | Would you like to see them? |
30749 | You do not mean to say so, surely? |
30749 | You have indeed been plain with her Highness,said the Earl, thoughtfully;"and what reply made she?" |
30749 | And then his Lordship, looking to me, added,--"Do you consider the late rebellion, being contrary to the King''s authority, rebellion?" |
30749 | Are your father and mother living, Jack Windsor?" |
30749 | As I went along the road, several that were passing inquired where I was going so fast? |
30749 | But I pointed to the grave, and said,--"Friens, do you ken what''s in yon place, and do ye counsel me to peace?" |
30749 | But did ye say ye would come wi''me?" |
30749 | But hae ye heard the names of the prisoners, or where they belong to?" |
30749 | But how will ye get into the presence and confidence of the Lord Boyd?" |
30749 | But the helpless widow was not content, and she came forward drying her tears, saying,"And what is my poor fatherless do- na- gude about? |
30749 | But what could he do and the danger so pressing? |
30749 | But what ministers would be there was not settled; for who could tell which, in those times, would be spared from prison? |
30749 | But wherefore need I thus descant of my own estate, when so many things of the highest concernment are pressing upon my tablets for registration? |
30749 | But why do I doubt? |
30749 | But why do I dwell on these intents? |
30749 | But why need I dwell on these melancholious incidents? |
30749 | By----? |
30749 | Call you rebellion suffering?" |
30749 | Can you, Gilhaize, in aught assist my resolution?" |
30749 | Dun going forward with the wonted reverences, the Queen said to him abruptly,--"Well, Erskine, what is this?" |
30749 | Have you provided yourself with the twenty douce men that I ordered you to bring hither?" |
30749 | How found you entrance, and I not hear you come in?" |
30749 | How''s a''wi''the bairns?" |
30749 | If I should hae had a misfortune, nane''s the sufferer but mysel''; and what would I hae to live on wi''my mother? |
30749 | If he kent ye were here, I doubt he would let you bide, and what would become of you then?" |
30749 | Is not the King''s authority instituted by law and prerogative, and knowing that, can not ye say that those who rise in arms against it are rebels?" |
30749 | Is the realm to be forever tossed like the sea by this tempest of heresies? |
30749 | Is your name Cargill?" |
30749 | Its satire is keen- edged, but good- humoured enough to hurt no one; and its wit and( may we say?) |
30749 | Murray resumed,--"And pray now, Ringan, tell us what has become of the two rebels?" |
30749 | Surely she did na sae beglamour your senses as to appear like a winsome young lass? |
30749 | The King''s forces are at Cartsdyke, and they''ll be here the morn, and what''s to come o''you then, wi''your covenanted havers? |
30749 | The other soldier was surprised, but collected; and shutting the door, to prevent us from pursuing or escaping, said,--"What the devil''s this?" |
30749 | The reviewer said:"Who says the sense of humour is dead when we have''The Pottle Papers''? |
30749 | Then said she, still more eagerly,"Think you that subjects, having the power, may resist their princes?" |
30749 | Was Gilhaize the name of any of the prisoners?" |
30749 | What hae ye done with your twa thoughtless companions?" |
30749 | What more can the average novel reader wish for in holiday time?" |
30749 | What of the merits of this first attempt in a line that was new to him? |
30749 | What say ye, Lucky?" |
30749 | Ye hae some brothers and sisters nae doubt? |
30749 | and wherefore is it that I have heard no tidings from you?" |
30749 | cried Dun;"and what is the result?" |
30749 | cried Murray;"that, Ringan, winna do; was it or was it not murder?" |
30749 | cried Nanse with the voice of terror;"and has the King daur''t to send sic accursed things to devour God''s people?" |
30749 | cried he, turning round and placing his chair between me and the door,"and who does not permit them? |
30749 | hae I yirded you at last?" |
30749 | is nae that Ecclesfield''s foot clampering wi''his spurs at the door?" |
30749 | is she one of that sort?" |
30749 | is thy goodness so great, that thou canst already vouchsafe to me a mercy like this?" |
30749 | or the shedding of many tears? |
30749 | said she,"what can hae sent you here, for this is a bishop''s house?" |
30749 | said the boy,"what is His will? |
30749 | she then said;"and has it come to this, that a minister of the Gospel is obligated to beg an almous frae Janet Armstrong?" |
30749 | what''s this? |
30749 | why have you come back? |
30749 | ye of little faith, wherefore are ye thus dismayed? |
49671 | ''Donald, ken ye hoo that bit beastie cam in my bonnet?'' 49671 ''They encourage themselves in an evil matter: they commune of laying snares privily; they say, Who shall see them? |
49671 | And did I no? 49671 And do you not like work, my wee man?" |
49671 | And do you not think I too have such a longing? |
49671 | And hoo are a''the bairns, Mistress Murdoch? |
49671 | And hoo hae ye made oot wi''your marketing in the town, Wullie? |
49671 | And what for no? 49671 And why s''ould there not be mercy for you?" |
49671 | Annie, lass, what hae ye dune to young Donald? |
49671 | Are ye in ony hurry for your ain share? |
49671 | Are you much hurt? |
49671 | Aunt Jeannie,she began,"are ye no weary? |
49671 | Ay hae they; but lassies hae na, hae they, Annie? 49671 Bessie dear, good neighbor Bessie,"said my mother,"do you no remember that Janet is as dear to us as to you? |
49671 | But what wad ye think if ye were in the kirk and ye s''ould hear it sounded in your ears that some were left to eternal death? |
49671 | But, Wullie, might not that be only for the chosen people, the Israelites? |
49671 | But, mither, can a man no be baith gude and great? |
49671 | But,added he,"what, after all, signifies an escape that must eventually end in torture or death?" |
49671 | Can a man no hae a bit o''merriment but ye maun come spierin''aboot after him? |
49671 | Can ye no see where your interest lies? 49671 Davie, I canna live always; why do ye no tak a wife to yoursel? |
49671 | Do ye not fare weel eneuch wi''Archie Lindsay? |
49671 | Do ye tell us fause, ye young whelp? |
49671 | Hae ye no heard aboot it? 49671 Hae ye onything to settle wi''your Maker, Ramsay?" |
49671 | Has the lad been talking to you about going to school? |
49671 | Have I not bided safely under the shadow of the Almighty more than threescore and ten years? 49671 His talk aboot what? |
49671 | Hoo are ye, my bairn? 49671 Hoo can I let Jamie gang? |
49671 | Hoo comes it that ye are sae wise, neebor Murdoch? |
49671 | Hoo is it,said he,"that ye speak aboot sic things? |
49671 | Hoo is that lad o''Daft Jamie''s likely to turn oot? |
49671 | Hoo is that, Rab? 49671 Hoo would that please you, Rab?" |
49671 | Hoot, man, what ails ye, to talk after that fashion? |
49671 | How comes it, my auld dame, and you, my bright- eyed lassie, that ye are sae dull o''hearin''? 49671 How hae ye sleepit, my bairn?" |
49671 | How is this,said the stranger when Wullie was gone,"that you advance money in that fashion? |
49671 | I am too auld to leave hame, Jamie; but if I could gang, what would I do in Edinburgh? 49671 I feel weel, and I hae plenty to eat and plenty to do; why s''ouldna I look weel?" |
49671 | I suppose ye hae room in your byre for anither coo? |
49671 | Is anything amiss? |
49671 | Is not Scotland a bonny country? |
49671 | Jamie, Jamie, will ye never hae dune talking aboot that man? |
49671 | Jamie, will ye gang wi''me for the coos? |
49671 | Jeannie, what think ye aboot oor neebor''s talk? |
49671 | Jeannie, ye are o''er pale and thin; are ye no weel? |
49671 | Let me see-- how many bairns have we among us? |
49671 | Mother,said Ellen softly,"was he no the ane wha put the match to Uncle Jamie''s fingers?" |
49671 | Na, Mistress McAllister, a drap wunna hurt ony ane; but wha stops at a drap, tell me? |
49671 | O Margaret,I said, for she was walking beside me,"how can we tell her these heavy tidings? |
49671 | O Steenie, what will they do with father? |
49671 | Oh, my bairn,sad the glad, sad mother,"when will ye daily sit at this table and pass your evenings at your ain hearthstane?" |
49671 | Robin,said his uncle,"are you not indulging in unprofitable thoughts? |
49671 | So ye hae been greetin''aboot new shoon, hae ye? 49671 The Bible tells us there is a time to be merry,"said he,"and what time is more fitting than a wedding- day?" |
49671 | Weel, Sandy, what brings ye out on sic a night? |
49671 | Weel, Wullie, if ye lack faith, what would ye think o''me? |
49671 | Wha is here? |
49671 | Wha will lay low the enemy of his country and his king? |
49671 | Wha will lead me to him? |
49671 | What ails Annie? |
49671 | What ails thee, Annie? |
49671 | What ails ye, faither, that ye dinna smile to wee Jamie? |
49671 | What ails ye, lass, that ye dinna talk ony mair? 49671 What brings ye oot on sic a morning? |
49671 | What harm has he ever done to living mortal? |
49671 | What hinders us to run you through, man? |
49671 | What is that you are saying, my lad? |
49671 | What is wrang wi''Nellie? |
49671 | What is wrang wi''ye, Jamie? 49671 What is wrang wi''your faither?" |
49671 | What puts Daft Jamie''s into your heid? |
49671 | What would Jamie say if he s''ould see you gaen at sic a gate? |
49671 | What would ye think o''callin''her Annie? 49671 When did he awa? |
49671 | Where is Steenie? |
49671 | Where then is Stephen Patterson? |
49671 | Wherefore should I flee? |
49671 | Who shall go with you, mother? |
49671 | Whom are you seeking? |
49671 | Why is that? |
49671 | Why should I be accounted an enemy of the king? 49671 Why should I no look proud? |
49671 | Will ye bring me some when ye gang again? 49671 Will you never have done wi''greetin'', Aunt Effie?" |
49671 | Wullie, doesna the Bible hold forth hope and pardon to the warst o''sinners? |
49671 | Ye say ye are nae auld Ramsay; then where is he? 49671 ''Who was it, Christie?'' 49671 After all of me that is mortal has turned to dust, will any say of me as they say of him,''He helped me on in the way to heaven''? |
49671 | And where is Jennie MacDuff? |
49671 | And who, think you, bides now at the manse? |
49671 | And why should I grieve for one who perhaps never gave me a second thought, and whom I had no right to love? |
49671 | Annie is like Rab; hae ye never noticed it?" |
49671 | Annie placed herself in front of him, with her arms akimbo, and with face brimful of happiness asked,"What think ye o''me?" |
49671 | Are they not as bonny and as sonsie as ony parent could wish?" |
49671 | Are ye no all weel at hame?" |
49671 | Are ye no weel?" |
49671 | As I approached I heard him ask,"Where is Effie?" |
49671 | As he left his house, so he found it; but how would it be if he opened his door to his brother''s family? |
49671 | Auld Muckle Geordie might tak it in his heid to gang daft aboot me; would I hae to marry him?" |
49671 | Besides, had not Alexander Ramsay told her so? |
49671 | But Jamie, anxious to escape, ran forward, calling out,"Are ye nae coming home, grandfather?" |
49671 | But Rab said to himself,"What is the need o''sic an ado?" |
49671 | But how is it that ye dinna speak your ain language? |
49671 | But how is it with you? |
49671 | But if we were so unsettled by the sad event, how must the new inmate of Bessie McDougal''s home have felt? |
49671 | But mother,"said I,"did not the minister read Sunday morning about Ezekiel and wheels and fire?" |
49671 | But the change in mother helped us all, and father often said,"Agnes, what should we do in all our difficulties without your strength and courage? |
49671 | But where is the flock?" |
49671 | But where would ye find a better lad than Donald? |
49671 | Can I help you now?" |
49671 | Did she see some one on the other shore beckoning to her? |
49671 | Did ye ever think o''it?" |
49671 | Did ye think I would forget my auld and tried servant at sic a time as this?" |
49671 | Do ye no ken that all parents see their bairns in the same way? |
49671 | Do ye no ken that grandfaither wearies to be awa wi''his Faither in heaven? |
49671 | Do ye no ken that there are robes provided, so that each wha will may wrap himsel around wi''them as he wraps his plaid aboot him? |
49671 | Do ye think our freends will be the first to greet us on the ither shore?" |
49671 | Do you forget that she was wife to my ain Steenie, and that I have loved her long and well?" |
49671 | Do you mind me?" |
49671 | Do you suppose there are no poor in America?" |
49671 | Donald McPherson met him one day, and after a cordial greeting said to him,"So ye are to be the man o''the parish, are ye, Jamie? |
49671 | Donald, I will ask ye ance mair, did ye pit that bee in my bonnet?'' |
49671 | Donald, who could not long be silent, turned to Annie and asked,"Hoo like ye the new sculemaister?" |
49671 | Had he been too lenient with his brother when he was young and under his care? |
49671 | Had he failed to impress his mind with Bible truths? |
49671 | Hae ye grawn ashamed of your mither- tongue? |
49671 | Hae ye no made paths aboot your ain door?" |
49671 | Hae ye taen to preachin''? |
49671 | Hae ye that sorrow?" |
49671 | He says sae muckle, wha can mind it a''?" |
49671 | Her daily life was harassed by the all- absorbing questions,"What shall we eat? |
49671 | His usually pale cheek glowed; his tongue was loosed; his burning words went to our souls as he continued:"Oh, shall any of us this day be glorified? |
49671 | Hoo soon s''all it be?" |
49671 | How are you, father?" |
49671 | How could we get on withoot Davie?" |
49671 | How is your ain part o''the wa''?" |
49671 | How should we win our bread? |
49671 | I do believe thee; and if I do not believe aright, wilt thou teach me how to believe?" |
49671 | I hear ye stand at the heid o''your class; hoo is that?" |
49671 | I think sometimes, What do parents rear bairns for? |
49671 | I will leave it to yoursel, Jamie; saw ye ever bonnier bit lassies?" |
49671 | If he can not meet his expenses this year, how will he do it next year with this amount deducted?" |
49671 | Is any one among us faint- hearted? |
49671 | Is he na a fine lad?" |
49671 | Is it no a gude fashion? |
49671 | Ken ye aught o''your uncle?" |
49671 | Lord, how long shall the wicked, how long shall the wicked triumph?" |
49671 | Now what is to be dune aboot it?" |
49671 | Oh, who of us, think you, is worthy to suffer for Christ''s sake? |
49671 | Saw ye ever mair thoughtfulness than that, Jeannie?" |
49671 | Shall any of us for this day''s work wear a martyr''s crown throughout eternity? |
49671 | So anxious was he that he forgot the usual courtesies, and did not raise his bonnet, but called out,"Is he dead?" |
49671 | Then I felt relieved; for was she not laying her burden at the feet of One who can sustain us in all our troubles? |
49671 | Turn ye, turn ye from your evil ways; for why will ye die, O house of Israel?''" |
49671 | Uncle Jamie, ye mind auld Sawny McKay? |
49671 | Was it joy that her long pilgrimage of more than ninety years was accomplished at last? |
49671 | Was it the nicht?" |
49671 | Wha kens but I may graw rich there, and come back and mak a''the lairds lift their bonnets to me?" |
49671 | Wha kens wha has the right o''it?" |
49671 | Wha says it doesna?" |
49671 | What but a miracle would save him? |
49671 | What do ye say till it?" |
49671 | What else would keep ye a''out o''your beds? |
49671 | What has kept you the hail morn?" |
49671 | What was the cause of his intemperance? |
49671 | What will ye be wantin''?" |
49671 | What will you say when their blood is required at your hands? |
49671 | What would he do here but herd sheep, or haud the pleugh for ither people? |
49671 | When did he gang awa?" |
49671 | Who is he, Erskine?" |
49671 | Who would not, if need be, lay down his life to win a''well done''from the Master?" |
49671 | Why are ye rinnin''in sic a fashion?" |
49671 | Why do not our party take the field? |
49671 | Will ye no tell me at ance what it is? |
49671 | Would you be sa kind as to gang and look for him?" |
49671 | Ye dinna want to do wrang, I hope; or do you think I hae na sense to judge what s''ould be accounted wrang? |
49671 | and Wullie would say,''What are ye after noo?'' |
49671 | and was not that enough for Mary? |
49671 | and wherewithal shall we be clothed?" |
49671 | and why his aversion to vital piety? |
49671 | said he,"did you indeed have to suffer for Uncle Steenie''s sake?" |
49671 | she exclaimed,"how could you do sic a thing? |
49671 | she exclaimed,"what is to become of the sheep when so many of the shepherds are taen awa?" |
49671 | what shall we drink? |
32137 | ''A Whig''s sang or a King''s- man''s sang?'' 32137 ''David, lad, do ye renounce John Gib and all his ways?'' |
32137 | ''Did ye see a light shining in the moss late yestreen?'' 32137 ''Hae you a Bible?'' |
32137 | ''How came ye to be here?'' 32137 ''It was, aiblins, Wull- o''-the- Wisp?'' |
32137 | ''John Gib,''cried Anton Lennox,''stand up before the Lord, and answer-- who has done this?'' 32137 ''Thou foul- mouthed Whig,''cried Douglas,''hast thou also been taking the Covenant? |
32137 | ''What made that great muckle hole in your side?'' 32137 ''What mak''s ye lauch sae wide at puir Gibbie?'' |
32137 | ''What mak''s your e''en bones sae white an''deep?'' 32137 ''Whaur came ye frae?'' |
32137 | ''Whaur gang ye sae late at nicht by this road withoot the leave o''Mardrochat?'' 32137 ''Ye saw visions, did ye?'' |
32137 | A chiel, Jean Gordon? |
32137 | A good morning, cousin,said she,"and how speeds the suit?" |
32137 | An''ken ye what my mither said when the next hefter cam to see after his sheep on the hill? |
32137 | An''what said ye next, Curate? |
32137 | An''what wull the auld body do then? |
32137 | And am I not a man, Aunty Jean? |
32137 | And did he die? |
32137 | And hae ye ony mair to tell me, Birsay? |
32137 | And how speeds the wooing, John? |
32137 | And what else are the Covenant men doing? |
32137 | And what is your father''s name? |
32137 | And what need may you have in Carsphairn, that you can not fit in Saint John''s Clachan of Dalry as well, and a deal nearer to your hand? |
32137 | And what,I said,"came o''Jock Wabster?" |
32137 | And who are you that speaks so lightly of my cousin of Earlstoun? |
32137 | And whom may we have here? |
32137 | Angry, Roger McGhie? 32137 Are there any here that find a difficulty to close with Christ? |
32137 | Are there none such here? |
32137 | Are these fit manners from a servant? |
32137 | Are ye deaf as well as man- sworn? |
32137 | Are you a maid of the Quaker folk? |
32137 | Are you one of Balmaghie''s servants? |
32137 | Are you the King? |
32137 | But aboot yoursel'', Aunty Jean? |
32137 | But heard ye o''the whummel I gat aff this verra Duchrae kitchen laft? |
32137 | But surely,I said to the cobbler,"you would not steal what the poor honest folk leave behind them in their haste?" |
32137 | But what for did ye no tak''yin then? |
32137 | But what of Walter-- you have seen-- is it well with the lad? |
32137 | But will not he be angry? |
32137 | But with yourself, how goes it? |
32137 | But you are not feared of them? |
32137 | Can I help ye, Sandy? |
32137 | Can ye no see them? |
32137 | Did Kate say that? |
32137 | Did she ever kiss you? |
32137 | Did ye ever think of the sore hearts ye left behind ye? |
32137 | Did ye think, as ye watched them gang, that it was your Lindsay, Aunty Jean? |
32137 | Did you not hear? 32137 Did you not see William before?" |
32137 | Do you own the King''s authority? |
32137 | Do you see This? |
32137 | Do you want them all? 32137 Gentlemen,"cried a stern, calm voice,"gentlemen, is it thus that ye amuse yourselves when ye are upon the King''s service?" |
32137 | Give me your hand? |
32137 | Has she not told you herself? 32137 Hath the fair Jean proved unkind?" |
32137 | Have I not been about the tower these thirty years? |
32137 | Have not you read it, sir? |
32137 | Have ye indeed hidden on the mountains and ken not that? 32137 Have you forgotten quite?" |
32137 | Have you your pistols by you? |
32137 | He prays, does he? |
32137 | Hey, where away, Roderick? |
32137 | How began ye this brawling? |
32137 | How came Jean Gordon to say that you were the gardener at Balmaghie? |
32137 | How can there be such a place and I not know it? |
32137 | How do you and the other Peter up the way draw together? |
32137 | How kenned ye, Birsay,I said, to humour him,"that we werna Whigs?" |
32137 | How now, Curate,began my cousin, reining in his black and sitting at ease,"are you going to take to the hill and put Peden''s nose out of joint?" |
32137 | How so, Balmaghie? |
32137 | I suppose you will claim that this cub also is a good King''s man? |
32137 | Is he by his lane? |
32137 | Is it not a noble thing,she said musingly,"to have a father that will render up his life for you as if it were a little thing?" |
32137 | Is there anything more that ye were in? 32137 Ken ye what little Jock said this day?" |
32137 | Kenned ye ever a Gordon that would be driven with whips of scorpions, or one that could not be drawn with the light of ladies''eyes? |
32137 | Let me see wha''s aucht the sheet? |
32137 | Maisie, Maisie, wha has done this to ye, my lassie? |
32137 | Maisie,I said,"ye''ll no forget me, will ye?" |
32137 | Matthew Welsh,she said,"what brings you so far from hame so early in the morning?" |
32137 | Nay, but tell me, my lassie, will ye think every day o''the lad ye nursed in the well- house chamber? |
32137 | Preserve us, lass, for what wad ye hae lad''s claes? |
32137 | Sain my soul and body,said Wat,"is the Heather Cat going to charge an army in position?" |
32137 | See here what I hae gotten aff him? |
32137 | See here, William Gordon, what mean you by that? 32137 Sodger- man, wull ye let me tak''my wee brither by the hand and dee that way? |
32137 | Tell me,said my aunt,"is it a matter of treason to the King?" |
32137 | Then who but Anne was the pretty fighter,Clavers went on lightly,"with a horseman''s piece on her left arm, and a drawn tuck in her right hand? |
32137 | Then why not let me have it out with this bairn- slayer? 32137 Then,"said he,"who may you be that kens so little?" |
32137 | There na, is that comfortable? |
32137 | Think ye I didna warn her? |
32137 | Think ye, Maggie? 32137 Think you, John,"said Balmaghie, shrewdly,"that you will add Earlstoun and Barscobe to your new lands of Freuch?" |
32137 | To bring the soldiers? |
32137 | Wad ye like to hear? 32137 Walter,"said my aunt,"will you not pleasure us with your company to- night?" |
32137 | Wha''s plaidie is this? |
32137 | Wha? 32137 What beast? |
32137 | What did she mean? |
32137 | What for does your faither no come ben the hoose to me? |
32137 | What for should I be feared? 32137 What is the push?" |
32137 | What ken ye aboot him? |
32137 | What ken ye, lassie? 32137 What of my Lady Wellwood?" |
32137 | What protection can I be to Walter Gordon, the best sworder in Edinburgh town this night from Holyrood to the Castle? |
32137 | What sent you to the conventicle, then, when you fear the red- coats so greatly? |
32137 | What takes you to the Covenant side? |
32137 | What then is the difficulty-- her mother? |
32137 | What think ye o''that? |
32137 | What''s ta''en ye, mither? |
32137 | What''s your hurry? |
32137 | What,he said,"do you not hold the covenants?" |
32137 | Whaur gang ye screeving to, young sirs, so brave? |
32137 | Where away so briskly? |
32137 | Where away, Heather Jock? |
32137 | Where away, Whigs, without the leave of the King and Peter Inglis? |
32137 | Where did you leave them? |
32137 | Where is the beast? |
32137 | Wherefore, then, stand ye there in arms against his forces? |
32137 | Which name shall I put in? 32137 Whither gang ye?" |
32137 | Who made this? |
32137 | Who may these maids be? |
32137 | Who may you be, and what do you want? |
32137 | Who may you be? |
32137 | Who was the man who laughed? 32137 Whom have we here,"he said,"coming so late by the window to see the lassies? |
32137 | Whom have we here? |
32137 | Will ye fight? |
32137 | Will ye get me a drink of good caller water? |
32137 | Will ye surrender and lay down your arms to the King''s troops? |
32137 | Will, do you see THIS? |
32137 | Wull it be sair? |
32137 | You were at Ayrsmoss, and won clear? |
32137 | You were at Sanquhar town on the day of the Declaration? |
32137 | You will not answer, young rebels,he cried,"ken you what they get that will not speak when the King bids them?" |
32137 | You, young Cock- of- the- heather, what might be your black Whig''s name? |
32137 | ''Ay, woman, did ye?'' |
32137 | ''Do I command a set of porridge- stuffed, baggy knaves that fall off their horses whenever they see a Whig tyke skartin''for fleas? |
32137 | ''O man, Birsay,''she says,''I hae aye been a freen''o''yours, ye micht e''en see gin he has it, an''seek it aff him? |
32137 | ''See ye if this be a vision?'' |
32137 | ''Think ye we will take a turn and steer them?'' |
32137 | ''Wha''s midden''s this? |
32137 | Also was she not the fine general? |
32137 | And standing where his feet were nearly on a level with our little Margaret''s head, he said to her:"What see ye down there, Margaret Wilson? |
32137 | And wha''s Mardrochat that his barn- door cock craws sae croose on til''t?'' |
32137 | Are there no man- sworn Whigs in the West that true men must fall to hacking one another?" |
32137 | Are there no watchmen to tell the towers thereof-- none to cry from rampart to rampart,''What of the night?'' |
32137 | Are ye sure it is not sticking somewhere by the road?'' |
32137 | At last Sir George Mackenzie turned him about and said,"Officer, whom have we here?" |
32137 | Aweel, puir Gibbie was lying on his bed up that stair, an''what think ye there cam''to him?" |
32137 | But after a''the Kirk was oor ain mither, and what for should the King misca''or upturn her? |
32137 | But first ere I reached her she said quietly to me,"Have you not seen your mother?" |
32137 | But hast Thou no other work for them to do in their master''s service? |
32137 | But it was not as I thought, for who can track a woman''s heart? |
32137 | But ken ye what my mither did? |
32137 | But was there ever a Gordon that would not go ram- stam at the boar, whatever his religion?" |
32137 | But what for did you sign all the papers and take all the oaths against intercommuning, and yet all the time be having to do with rebels?" |
32137 | But who are the Seven Thousand?" |
32137 | By what right do you fall to brawling with an ally of the country? |
32137 | Can you with constancy suffer the choking of the salt water when it comes to your turn?" |
32137 | Did ye never hear of them that wait for the time appointed?" |
32137 | Do you mind the long wood of Dairsie by the Eden Water?" |
32137 | Do you wonder that my desire went out to her greatly, and that all in a moment I sprang down the rickle of stones as if they had been a made road? |
32137 | Gin she whummelt us, and peyed us soondly till we clawed where we werena yeuky, wha''s business was that but oor ain? |
32137 | Hae ye nane that ye love?" |
32137 | Hae ye ony sisters?" |
32137 | Has he taken the Test?" |
32137 | Hath your master given you any word to speak before I come down to you?'' |
32137 | Have any of you that are here seen me in New Luce? |
32137 | Have ye never witnessed for the cause and Covenants? |
32137 | He turned upon Inglis as fiercely:"Cornet, are you upon duty? |
32137 | Heard ye ever o''the Hefter o''the Star?" |
32137 | Heard ye what our Anne did? |
32137 | I went to the door and with my knuckle knocked gently, as is our fashion in that part of the country, crying,"Are ye within, good wife?" |
32137 | Is he not where you and I would gladly see all his clan? |
32137 | Is he the King''s hangman? |
32137 | Is it not true?" |
32137 | Is the good man about the doors?" |
32137 | Ken ye what I was tellin''them the ither day? |
32137 | Me? |
32137 | Must ye have them?" |
32137 | O Sandy, why could you not have been content with scaring them?" |
32137 | Of our further progress what need that I tell? |
32137 | Or have ye been dumb dogs that would not bark? |
32137 | Richt curious, was it na? |
32137 | Shall the fortress be utterly broken down with none to build her up? |
32137 | She was muckle the better o''a man, was she no? |
32137 | She''s near as bonny as me, think ye no? |
32137 | Since when has she become so distasteful to you?" |
32137 | So pitiful did he look that, when all was past, my cousin Wat went over and asked of him:"What craven manner of hill- man art thou?" |
32137 | So we e''en gied him a bit hoise an''ower he gaed intil the water----""Mercy on us,"I cried,"ye didna droon the man?" |
32137 | Tell me, Gordon, gin ye drew this yoursel''or is James Stewart in Scotland?" |
32137 | Then Mardrochat turned about to his gallows thieves:"''Must we go back empty- handed? |
32137 | Then louder he cried,"Mistress, are ye within?" |
32137 | Then what think ye? |
32137 | Thus we learned that Sandy''s side of the house was safe; but what of our mother and Maisie Lennox? |
32137 | Wad ye gie your mither up for the King''s word?" |
32137 | Wad ye, then? |
32137 | Wadna the like o''that be a bonny exchange for the peace and quaitness o''the Garpel side?" |
32137 | Was he to denounce us as traitors? |
32137 | Was it the brither o''ye, that cursed spawn o''the low country? |
32137 | Was there ever such consolation sent in any nation to the wife of a man condemned to torture and to death? |
32137 | Was there one of us, say maybe your father and mine, that had not been sessioned time and again? |
32137 | What if her eyebrows meet under her chin and her ears hang down like band strings? |
32137 | What is my life any more? |
32137 | What is that to you?" |
32137 | What mean you?" |
32137 | What more can ye do but smell him? |
32137 | What say ye, Wat? |
32137 | What signifies a Whig Johnstone the less? |
32137 | What think ye? |
32137 | What wad ye say, Wat? |
32137 | What would ye have?" |
32137 | Whatna Whig rebel was it ye harboured? |
32137 | Whatna yin o''your rebel sons-- chasing up hill and doon dale after your blackguard brither, was it that brocht him hame?" |
32137 | Whaur has he come frae?" |
32137 | When what d''ye think happened? |
32137 | Where didst thou get all the stories of the city? |
32137 | Whither rides he now thus early?" |
32137 | Who might the father of you be, if ye happen to be so wise as to ken?" |
32137 | Will ye say aloud''God save the King''?" |
32137 | Will you dare to seek it back from Him now, as if He could not guide and keep and manage, what you have committed to Him? |
32137 | Will you deliver your prisoners?" |
32137 | Would you like to have that, Heather Jock?" |
32137 | Young Whiggie, this is not proper wark; but who may you be?" |
32137 | cried Westerhall,"who was it that found him? |
32137 | cried he;"good sport in your ain coverts, Westerha''?" |
32137 | he said;"ken ye not the Seven Thousand upon the hills of Scotland, that never bowed the knee to Baal?" |
32137 | like a flaught o''fire-- Yon comes upon ye, and where are ye?" |
32137 | said I, but stilly to myself, for who was I to stand against all of them? |
32137 | she said,"is it indeed you and not a dream?" |
32137 | who can? |
45495 | ''Deed aye,she answered,"and what for no? |
45495 | After all,said the four eyes, as they took counsel,"is it worth it?" |
45495 | Ah, Lochinvar,she cooed,"what is this we have heard of you? |
45495 | Ah, good lads,he cried,"plaided men, carriers of the buckler, where gat ye that ane?" |
45495 | Ah, let this be a lesson to you, young sirrah,he said;"see how carefully and yet how politely this gentleman can keep his master''s secrets? |
45495 | And Maisie,said Kate, solemnly, looking up at her with her head still on her hands,"would you believe it? |
45495 | And afterwards among the sand- dunes of Lis you discovered that all this devotion arose merely from noble, pure, unselfish, platonic love? |
45495 | And do you know why? |
45495 | And for what were you in prison in Holland? |
45495 | And has it taken you all this time to come to that conclusion? |
45495 | And have I not remembered? |
45495 | And heard you whither the ship was to sail, Marie? |
45495 | And how came you by your English? |
45495 | And how did you save her? |
45495 | And how now about the anointed king? |
45495 | And how was the matter settled? |
45495 | And is it because you hope to be so happy with her that you do all these things? |
45495 | And is our Wat in prison? |
45495 | And is this gentleman also of Monsieur Haxo''s gallant company, and in the suite of his Excellency my Lord of Barra? |
45495 | And leave all this,she said, wistfully,"and you?" |
45495 | And now,said Scarlett,"pray, have you so much as thought upon our need of horses?" |
45495 | And pray, whom do you expect to delude with this cock- and- bull story? |
45495 | And the beginning of that-- was it not some matter of doctrine or of the kirk? |
45495 | And the horses,queried Wat,"whence came they?" |
45495 | And the third? |
45495 | And these other two gentlemen, your honorable companions? |
45495 | And was it for that service you spoke so kindly to him just now, and bade him meet you at the head of the wood as you went home? |
45495 | And what of that? |
45495 | And what would you do with me there? |
45495 | And what, Master Lyall, might have brought you to Flanders? |
45495 | And when you went out of your lodging that night, was it to walk with your cousin or to visit my Lady of Wellwood in her boudoir? |
45495 | And whither have they taken her? |
45495 | And who are you, my skip- jack manling,said Scarlett,"that makes so free with your horses in this country of donkeys?" |
45495 | And who may that be, Marie-- old Jack Scarlett, mayhap? |
45495 | And who may they be? |
45495 | And who may you be, my pretty little young man with the babe''s face, and where gat you the spirit that makes you speak so brisk and bold? |
45495 | And who, Sir Broad- Stripe, made you burgomeister of the town of Lis- op- Zee? 45495 And why were you afraid, dear love?" |
45495 | And you expect--? |
45495 | And you gave him the love- token? |
45495 | And you understand the drilling and mustering of raw levies? |
45495 | And you? |
45495 | And your friend? |
45495 | Are you glad I have come back? |
45495 | Are you of the servants of the prince? |
45495 | Are you sorry, Wat? |
45495 | Are your minds made up? 45495 As you say, my Lord Lochinvar, of what use is it?" |
45495 | Aye, John Scarlett, man, but is that you, na? |
45495 | Aye, man, an''hoo''s a''wi''ye? |
45495 | Aye,said the girl, anxiously;"did I not do right? |
45495 | But are there, then, no others? |
45495 | But eneuch o''havers,said Bess;"ken ye that yon braw lad o''yours is safe and hearty? |
45495 | But have you considered, my friend, that England is a somewhat large mark to hit in the white and bring up in Poole Harbor at the first offer? |
45495 | But in that case,said Maisie,"why not persuade the prince to make an example of somebody else-- not, surely, of our cousin Wat?" |
45495 | But the boat upon which you are leaning? |
45495 | But the king-- the king--? |
45495 | But what seek you in my country? |
45495 | Captain Smith was perhaps overtaken by the late storm,he said, warily,"and so compelled to leave his long- boat behind him?" |
45495 | Captain William Gordon? 45495 Clerk McCaskill,"cried Jean,"ye''ll mind Maister Walter? |
45495 | Could you have loved me,he asked, more calmly,"if you had known no other? |
45495 | Did I not lead them well? |
45495 | Did I not say that he could break prison- bands and come to find me-- that he would overpass unruly seas only to look on my face? 45495 Did Kate tell you if he had spoken aught to her of love?" |
45495 | Did you not send for me, William? 45495 Do these your clansmen of honor and courtesy wear butchers''knifes in their belts, and go by the name of Haxo the Bull, the Calf, and the Killer?" |
45495 | Do you believe in love? 45495 Do you not remember me?" |
45495 | Does this your noble Highland honor include treachery, spying, and butchery? |
45495 | Doubtless you will have seen my Lord Dundee? |
45495 | Faith, Will, is it time to get up already? |
45495 | Feared? |
45495 | From whom did you receive that order, and what speed did you make with your mission? |
45495 | Get up and escape-- what''s the terrible fyke and hurry? 45495 Have I your highness''s leave to speak?" |
45495 | Have you anywhere to go where you will be safe? |
45495 | Have you quarrelled with him? |
45495 | He but asked me for a love- token to take with him to the wars-- which I gave him, and how could I tell? |
45495 | How can I go back? |
45495 | How did we get away from the city of Amersfort, tell me, Jack? |
45495 | How near by did you see him? |
45495 | How says the Writing? 45495 How shall one know that he is within a hundred miles or more of his aim?" |
45495 | How should there be a horse aboot the house of Lochinvar? 45495 How then?" |
45495 | I am indeed his wife,said Maisie, with just pride;"what of him?" |
45495 | I can not go on,he said;"my words are not credited-- of what use is it?" |
45495 | I trust your illness has not been grievous? |
45495 | I wonder,she said, presently,"if it is as good to be in love as to sit in the tree- tops and eat pignuts?" |
45495 | In the matter of the Privy Council and my Lord Wellwood? |
45495 | Is Colonel Graham here? |
45495 | Is the auld hoose on fire, or what''s a''the red- hot haste? |
45495 | Is the paper genuine, think you? |
45495 | Is their hire paid for? |
45495 | Is there a horse about the house? |
45495 | Is this true? |
45495 | Is your husband on board? |
45495 | It is Barra''s trick-- what other? |
45495 | Jack-- Jack Scarlett? |
45495 | Kate, Kate, where are you? |
45495 | Ken ye that? |
45495 | Lad, have ye had enough of adventures,he said, more sadly than was his wo nt,"or are ye as keen after them as ever? |
45495 | Laddie, what should auld Jean Gordon ken aboot times and seasons? 45495 Lest what, Kate?" |
45495 | Let us walk together to your home; you lodge with your cousin of Earlstoun, do you not? |
45495 | Lie still, man; can ye not bide and watch? 45495 Lord, what''s yon they hae gotten?" |
45495 | Love,he said,"you will never change when the days darken? |
45495 | May I have a moment''s private audience with you, Mistress Kate? |
45495 | Milk for the kitten,she said;"taste it,"and she offered to feed him with a spoonful--"nice, nice-- is it not, brother John?" |
45495 | My Lord of Barra,they heard Bess Landsborough say, without,"have ye forgotten aught? |
45495 | My lassie, are ye feared? |
45495 | My lord,said Wat, softly,"how is it with you?" |
45495 | Nay, rather, how goes the day? |
45495 | Nevertheless, you will give our poor cousin your best word and offices to- morrow? |
45495 | Not my lady-- my late Lady Wellwood, I mean? |
45495 | Now, do you understand? |
45495 | Now,she said,"what brocht ye here this night, and where did ye come frae?" |
45495 | Of my own choice I took the barred road, and wherefore should I complain that I had to settle the lawing when I came to the toll- gates? 45495 Oh, I wonder if they have brought the babe?" |
45495 | Oh, why,she sobbed,"was he so foolish and wicked? |
45495 | Or come you to visit your ancient friends, who have not wholly cast you off, Lochinvar, though you have forgotten them? |
45495 | See you any stronghold where we may keep ourselves against these rascals, if they manage to attack us? |
45495 | She has gone in your father''s ship, then? |
45495 | Struck my Lord Barra-- with a knife, Marie? |
45495 | Surely,he thought,"it can not be in this morose dungeon that they have shut my love?" |
45495 | Tell me first,he said,"where you have hidden our Kate, and what you have to do with the killing of my Lord of Barra? |
45495 | Tell me how you first loved me, and when, and why, and how much? |
45495 | The babe? |
45495 | The boy''s fair dementit,cried Jean;"what for should auld Jean Gordon lee to him? |
45495 | The provisions, sayest thou? |
45495 | Then you are the officer of the prince appointed to receive my despatches? |
45495 | Then you will not love me? |
45495 | Then,said the girl,"may I not drink first to your beautiful eyes, my captain, and then, if you will, to our better acquaintance?" |
45495 | Think ye that tower anywise defensible? |
45495 | Think you the enemy will attack us this day? |
45495 | Think_ who_ will be dead? |
45495 | To seek your lass and your friend, says you,answered the woman,"a good answer and a fair; but whilk o''them the maist? |
45495 | Walter, mind you not my dearest friend and gossip Kate, and how in old sad days in the dear far- away land we there underwent many things together? |
45495 | War? 45495 Was_ he_ in prison?" |
45495 | Wat Gordon,she said,"know you not that there is but one kind of love? |
45495 | Wat, Wat, how came you here, lad? |
45495 | We might break it,said Will Gordon, quietly,"or it might even cry, and then what should we do? |
45495 | Well,he said,"has it come to this? |
45495 | Well? |
45495 | Went your night- ride to rights? |
45495 | Were they souljers or civilians ye murthered, for sure? |
45495 | Wha wad hae thocht on seeing you in mountebank''s cleading so early in the morning? 45495 What day of the month is this?" |
45495 | What do three horses there? |
45495 | What do you here in this attire? |
45495 | What have you been doing to my Wat? |
45495 | What is the matter with old Jack? |
45495 | What is your name, pretty maiden? |
45495 | What is your name? |
45495 | What may be the great hurry? |
45495 | What may be the import of your message, since you are grown suddenly so solemn- jawed over it, Wat? |
45495 | What means that message, Will? 45495 What might all this be?" |
45495 | What of that? 45495 What regiments are on guard to- night?" |
45495 | What said Wat to you, dearest Kate,asked Maisie, again, altering the form of her question,"that you sent him thus speechless and dumfoundered away? |
45495 | What said he? 45495 What shall we do with these fellows?" |
45495 | What''s a''the tirrivee? 45495 What, then, do you desire?" |
45495 | Wheest, laddie,she whispered,"hae ye the heart o''gowd that the lassie left for ye wi''that daft hempie, Mehitabel Smith?" |
45495 | Which tale? |
45495 | Whither away so fast and so late, maiden? |
45495 | Whither- away so fast? |
45495 | Who goes there? |
45495 | Who is that? |
45495 | Who may this youth be? |
45495 | Who might want him at this time of night? |
45495 | Who were on duty to- day at headquarters? |
45495 | Whose leg goes across the saddle of the third? |
45495 | Why not the new and brave one you hid in the water- passage? 45495 Why, Kate, lass, how came the good winds to blow you hither from the lands of mist over the sea?" |
45495 | Why, lassies,he said, with loud joviality,"what can there be to cry about now, when everything has fallen out so well after all our troubles?" |
45495 | Wi''laddie, laddie, what has gotten ye? 45495 Will not you let me be your friend once again after these weary years?" |
45495 | Will you not bid me good- bye again ere you go, if only for the old sake''s sake? |
45495 | Will you not come up with me, Wat? |
45495 | Will you tell this lady,said Wat,"what you know of my acquaintance with the Little Marie?" |
45495 | Would not you be an outlaw, and I no better than an encumbrance while you remain in hiding? |
45495 | Would you give her up to another if you knew that it was for her good? |
45495 | Ye are acquaint with my Lord Dundee, they tell me? |
45495 | Yes; but how may my Lord Barra know of that? |
45495 | You are an officer of the King of France? |
45495 | You are not hurt, Wat? |
45495 | You are of his Highness''s Scot regiments? |
45495 | You are sure that there is no friend I can take a message to? |
45495 | You choose between us, then? |
45495 | You come from the country, perhaps? |
45495 | You do not mean it-- Kate gone? |
45495 | You fought by my side at Calmthout, did you not? |
45495 | You have not quite forgotten me, then, sweet lad of Lochinvar? |
45495 | You have, perchance, no one to drink with you? |
45495 | You must have been very happy in prison? |
45495 | You remember my father? |
45495 | You swear to me that he is not dead? |
45495 | You took an order the night before last to this gentleman''s quarters? |
45495 | You were a celebrated master- of- arms in Scotland, were you not? |
45495 | You will not tell them,whispered the girl, faintly, catching at Maisie''s hand as she went out,"nor let him think that I am-- foolish?" |
45495 | Your business with me? |
45495 | Your father and your mother-- are not they authority enough? |
45495 | Your husband''s name and regiment? |
45495 | Your name and possessions? |
45495 | Your name and regiment, sir? |
45495 | Your name? |
45495 | ''Collation,''quo''he? |
45495 | ''Goes my lord to Scotland?'' |
45495 | A fine figure of a woman, and-- Lord, where was the best of them? |
45495 | Ah, if she had stayed in the fields always she might have been better, purer, perhaps-- who knows? |
45495 | Also, am I not of age, and able to choose my company as well as they? |
45495 | Am I not an officer of dragoons? |
45495 | An enemy? |
45495 | And as for ancient sweethearts, what cared he for a peck of them? |
45495 | And it lasted-- hoo lang? |
45495 | And the man and me, we baith wanted the lass-- ye comprehend? |
45495 | And what wonder if a little of it overflowed into her eyes? |
45495 | And whither might this treasure be going?" |
45495 | And who are the brisk lads with you? |
45495 | And will not I give thee wars to fill thy belly, and leave something over for stuffing to thy calves?" |
45495 | Are the dead- runners on your track?" |
45495 | Are the eleventh and the twelfth no''as guid days? |
45495 | But as to this boat,"he went on,"your master can not mean you to take her along the coast by yourself all the way to meet him in Hamburg?" |
45495 | But do you believe in love really-- the love they sing about in catches, and which the lads prate of when they come awooing?" |
45495 | But for your lass--""For her,"said Wat, lowering his voice, solemnly,"for the lass I love, is it? |
45495 | But had he ridden five days or fifty? |
45495 | But presently he grumbled,"How can I or any man take a boat to England without so much as a compass or a chart?" |
45495 | But what can I do? |
45495 | But"--he scratched his head and hesitated--"the provisions for such a cruise-- they will cost much?" |
45495 | CHAPTER XLVIII THE MASTER COMES HOME And what in all the annals of romantic adventure could be found more utterly hopeless than Wat Gordon''s quest? |
45495 | Can you not see we are just glad?" |
45495 | Can you not tell me what it is that you have against him? |
45495 | Come, what had you been saying to him to provoke him to kiss you?" |
45495 | Could it possibly be that Wat, released from prison, had come directly back to her? |
45495 | Could you not have said as much at first, and not stood gaping there like a week- old corpse done up in a winding- sheet?" |
45495 | Did I not tell you that he was my enemy before he was yours?" |
45495 | Did I not tell you?" |
45495 | Did I not well?" |
45495 | Did I tell you his beard was like yours? |
45495 | Did any see you strike?" |
45495 | Did the same Lord no''make them a''?" |
45495 | Does she not sleep soundly, recking nothing of evil or the sorrow of others, upon her bed? |
45495 | For have not half a dozen generations been told in rhyme how"Tammy Norrie o''the Bass Canna kiss a bonny lass?" |
45495 | For this that we lay shoulder to shoulder on the chill moors, that in these latter days you should charge me with crimes of which I know nothing? |
45495 | Had Lochinvar made love to her? |
45495 | Had he not buried his mother in the green kirkyard of Dalry? |
45495 | Hae ye been at some play- actin''near by? |
45495 | Hae ye slain a man to his wounding-- a young man to his hurt? |
45495 | Has any maid in the world a lover true like mine? |
45495 | Have you nothing else that you can say to finish the lie in a more workmanlike fashion?" |
45495 | He ought not to have done that, ought he?" |
45495 | He would say good- bye to the friends who are with him in this strange land before he departs, and of these you are one, are you not, my Kate?" |
45495 | Hidden Kate? |
45495 | How can I wait with the greedy talons of the monster drawing nearer to my lass? |
45495 | How shall I love you now, when your sweetest words of this night are writ in fire on my heart? |
45495 | How will you ever find your love if your wits are so moidered, before ever ye leave this dull Dutch country?" |
45495 | I know that you can not forgive me; but tell me something-- anything that I may do for you?" |
45495 | I suppose it is there in safety still?" |
45495 | If he so kiss the gift, what would he not do to the giver?" |
45495 | If the other existed not?" |
45495 | In what, think you, have I offended her?" |
45495 | Is it permitted to kiss your hand? |
45495 | It was given to his ancestors by the grandfather of his present majesty--""His present majesty?" |
45495 | John Scarlett, is that the life for a man or for a puddle- rolling pig of the stye?" |
45495 | Know you that only my bare word stands between your lover and death?" |
45495 | Nae sic Whiggery about a brisk lad like you, surely?" |
45495 | Or will you return to your own home with me, your father, and with this noble lady, to whom I give you as a daughter?" |
45495 | Quietly, quietly; tell me, in brief, what ye wad do for your friend and what for your lass?" |
45495 | Shall I utter a word of excuse only to be met with the sneer of unbelief? |
45495 | Should she ever see it more? |
45495 | Since when did Walter Gordon of Lochinvar need to stand considering who has the right to be styled his lawful king?" |
45495 | Tell me, laddie, as God sees ye, what yin ye wad leave ahint ye, gin ye could tak''but yin o''them and ye kenned that death wad befall the ither?" |
45495 | The chief went on:"You will be wondering what Keppoch does here on the edge of this country o''Camerons? |
45495 | Then, catching sight of the pale, desperate face, he exclaimed, in a different tone,"Preserve us, laddie, what has ta''en ye? |
45495 | There is nothing at all that you can do for me--""No one you love to whom I could carry a message-- a letter?" |
45495 | Think ye the States- General and the Yellow Prince have need of such as I?" |
45495 | Think you that our muckle clumsy bodies could run and hide as featly? |
45495 | Was he to meet her at the end of the avenue? |
45495 | Was her love lying there dead before her, or at least in utmost danger of his life? |
45495 | Was it your lass or your friend that ye thocht on when ye took life in hand and cam''paddling like a pellock through the mirk? |
45495 | Was she not Kate McGhie of Balmaghie, and had she not been accustomed to be told that she was beautiful as long as she could remember? |
45495 | Were you ever hungry in prison?" |
45495 | Were you to find her to- morrow, what should I get out of all the errant jackassery in the world?" |
45495 | Wha hae we here this shot? |
45495 | What are ye in sic a fyke for aboot the tenth and the tenth? |
45495 | What did she care? |
45495 | What had become of the other? |
45495 | What has happened to the Covenant that you have left the prayer- meeting and come to the Hostel of the Coronation?" |
45495 | What matters it if I do suffer a wee here for cleanliness? |
45495 | What was that noise? |
45495 | What''s that?" |
45495 | What, I pray you, is this love of yours to that?" |
45495 | What, then, had he come home for? |
45495 | Where got ye it, Will?" |
45495 | Who so wicked in all this land as to have done the thing?" |
45495 | Who was your master at the play?" |
45495 | Why are you not in the Low Countries, making love to the little Dutch maids with faces like flat- irons?" |
45495 | Why did Maisie grow of a sudden so hard and cruel to him? |
45495 | Why do you ask if it be genuine?" |
45495 | Why must I have faith for both of us? |
45495 | Why must things turn out thus deadly wrong, when they might just as easily have gone right?" |
45495 | Why should not we three put the boat''s head towards England this fine brisk night, with the wind in our quarter, and boldly steer our way thither? |
45495 | Why will you let me fight this battle alone? |
45495 | Why, is not Kate here, behind the glass of that window? |
45495 | Why, man, what is come of your ancient contrivance, your wise shifts, your forethought? |
45495 | Why-- why did you let me?" |
45495 | Will my Kate be sufficient for these things? |
45495 | Will you come with me? |
45495 | Yet whither can I go? |
45495 | You forgave me long ago, did you not? |
45495 | You mind it was to be the fiery cross betwixt us two? |
45495 | You will never think less of me, never love me less for my words, nor for letting you love me thus?" |
45495 | [ Illustration:"A GIGANTIC HIGHLANDER WITH A NAKED CLAYMORE BY HIS SIDE"]"Wi''laddie, was I no watchin''ye?" |
45495 | [ Illustration:"SCARLETT THUNDERED ON THE PANELS WITH THE HILT OF HIS SWORD"]"Decent woman,"cried Jack Scarlett to her,"is your man at hame?" |
45495 | asked the Little Marie, for the fiftieth time;"no beloved mistress to whom I can carry a letter?" |
45495 | cried Jean Gordon;"do ye no''see that the lad is deein''on his feet? |
45495 | cried Scarlett;"_ she_, did he say? |
45495 | cried Wat, starting back,"was it for this that we two kept Wellwood''s men at bay under the arch at Holyrood? |
45495 | cried her husband,"why not fetch it here to- night? |
45495 | cried the officer in command to him;"whither away, riding so gayly, young sir?" |
45495 | he cried, astonished,"what wind hath blown you here-- not recruiting for the Prince of Orange, I hope, nor yet trying to cut my favor with Keppoch?" |
45495 | he cried,"what do you here, lassie?" |
45495 | he cried,"what do you here?" |
45495 | he returned,"what need to speak of escape? |
45495 | he said, as if to himself;"is this another of them? |
45495 | he said, without manifesting the least surprise,"what for did ye no''meet me at the kirk stile of Colmonel, where I trysted wi''ye?" |
45495 | it cried,"what do you here with our long- boat? |
45495 | pursued Scarlett,"is she not a vessel which a man may hire for a just price?" |
45495 | said Jean Gordon,"what will we do wi''the puir laddie? |
45495 | said Kate,"why should I be afraid; am I not all his? |
45495 | said her husband,"wherefore should they bring the babe, carrying him all the way from Earlstoun?" |
45495 | said the woman,"and did I no see the thocht in the verra crook o''your elbow? |
45495 | she cried, in a hoarse voice, as she had heard the guard do at the posts;"the name of the prisoner detained within?" |
45495 | she cried,"do ye think so? |
45495 | she said, anxiously, taking him by the hand,"nor Scarlett?" |
45495 | she said, with something like the dew of tears in her voice,"that you gave up the command of a regiment to come to this quiet place-- and to me?" |
45495 | what have you to say?" |
45495 | what is''t, woman?" |
37137 | Now what hast thou to do in the way of Assyria?--The Chaldee paraphrase hath it, What have you to do to associate with Pharaoh king of Egypt? 37137 Now ye shall say, we have no king, because we feared not the Lord, what then should a king do to us?" |
37137 | Shall he break the covenant, and be delivered? 37137 Should we again break thy commandments, and join in affinity with the people of these abominations? |
37137 | Ye rejoice in a thing of naught, which say, Have we not taken to us horns by our own strength? |
37137 | ''Idolatry''( saith he in his conference with Lethington)''ought not only to be suppressed, but the idolater ought to die the death; but by whom? |
37137 | ''What is he then that bears command, not for the people''s advantage, but studies only himself, who leadeth his subjects into manifest snares? |
37137 | ''What then? |
37137 | ( For how otherwise can popery be extirpated? |
37137 | 11.----The cup which my Father hath given me, shall I not drink? |
37137 | 20. does tacitly assert the same truth, in that expostulation, shall the throne of iniquity have fellowship with thee, that frameth mischief by a law? |
37137 | 22.----What peace, so long as the whoredoms of thy mother Jezebel, and her witchcrafts are so many? |
37137 | 3, 4.--he doth whatsoever pleaseth him, where the word of a king is, there is power, and who may say unto him, What dost thou? |
37137 | A father to these that are unwilling to be sons? |
37137 | Again he asked, what they meant by owning? |
37137 | Again, if royal power may be resisted by interposing seas and miles, why not also by interposing walls and arms? |
37137 | Again, is it not plain, that the abstract and the concrete, the act or habit, and the subject wherein it is, can not have a contrary denomination? |
37137 | An head over such as will not be members? |
37137 | And a defender thro''violence? |
37137 | And are not tyrants the greatest of thieves, that rob and destroy twenty for one of private robberies? |
37137 | And do they not require this as such a sign on such a condition? |
37137 | And does not a national promise of preserving the reformation, bind as much to the curse of the breach of it? |
37137 | And how can we own that authority, that is wholly employed and applied for the destruction of religion? |
37137 | And if he have not the peoples call, where shall we find another? |
37137 | And if the father''s vow obliges the children, shall not the nation''s vow oblige the posterity? |
37137 | And in invading all those privileges of subjects, which are natural, civil, moral, and religious? |
37137 | And is not public preaching indispensible duty too? |
37137 | And must we own him to be a nursing father to the church? |
37137 | And shall they be obeyed? |
37137 | And shall we put them upon our head, who are infamously suspected of parricide, both projected and perpetrated?'' |
37137 | And this another, Was the killing of the bishop of St. Andrew''s horrid murder? |
37137 | And to set such a man over them, and not such an one, if they had no influence in making one at all? |
37137 | And what shall we say of his brother succeeding, who disdains all bonds, whose professed principle is, as a papist, to keep no faith to heretics? |
37137 | And what should make the taking away of honour from the proper object to be sin, and the giving it to a wrong object to be no sin? |
37137 | And who dare be so impudent as to deny this to be most reasonable and just? |
37137 | And who knows not the cruel designs of the papists now? |
37137 | And wilt thou condemn him that is most just? |
37137 | Are men therefore obliged to own his authority? |
37137 | As the minister of God, not to be resisted or revolted from under pain of damnation? |
37137 | As the question was never put to the people, whether they owned his authority as lawful, or not? |
37137 | But are not tyrants and usurpers haters of right? |
37137 | But can a subjection of this extent be paid to a tyrant or usurper? |
37137 | But can it be imagined, that all this is due to a tyrant and usurper? |
37137 | But it is not enough that they menace heaven? |
37137 | But it will be said, Can there be any instances of the primitive christians adduced? |
37137 | But now how shall this testimony be given by us conveniently? |
37137 | But shall the king also be punished? |
37137 | But then it will be urged, why then was that clause cast into the covenant? |
37137 | But what could be their hire they gave them for it, if it was not their taxations they paid, and money they sent unto them? |
37137 | But who sees not the disparity in every respect? |
37137 | But why are not the reformers condemned for the same things? |
37137 | But will men put out their own eyes, that they may be taken with the more tameness to grind in their mill, and make them merry at our madness? |
37137 | But will the world never be awakened out of this dream and dotage, of dull and stupid subjection to every monster that can mount a throne? |
37137 | By authority, whether did they mean the administration of it as now improved? |
37137 | By me tyrants reign, and usurpers decree injustice? |
37137 | By what authority shall judgment be execute upon them? |
37137 | By what right? |
37137 | Can an oath be taken in truth and righteousness, to assist him in all encroachments, upon causes that are not subordinate to him? |
37137 | Can he be a father and a patron to us against our will, by the sole power of the sword? |
37137 | Can he be called a father, who accounts his subjects slaves; or a shepherd, who does not feed, but devours his flock? |
37137 | Can it be imagined, that a people acting rationally, would give a power absolutely, without restrictions, to destroy all their own rights? |
37137 | Can it be out of conscience, because he is the Lord''s minister for good? |
37137 | Can no power, at first unjust, afterward become just? |
37137 | Can these be the fathers we are bound to honour in the fifth commandment? |
37137 | Can these scriptures consist with the judges dependence on the king''s pleasure, in the exercise and execution of their power? |
37137 | Can they be said to be gods among whom the Lord judgeth? |
37137 | Can tyrants and usurpers be such? |
37137 | Can we consent, that we and our posterity should be slaves? |
37137 | Can we honour them who are vile, and the vilest of men; how high soever they be exalted? |
37137 | Can we pray that God would bless him on a throne of iniquity? |
37137 | Can we support those we are bound to suppress? |
37137 | Could they suppose this boundless and lawless creature, left at liberty to tyrannize, would be a fit mean to procure the ends of government? |
37137 | Could we pray, that the Lord would bless a drunkard in his drunkenness, abusing his enjoyments? |
37137 | Dare any say then, that a magistrate''s or tyrant''s laws can exauctorate a minister? |
37137 | Did ever they, while groaning under the most insupportable tyranny of their persecuting emperors, disown their authority, or suffer for not owning it? |
37137 | Do they indeed fear a foreign invasion? |
37137 | For against what common enemy must we preserve it, if not against him that is the chief enemy thereof? |
37137 | For hath not he and his accomplices made the kingdom a curse? |
37137 | For the question is not, if when they think themselves injured they may resist? |
37137 | For what is authority, but a right to rule? |
37137 | For, it is demanded, how doth the son or brother succeed? |
37137 | Further, let it be enquired, What makes it unimitable? |
37137 | Great king''s- men all of them, who despised and boasted them, What is this that ye do? |
37137 | Have they not invaded the Mediator''s kingdom, and taken to themselves his house in possession? |
37137 | Have we lost our senses, that we may with confidence jeopard our souls? |
37137 | Hereby they have presumptuously taken upon them, to pass a judgment upon the deed of their brethren, before their murdering enemies? |
37137 | How long shall they break in pieces thy people? |
37137 | How shall we know who is our father, or what we owe to him, if we may give another his due? |
37137 | How? |
37137 | I retort that old Colewort twice boiled, who should be judge, whether they were their own lawful kings or not? |
37137 | If kings be not among the mighty, how shall they be classed? |
37137 | If so, then he was not satisfied with it: or the right, as now established? |
37137 | If the first be said, they grant all I plead for; for though the power in general be ordained, yet what is this to tyrants and usurpers? |
37137 | If the kingdom be his, by birth, as an inheritance, why may he not upon necessary occasions sell his inheritance? |
37137 | If they must only stand by, and be spectators of their omissions unconcerned, what shall they do to evite this wrath? |
37137 | If we cast at divine laws for rules of government where will we find better laws? |
37137 | If we have been forward to assist our neighbour kingdoms, shall we neglect to defend our own? |
37137 | In this case then I demand, whether their impunity is necessary, because they must not be put to death? |
37137 | In this case would, or durst any of the lovers of Jesus comply with any of these demands? |
37137 | Is it fit to say to a king, thou art wicked; and to princes ye are ungodly? |
37137 | Is it not necessary that forces be maintained, and such as are in public office in the kingdom? |
37137 | Is it not then both a part of the witness of the faithful, and of their wisdom to stand aloof from such a plague, that hath such destructive effects? |
37137 | Is it the law which adjudges them to punishment? |
37137 | Is it the person executing the laws? |
37137 | Is not this the case now? |
37137 | Is this our crying? |
37137 | Is this our endeavour that the wicked may be brought to condign punishment? |
37137 | Is this our struggling? |
37137 | It is sure the physician''s duty; but what if he will not, or can not, or there be no physician? |
37137 | It is true this is spoken against churchmen; but will any think that will be approven in civil powers, which is so hateful in church officers? |
37137 | It will be asked, how this passed from him unto others? |
37137 | Jehu the prophet is sent to him,"Shouldst thou love them that hate the Lord? |
37137 | Jesus or CÃ ¦ sar? |
37137 | Lord, how long shall the wicked? |
37137 | Must these things depend on the magistrate''s allowance? |
37137 | Must we believe, that a religion destroying tyrant is a righteous ruler? |
37137 | No man needs to say, Who shall be judge? |
37137 | Now how were they said to be without a ruler, when the Chaldean actually commanded, and absolutely ruled over them? |
37137 | Now, can we own all these abominable creatures to be magistrates? |
37137 | Now, if we require this qualification in the subordinate, why not in the supreme? |
37137 | Now, shall the laws be like spiders webs, which hold flies, but let bigger beasts pass through? |
37137 | Now, what else was the voice of Samuel, than a dissuasion? |
37137 | Now, what reason can be given for his opening his windows? |
37137 | O how amiable are his tabernacles? |
37137 | One objection is to be removed here: can the customs of the Jews be binding to all nations? |
37137 | One would think this behoved to be a very great favour, from a very great friend, for very gracious ends: but what is it? |
37137 | Or a thief in his stealing, though he used his purchase never so soberly? |
37137 | Or by refusing, expose myself to the hazard of being robbed or slain? |
37137 | Or can he think to be saved, when they shall be sentenced, who with so much deliberation and despite have done this thing? |
37137 | Or can they be done without meeting together in private or public? |
37137 | Or how otherwise can we cleanse the land of their sins?) |
37137 | Or in any other sense, alledged more legal? |
37137 | Or shall the enemies of God be more active against his cause than his people for it? |
37137 | Or shall the subjects, calling in all from 60 to 16, be able to support the throne? |
37137 | Or that whores of state are not to be called to an account? |
37137 | Or whether it induces upon themselves, and entails upon the posterity, slavery as to both these invaluable interests? |
37137 | Or whether they might suffer their brethren to be murdered in their presence, without any declaration that such tyranny displeased them?'' |
37137 | Or, shall this be satisfaction for his life, that he is a crowned king? |
37137 | Shall I obey and be free? |
37137 | Shall even he that hateth right govern? |
37137 | Shall even he that hateth right govern? |
37137 | Shall he, notwithstanding of this, give what these enemies to Christ, call for as his concurrence, to enable them to execute their wicked contrivance? |
37137 | Shall it be for want of witnesses? |
37137 | Shall none be past against parricide or fratricide, for killing his brother, murdering the nobles, and burning cities? |
37137 | Shall not a man defend himself? |
37137 | Shall sentence be past for petty wrongs against a man, and none for tyrannizing over religion, laws, and liberties of the kingdom? |
37137 | Shall that idol( say they) be suffered again to take place within this realm? |
37137 | Shall the throne of iniquity have fellowship with thee, that frameth mischief by a law? |
37137 | Shall their omission be an argument to us? |
37137 | Shall therefore they govern? |
37137 | Shall these guard the nation, who, together with religion, tread upon the poor remaining shadow of liberty? |
37137 | Shall we love the ungodly, and help those that hate the Lord? |
37137 | Shall we own these, against whom the Lord hath engaged his holiness by oath so solemnly, that he will fish them with hooks? |
37137 | Should not we then hate that which the Lord hates, and withdraw from that which he hath forsaken? |
37137 | Should we thus help the ungodly, and love them that hate the Lord? |
37137 | So may we say, what have we to do to take their oaths and bonds, that are as great enemies as they were? |
37137 | So when Israel saw that the king hearkened not unto them, they answered, what portion have we in David? |
37137 | Sulpitius Asper, being asked, why he had combined with others against Nero, and thought to have killed him? |
37137 | The Lord God hath spoken, who can but prophesy? |
37137 | The commands of public justice, to whom are they given but to magistrates? |
37137 | The contrary is clear, that he is the devil''s drudge serving his interest: Is resistance to tyrants a damnable sin? |
37137 | The first can not be said: for that would justify all robbery: nor the second, for where is that law found? |
37137 | The kings of Judah made such covenants, shall therefore all kings do so? |
37137 | The law requiring these payments being promulgate, every man must be supposed to put the question to himself, What shall I do in the case? |
37137 | Then, who made him a king? |
37137 | Therefore what can remain, but that he must be a fiduciary servant? |
37137 | They owned him; but how? |
37137 | They were never forced to give their judgment, neither was the question ever put to them, whether they owned their authority or not? |
37137 | This could not be taken in truth, judgment, and righteousness: for who can tell how far that may extend, upon any pretence whatsoever? |
37137 | To the question then, who shall be judge between these usurping and tyrannizing rulers and us? |
37137 | To what purpose are these rules given them, if they had no interest to choose their magistrates? |
37137 | Was it only to let in the air? |
37137 | What are these forces and public officers for? |
37137 | What are they employed about, but to promote the dragon''s designs, and serve his drudgery? |
37137 | What command can there be for praying for that, which is against the preceptive will of God? |
37137 | What evidence can be given of this in their transactions with them? |
37137 | What follows? |
37137 | What have we to congratulate him for, but for overturning our laws and liberties, and oppressing us in most grievous tyranny? |
37137 | What if all this should be granted? |
37137 | What if both king and nobles turn enemies to religion,( as they are at this day) shall people do nothing for the defence of it then? |
37137 | What if the royal line surcease, there be no prophets now sent to make kings; and if they have power in these cases, why not in the case of tyranny? |
37137 | What if those in public authority be the murderers? |
37137 | What if we find among them meetings, that were called and counted as seditious and schismatic as ours are now? |
37137 | What is a man''s excellency but a good conscience? |
37137 | What is he then, who doth not contend for virtue with the good but to exceed the most flagitious in vices? |
37137 | What is here to be reprehended? |
37137 | What is that, that thou hast done?'' |
37137 | What should hinder then justice to be awarded upon a murdering king? |
37137 | What sort or size of possession can be owned to give a right? |
37137 | What then shall appease the wrath of God, for the unparalleled breach of covenant with God in our days? |
37137 | What, by owning authority? |
37137 | What? |
37137 | When it is an evil time, the evil of sin is incumbent, and the evil of wrath is impendent over a land; then the lion hath roared, who will not fear? |
37137 | When the old world was destroyed by water, Sodom and Jerusalem were destroyed, were all alike wicked? |
37137 | Where was there ever such an arbitrary and absolute power arrogated by any mortal, as hath been claimed by our rulers these years past? |
37137 | Where will any other be found to do it in such circumstances? |
37137 | Whereupon this became a criminal question robbing many of their lives, Was the rising at Bothwel- bridge rebellion, and a sin against God? |
37137 | Wherewithal shall the nation be guarded against foreign invasion? |
37137 | Whether any thing less than a testimony can free me of this guilt, whereby the nation involved in it is made a curse? |
37137 | Whether it be magistracy or tyranny? |
37137 | Whether it gives security for religion and liberty, to themselves and their posterity? |
37137 | Whether it must be taken in that of the imposers, practically explained by their administrations? |
37137 | Whether it obliges to a king in idea, and in a more general consideration, as one who is said never to die? |
37137 | Whether it went by fatherhood to all the sons, fathers to their posterity? |
37137 | Whether or no is it lawful for a man to kill another by his own private authority? |
37137 | Whether public or private? |
37137 | Whether, if ever it be necessary, it be not then when Christ is openly opposed, and every one is called either to concur or to testify? |
37137 | Whether, we believe that the testimony of every one shall be called for, in the day when God shall seek out this wickedness? |
37137 | Who durst concur then in this compliance, who had love to Christ in exercise, and who had his friends in the same bottom embarked? |
37137 | Who shall put them to death? |
37137 | Whose bands? |
37137 | Why should not the young lions roar upon them, and make their land waste? |
37137 | Why should not they be spoiled? |
37137 | Why then do we so much weary ourselves concerning a judge, seeing we have the king''s own confession, that is, the law?'' |
37137 | Why then shall the representatives, betraying their trust, wrong the cause of the people, whose trustees they are? |
37137 | Will mischiefs framed into a law warrant such iniquity? |
37137 | Will they mock us into the same rebellion with themselves? |
37137 | Will ye rebel against the king? |
37137 | Will ye( quoth she) allow they shall take my sword in their hand? |
37137 | Would God command them to set a king over them, if they had not power to do it? |
37137 | Would Samuel write in a book the rules of tyranny, to teach to oppress, contrary to the law of God? |
37137 | Would any that favoured David''s righteous cause, have dared to do any of these? |
37137 | Would men be hindered, by law, from seeking their natural food? |
37137 | Would not every man nauseate that as not the doctrine of God? |
37137 | Would not this be wickedness thus to pray for thieves and robbers? |
37137 | Would these that durst not concur themselves, contribute any encouragement to the concurrers? |
37137 | Wouldst not thou be angry with us, till thou hadst consumed us, so that there shouldst be no remnant nor escaping?" |
37137 | Yea, when it was voted in the General Assembly, whether they might take the Queen''s mass from her? |
37137 | Yet all perished: why? |
37137 | Yet certain it is, that they had commission and warrant from the King; as the Assembly that year, February 13. remonstrates it to himself? |
37137 | Yet it doth not infringe the proposition: what if the people have not power to compel him? |
37137 | _ Answ._ Why not this custom, as well as crowning, which they used likewise? |
37137 | _ Shall the throne of iniquity have fellowship with thee, which frameth mischief by a law?_ Rev. |
37137 | and for what end was it ordained, and continued among men, but that the stronger may not domineer over the weaker? |
37137 | and he that keepeth thy soul doth not he know it, and shall not he render to every man according to his works? |
37137 | and not rather chuse to perish with him, or in opposition to such wicked attempts? |
37137 | and submit to them whom we are bound to extirpate? |
37137 | and what have you to do to make a covenant with the Assyrian?" |
37137 | and what is anarchy, but the playing the rex of the natural power over the moral? |
37137 | and why should not Christians shew by their deeds, that they honour such as fear the Lord, and contemn a vile person? |
37137 | can presbyterians swear that allegiance, which is substituted in the place of the broken and burnt covenant? |
37137 | do they declare they will stone our husband? |
37137 | for which of his good deeds is this done) and shall they make a law, whereby we shall be obliged to furnish them with stones to do it? |
37137 | have not we the king''s letter for it?) |
37137 | how long shall the wicked triumph? |
37137 | if CÃ ¦ sar''s authority was from bad beginnings, did therefore Christ untruly say it was from above? |
37137 | is it the cause of their punishment? |
37137 | nor endeavour to kill none of that murdering crew, because they are in his service? |
37137 | or a pilot, who doth always study to make shipwreck of the goods, and strikes a leak in the very ship where he fails? |
37137 | or an act of a king of clay rescind the mandates of the King of kings? |
37137 | or because they can not be put to death? |
37137 | or disobey and suffer? |
37137 | or exempt people from obedience due thereunto? |
37137 | or ought he not rather to be delivered up even by the son to justice? |
37137 | or silence him by his own proper elicite acts, as king or tyrant, or formally and immediately? |
37137 | or that antichrist, or one of his limbs, should be employed in the church''s deliverance, while such? |
37137 | or that he will thrust them away, as a man must be fenced against thorns? |
37137 | or that the declaration does assert any such thing? |
37137 | or was it to see Jerusalem out at these windows? |
37137 | or, whether he may encroach on the prerogative of God or not? |
37137 | read of tyrants? |
37137 | shall they exhort them, or witness against them? |
37137 | shall we refuse to be slaves to one without, and be, and own ourselves contented slaves to one within the kingdom? |
37137 | shall we split twice upon the same rock? |
37137 | the magistrate or people? |
37137 | v. 12. whom we are to obey and submit ourselves to as those who are accountable to Christ only, for to whom else can they give account of souls? |
37137 | was ever a fool so fettered? |
37137 | what if he commands massacre? |
37137 | what new habit or endowment is produced in him? |
37137 | will this tattle of a robber be found relevant in that day, when the public robbers shall be proceeded against by the just Judge? |
37137 | would not this claim be ridiculous for any man to soy, God hath ordained governments to be, therefore I will challenge it? |
37137 | yea run upon it, when God hath set a beacon on it? |
37137 | yea, how can the fishes and reptiles have no ruler over them? |
19100 | But unto the wicked God saith, What hast thou to do to take My covenant in thy mouth? 19100 For what communion hath light with darkness? |
19100 | Have you received the Holy Ghost? |
19100 | I will cause him,saith God,"to draw nigh, and he then shall approach; for who is this that hath engaged his heart?" |
19100 | I will cause the horn of Israel to flourish, saith God:by what means? |
19100 | If you will fear the Lord and serve Him( these are Samuel''s words to the people)"and not rebel:"what then? |
19100 | Is it not a good and pleasant thing for brethren to dwell together in unity? |
19100 | Seemeth it( said David once to Saul''s servants) a small thing in your eyes, to be son- in- law to a king,seeing I am a poor man? |
19100 | Shall the throne of iniquity have fellowship with Thee, that frameth mischief by a law? |
19100 | They shall seek the Lord,_ i.e._ they shall seek God for Himself, and not only for themselves;"going and weeping;"why? |
19100 | Who art thou, O great mountain? |
19100 | Who is it that hath engaged,tied, bound his heart from starting aside like a broken bow, to approach to, and to continue with Me, saith the Lord? |
19100 | 1. Who is he,_ viz._ Christ, hath appointed his heart? |
19100 | 2. Who hath fitted and adorned his heart? |
19100 | 2. Who was the Son of this great king? |
19100 | 3. Who is it that provides means for their sustenance daily, and makes these means effectual, but only the Lord? |
19100 | A mountain reproved,"Who art thou, O great mountain? |
19100 | All people, it''s true, are God''s people by right of creation: why therefore says he,_ Thy_ people, and not_ all_ people? |
19100 | All whom this verse specifies, and enow to bring in all the rest? |
19100 | Always we may learn from this, that the Lord''s best servants have been, and will be abused, and spitefully used? |
19100 | Am I indeed resolved in like manner, without respect of persons, to endeavour the extirpation of popery, prelacy? |
19100 | Am I indeed resolved to humble myself for my own sins, and the sins of the kingdom? |
19100 | An impediment removed, under the name of a mountain,"Who art thou, O great mountain? |
19100 | And I think God saith to you in this text,"Who art thou, O great mountain? |
19100 | And as for Jesus Christ, who is the angel of the covenant: are there not some amongst us that ungod Jesus Christ? |
19100 | And can we think, that God will be easily entreated to sheath up His bloody sword, and to cease shedding our blood? |
19100 | And do not these look like the days wherein the prophet calls to the doing of this? |
19100 | And doth not this indistinctly admit all, and all, of all sorts? |
19100 | And here, let me not conceal the mercy of the Lord to us, in the work now in hand; for why should not the Lord have the glory of all His favours? |
19100 | And how base is that issue which is begotten between, and born from vile affections, and a reprobate mind? |
19100 | And how great an obligation to duly doth this contain, wherein there is an obligation to every duty? |
19100 | And how reverently did they read in the Scriptures, and speak of the nature of the covenant? |
19100 | And if families be not reformed, how will your worshippers be pure? |
19100 | And if so, is not their lot fallen in an unpleasant place? |
19100 | And if you ask again, what days those are? |
19100 | And if you inquire when this should be? |
19100 | And is it not fit and equal that God should unchurch us and unpeople us? |
19100 | And is not the godly ministry as much persecuted by the tongues of some that would be accounted godly, as heretofore by the bishop''s hands? |
19100 | And is that indeed the way of gospel government? |
19100 | And is this because He has need of you? |
19100 | And is this to keep covenant with God? |
19100 | And may not this day''s work be a happy beginning of such a blessed expedition? |
19100 | And shall not God be avenged of such a nation as this? |
19100 | And shall we not rejoice? |
19100 | And should not all these make you willing to swear to it, and to hazard for it? |
19100 | And so, when he had made that appeal to God,"do not I hate them that hate Thee, Lord?" |
19100 | And the while kings will defend these, these will defend kings? |
19100 | And think ye to prevail against the people of Zion? |
19100 | And thus much be spoken concerning the first branch of this third query, how to acceptation? |
19100 | And were these all? |
19100 | And what is it that makes the covenant of God with man thus sure? |
19100 | And what was the reason of this stand, or contrary motion? |
19100 | And when the nation shall say, Wherefore hath the Lord done thus unto the land? |
19100 | And where is the man that walketh so holily in this covenant as becomes him, and as it requires? |
19100 | And wherefore cried ye yesterday and this day, Hosanna, hosanna? |
19100 | And why may not God make use of the same stratagem to ruin their kingdom, which they used to build it? |
19100 | And yet again,"do not I hate them, O Lord, that hate Thee?" |
19100 | And yet how many are there amongst us like unto Gallio, that care not what becomes of the cause of God, so they may have peace and quiet? |
19100 | And, as our Saviour speaks upon another occasion,"If the light which is in them be darkness, how great is that darkness?" |
19100 | And, moreover, beloved, whom have ye against you in this course? |
19100 | And,"Hath any nation changed their god, which yet are no gods? |
19100 | Are not these the days, and this the time, when out of the north there cometh up a nation against her? |
19100 | Are there not many that walk professedly contrary to this clause of the covenant? |
19100 | Are there not thousands that have sworn to be Christ''s servants, and yet are in their lives the vassals of sin and Satan? |
19100 | Are we not covenant- breakers? |
19100 | Are we not like little children that, while they are being whipped, will promise any thing; but, when the whipping is over, will perform nothing? |
19100 | Are you willing to be at this cost to build the tower? |
19100 | Are you willing to this engagement? |
19100 | Art thou able to stand out against Him, or pitch any field against Him? |
19100 | As David saith in another case,"Is it a light thing to be the son- in- law of a king?" |
19100 | As if He had said, would you know the reason why this people were so unstedfast? |
19100 | As some say, What better is this feast than the feast we have at home? |
19100 | At another occasion I handled the parable after a more general manner, and propounded these points unto you: 1. Who was this great king? |
19100 | Busking a bride for the Pope of Rome, the bishop of Rome, even for antichrist? |
19100 | Busking a bride for thyself? |
19100 | But ah? |
19100 | But are there not some that write against an uniformity in religion, and call it an idol? |
19100 | But for whom especially is this joy reserved? |
19100 | But is it indeed only the fault of the men, not of the calling? |
19100 | But it may be, some will say, what is this cost? |
19100 | But now, blessed be God, it was otherwise:"the children of Israel shall come, they and the children of Judah together"to what end? |
19100 | But now, how are our fasting days slighted and vilified? |
19100 | But now, the Lord Jesus, the antitype of David here in this Psalm, because he made good this,( duty shall I call it?) |
19100 | But trow ye that every minister and every burgh will come in? |
19100 | But trow ye, that God will give that honour to every one? |
19100 | But what bosom- sin, what beloved sin, as dear to thee as thy dear wife and children, hast thou left for God''s sake, since thou tookest this oath? |
19100 | But what holy thing is there which swine will not make mire of, for themselves to wallow in? |
19100 | But what is the bearing of Scotland''s Covenanted Reformation of three centuries ago, on the Scotland of the present times? |
19100 | But what were the particulars that made up the gross sum of all this? |
19100 | But where is that family reformation? |
19100 | But who makes conscience of this part of the oath? |
19100 | But yet further, was not the calling as bad as the men? |
19100 | But, will they take up arms and scatter carnage and blood throughout the land? |
19100 | By what rule? |
19100 | Can Satan cast out Satan? |
19100 | Can that be a trifle, which is published as the main and sole preventive of all the bloody plots of God''s enemies against the truth? |
19100 | Can that be a trifle, which is the fruit of the judicious consultations of the agents of both kingdoms, as the only means to perpetuate the union? |
19100 | Can that be a trifle, which was produced by such, who had merely the glory of God before their eyes as conducing much thereto? |
19100 | Can that be the government of Christ and His Church? |
19100 | Can that man be said really to endeavour the maintenance of a cause while he lets it starve? |
19100 | Can there be found a parallel to Christ in the world, that hath so given himself up to God? |
19100 | Can you instance in any that have been backward to swear unto the Lord? |
19100 | Canst thou hold the field against Him? |
19100 | Could an oppressed people bear the tyranny longer? |
19100 | Dear hearts, know ye not how Moses was used? |
19100 | Did not prelacy? |
19100 | Divers more such instances I could give you; and why thus? |
19100 | Do we not make the times perilous by our falsifying of our oath and covenant with God? |
19100 | Do you know yourselves? |
19100 | Doth the oath bind me to oppose legal acts? |
19100 | Ephraim shall say,"What have I to do with idols?" |
19100 | Find we not the name of bishop under the New Testament? |
19100 | For the Lord''s supper, how oft have we spilt the blood of Christ by our unworthy approaches to His table? |
19100 | For we say, how can Satan cast out Satan? |
19100 | For when ye say the grace to your meat, say ye it to man? |
19100 | For why should not every one value the public above the private, the common good before his own? |
19100 | God hath a_ changing power_, whereby He makes mountains plain: how easy is it with God, to make the highest mountain that impedes His work a plain? |
19100 | God will be steady to us; why should not we resolve to be so to Him? |
19100 | Had it not been better to have defeated Athaliah, and then to have crowned the king? |
19100 | Has He not a famous church in America, where He may go? |
19100 | Has it no instruction for all times? |
19100 | Hath it not been prelacy? |
19100 | Have ye not so much power as the mountains and hills have? |
19100 | Have you engaged your souls in a solemn league? |
19100 | Here is God''s wise deliberation on the matter:"how shall I put thee?" |
19100 | Here was cheerfulness: who was not glad to see it? |
19100 | How are the people of God divided one from another, railing upon( instead of loving) one another? |
19100 | How beautiful were the feet of them that brought the gospel of peace unto you? |
19100 | How can we, say they, bind ourselves to forbear the practice of that whilk Acts of Assembly allows, and Acts of Parliament commands? |
19100 | How comes it to pass then that this part of the covenant is so much forgotten? |
19100 | How comes the man to be so undaunted? |
19100 | How comes this to pass? |
19100 | How could they loyally support a Constitution now so opposite to the ancient Scriptural and Covenanted Constitution of the realm? |
19100 | How dear and precious were God''s people one to another? |
19100 | How in judgment? |
19100 | How much more then will holiness be increased through this covenant which, in many branches of it, is a direct covenant for, and about holiness? |
19100 | How so? |
19100 | How to acceptation? |
19100 | How to( 1) Acceptation? |
19100 | How unbecoming is it, that they who swear together, should be so strange as scarce to speak together? |
19100 | How, or in what manner this service is to be performed? |
19100 | How? |
19100 | How? |
19100 | I appeal to all your consciences, Is it possible to set caveats to their pride and avarice? |
19100 | I come now to the Second branch of it, and that is, How to perpetuity? |
19100 | I have now done with these three queries; What? |
19100 | I may apply this to them that can not act; will ye sit still, when the rest of your brethren are to hazard their lives against the enemy? |
19100 | I see you looking up to the height of it, and ye are saying within yourselves, How shall it come down? |
19100 | I will say to you then that word,"The hill of God is a high hill, as the hill of Bashan: why leap ye, ye hills? |
19100 | If God be with a work, who is he that will let or impede it? |
19100 | If I would pose you with this question, as you will answer to God, Who have been the instruments of all this mischief? |
19100 | If any shall say these demands are very high and the charge very great, but is a part in this covenant worth it? |
19100 | If our father had but spit in our face by some inferior correction, should we not be ashamed? |
19100 | If this position were assumed by larger numbers throughout the land, who knoweth whether they would"not come to the kingdom for such a time as this?" |
19100 | If thou askest, What will this garment do to thee? |
19100 | If we knew that every loss were our gain, every wound our healing, every disappointment our success, every defeat our victory, would we not rejoice? |
19100 | If we walk and work by sense, and not by faith? |
19100 | In a covenant, God and man meet; He is with us who is more than all that are against us: and when He is with us, who can be against us? |
19100 | In the first place, we must inquire how this duty may be so managed, that God may accept of us in the doing of it? |
19100 | In what clause or word of the article? |
19100 | Is every man that sins against the covenant to be accounted a covenant- breaker, and a perjured sacrilegious person? |
19100 | Is it a respect to prelacy that hinders thee, O Scotland? |
19100 | Is it a respect to the king? |
19100 | Is it a respect to the novations already come into Scotland? |
19100 | Is it all but a story with interest, however thrilling, for the study of the antiquarian? |
19100 | Is it in superstition? |
19100 | Is it not prelacy? |
19100 | Is it not the chief desire of the holy apostles, that we"should all speak the same things, and that there should be no division amongst us?" |
19100 | Is it not the happiness of a city, to be at unity with itself? |
19100 | Is it not the preservation of religion, where it is reformed, and the reformation of religion, where it needs? |
19100 | Is it not this, because it hath a strong foundation, a double, impregnable foundation? |
19100 | Is not the Holy Bible by some rather wrested than read? |
19100 | Is not unity amongst Christians one of the strongest arguments to persuade the world to believe in Christ? |
19100 | Is not unity the happiness of heaven? |
19100 | Is that it indeed which bears away the bell of_ jure divino_? |
19100 | Is the whole prolonged struggle, with all its chequered scenes, but a panorama on which spectators may gaze with but passing emotions? |
19100 | Is there any soul in this house this day, that is filled with the love of Christ? |
19100 | Is there any soul that is seeking unto Him in earnest? |
19100 | Is there any that can adorn and prepare himself to approach unto God, without God? |
19100 | It is a denial with disdain;"should I?" |
19100 | It is said,"The sinners in Zion are afraid; who shall dwell with everlasting torments? |
19100 | It will be said, What ails you? |
19100 | Job was probably sometimes seduced with such foolish persuasions, to courses not less foolish, but he yielded not: what helped him? |
19100 | Know ye not that Zedekiah struck Micaiah; and how his threatenings against him came to pass? |
19100 | Minister, lovest thou me? |
19100 | Moses reproveth them in these words,"Shall your brethren go to war; and shall ye sit still? |
19100 | My good people, beloved in Christ, have ye nothing to contribute for this work? |
19100 | Nay, canst thou be a party for Him? |
19100 | Nay,"Shall the thing formed say to Him that formed it, Why hast Thou made me thus?" |
19100 | Now the question is, Whether it be safer to stop it up than to guard it? |
19100 | Now, if your leases and covenants among men be either lame or forfeited; need men persuade you to have them renewed and perfected? |
19100 | Now, is there any of you but ye are obleist( obliged) to be holy? |
19100 | Now,"Who are these that are invited to the marriage?" |
19100 | O Lord of hosts, and King of kings, who can stand out against Thee? |
19100 | O then he will cry out with Isaiah,"Lord, who believes my report, and to whom has the arm of the Lord been made naked? |
19100 | Or, can we indeed love or promote a reformation, and in the mean time countenance or conceal the enemies of it? |
19100 | Or, have ye not such substance as the vallies? |
19100 | Or, how may we perform this service so that it may be"an everlasting covenant, that may never be forgotten?" |
19100 | Or, upon what considerations we may be persuaded to undertake this service? |
19100 | Ought we not to be greatly humbled before Him? |
19100 | Our God is a consuming fire, and we are as stubble before Him; who can stand before His indignation? |
19100 | Peace is a precious jewel, but who can value truth? |
19100 | Perpetuity? |
19100 | Says not the covenant enough for the maintenance of the king? |
19100 | Shall I pass you that are commons? |
19100 | Shall civil and religious liberty be saved from captivity by tyrants on the throne? |
19100 | Shall the crawling worm and the pickle of small dust fight against the King of kings? |
19100 | Shall we not walk cheerfully? |
19100 | Shewing the impossibility in man to begin the action:"I will cause him to draw nigh; for who is this, that hath engaged his heart?" |
19100 | Should not ye have lain at His door, and scraped, if ye could not knock? |
19100 | Should not ye have sought unto Him first, with ropes about your necks, with sackcloth upon your loins, and with tears in your eyes? |
19100 | Should they deal with His people as murderers and malefactors, and we not draw out His sword against them? |
19100 | Should they deal with our God as an idol? |
19100 | Some having nothing else to say, yet can not withhold to question, whether the Scots will enter into it or no? |
19100 | That are very indifferent which side prevail, so they may have their trading again? |
19100 | That is, how shall I do this? |
19100 | The Lord forbid such a thing:"for, how shall we escape, if we neglect so great salvation?" |
19100 | The inquiry into both, who is this? |
19100 | The inquiry,"who is this?" |
19100 | The question I put to you is this: How often have you broken covenant with God? |
19100 | The reformation of religion in the kingdoms of England and Ireland? |
19100 | The second thing in this great mountain is this, It is a mountain reproved:"Who art thou, O great mountain? |
19100 | Then is it not the Lord who enters in covenant with thee, and says, I will remember thy sins no more? |
19100 | There is a fourth, who profess they acknowledge a king; but despise him in their heart, saying"Shall this man save us?" |
19100 | They have been burdensome in all ages; what opposites in England have they been to our kings, till their interests were changed? |
19100 | They which single, blessed be God, have yet such strength, how strong may they be when conjoined? |
19100 | This makes God complain,"What iniquity have your fathers found in Me, that they have gone far from Me?" |
19100 | Those who rise against kings in open rebellion, as Absalom and Sheba, who said,"What have we to do with David, the son of Jesse? |
19100 | To utter what? |
19100 | To what end? |
19100 | To whom shall I speak then? |
19100 | Tobiah and Sanballat gnaw their tongues, laugh and despise us, saying,"What is this ye do? |
19100 | Upon what warrant? |
19100 | Was it only a jest? |
19100 | Was not unity one of the chief parts of Christ''s prayer unto His Father, when He was here upon the earth? |
19100 | We speak and contend much for a church- reformation, but how can there be a church- reformation, unless there be a family- reformation? |
19100 | What a number of able men did Josiah collect together? |
19100 | What ails you? |
19100 | What an one is this? |
19100 | What do we covenant? |
19100 | What do we vow? |
19100 | What engagement can be upon us, which these reasons do not reach and answer? |
19100 | What followeth upon this breach? |
19100 | What follows these gracious promises? |
19100 | What ground have we to expect good? |
19100 | What had he to do with gluttony, drunkenness, pride, wantonness, incontinency, and the rest of my ware? |
19100 | What hast thou been doing? |
19100 | What hath hindered the reformation of religion all this while in doctrine, government, and worship? |
19100 | What have I to do with such and such base company? |
19100 | What have I to do with such base filthy lusts? |
19100 | What heard you cried on Sabbath last, and yesterday, and this day? |
19100 | What hinders this engagement, and stops our entrance thereupon? |
19100 | What is it that hath taken down a teaching ministry, and set up in the room a teaching- ceremony? |
19100 | What is this at all to the covenant, where there is no mention of arms at all? |
19100 | What is this but the contents and matter of our oath? |
19100 | What is this to our present condition, where reforming by arms is not at all the question? |
19100 | What meaneth the heat of this great anger? |
19100 | What meant then that saying of queen Elizabeth,"That when she had made a bishop, she had spoiled a preacher?" |
19100 | What noblemen, what aldermen, what merchants, families, are more reformed since the covenant than before? |
19100 | What one is this, that so carefully engageth his heart? |
19100 | What ought the British subject, if a patriot, do, in the face of evils which threaten the ruin of his kingdom? |
19100 | What ought the Protestant to do, in the presence of a government and administration which are daily advancing the court of Rome to power? |
19100 | What ought to be done to remove these evils and avert the disaster which their continuance must entail? |
19100 | What particulars do engage us, by what acts or thoughts doth the heart become engaged? |
19100 | What say you? |
19100 | What shall I say to these neutrals? |
19100 | What should we do with their hands in the work, whose hearts, we know, are not in the work? |
19100 | What sin hast thou left, or in what one thing hast thou reformed since thou didst take this covenant? |
19100 | What the Presbyterian, who can not take the Oath of Allegiance without committing himself to the hierarchy of Prelacy? |
19100 | What the duty is, to which they mutually stir up one another? |
19100 | What the duty is? |
19100 | What then to be engaged, to be incorporated, and that by sacred oath, with such an high and honourable fraternity? |
19100 | What though the church- worship be pure, yet if the worshippers be impure, God will not accept of the worship? |
19100 | What though those tongues set on fire by hell do rail and threaten? |
19100 | What time, and what days were those? |
19100 | What we have to do? |
19100 | What will come of me, after so many years''travail in the ministry? |
19100 | What? |
19100 | When God hid His face from him, or he hid his eyes from God; then how easily is he moved? |
19100 | When an apprentice has subscribed his name, and sealed his indentures, doth he then think his service is ended? |
19100 | When the sons of darkness go to cast out the prince of darkness, is this possible? |
19100 | Where is the man that can direct his heart, approach to Me of himself, by his own power? |
19100 | Where the governors and the teachers go before in an holy example, what honest heart will not follow? |
19100 | Wherefore discourage ye the heart of the children of Israel?" |
19100 | Wherefore,"Who art thou, O great mountain"before God''s people, that thinks to impede such a work? |
19100 | Whether any thing, the extirpation of which is sworn by an ordinance of parliament, can be said to stand by law? |
19100 | Whether by any law, divine or human, may reformation of religion be brought in by arms? |
19100 | Whether the making a party be legal? |
19100 | Whether there be any particular law for prelacy? |
19100 | Whether to swear to a government that shall be, or to swear not to dissent from such a future government, be not to swear upon an implicit faith? |
19100 | While some will be ready to call that schism and superstition, which is not; and others deny that to be heresy, superstition, schism, which is? |
19100 | Who almost sees not His hand in all this? |
19100 | Who amongst us hath not felt these reasons? |
19100 | Who are they that impede our work? |
19100 | Who but an atheist can refuse the first? |
19100 | Who can abide in the fierceness of His anger? |
19100 | Who can stand?" |
19100 | Who can tell? |
19100 | Who dare practise what he prays against? |
19100 | Who is the best favoured body; and the trimmest soul? |
19100 | Who is this? |
19100 | Who knows, whether our peace hath been denied; our propositions cast out; our treaties fruitless, for such an end as this? |
19100 | Who shall dwell with devouring fire?" |
19100 | Who thought to have seen such a sudden change in Scotland, when all second causes were posting a contrary course? |
19100 | Who was not encouraged to it? |
19100 | Why do ye spend your money for nought?" |
19100 | Why may not you suffer the enemy to abide within the town? |
19100 | Why should sorrow sit clouded in our faces, or any darkness be in our hearts, while we are in the shine and light of God''s countenance? |
19100 | Why, Ephraim shall say,"What have I to do any more with idols?" |
19100 | Why, or upon what considerations? |
19100 | Why? |
19100 | Why? |
19100 | Why? |
19100 | Will it quit cost to be at so great a charge? |
19100 | Will ye fortify yourselves? |
19100 | Will ye make an end in a day? |
19100 | Will ye rebel against the king? |
19100 | Will ye remove the stones out of the heaps of rubbish that is burnt?" |
19100 | Will you bind yourselves to the Lord? |
19100 | Will you trust yourselves without a tie? |
19100 | Wilt thou search thyself who thou art: art thou of God''s building or not? |
19100 | With what serious humiliation, and hearty prayers did Nehemiah begin this duty? |
19100 | Would he have the chariot move swiftly, who only draws but will not oil the wheels? |
19100 | Would their adherence to those deeds and documents have done them any dishonour? |
19100 | Wrested, I say, by ignorant and unstable souls, to their own destruction? |
19100 | [ 5]_ BY ANDREW CANT._"Who art thou, O great mountain? |
19100 | _ Answ._ Where lies that, think you? |
19100 | _ BY THOMAS CASE._ I come now to the third query, how? |
19100 | _ BY THOMAS COLEMAN._"For who is this, that engaged his heart to approach unto Me, saith the Lord?" |
19100 | _ I did see._ Which of us, brethren, hath not his heart yet rejoicing, but even to think upon this work, this last Monday in this place? |
19100 | _ Obj._ But what, if the exorbitances be purged away, may not I, notwithstanding my oath, admit of a regulated prelacy? |
19100 | _ Obj._ What if one make a party to uphold prelacy, whilst it stands by law, must I oppose him, or discover him by virtue of this oath? |
19100 | _ Object._ Aye, but there be that will tell us, these have been the faults of the persons, and not of the calling? |
19100 | _ Object._ How can we swear the extirpation of these, since, who shall be judge? |
19100 | _ Objection._ We have oblished ourselves by our subscription already; what then needs us to obleish ourselves over again by our oath? |
19100 | _ Quest._ But some will say,"How shall I do to get up my heart to this high pitch, that I may be a covenant- keeper?" |
19100 | _ Quest._ How are their servants treated? |
19100 | _ Third_, Inquire diligently at your own hearts, whether they come up to the terms of this covenant? |
19100 | and how many have smarted their proof unto us? |
19100 | and this covenant will be stedfast and uniform unto us, why should not we resolve to be so too, and in this covenant? |
19100 | and what concord hath Christ and Belial?" |
19100 | and( 2) Perpetuity? |
19100 | but my sins are many, how can the Lord look upon me or pardon me? |
19100 | even his engagement:"I have made a covenant with mine eyes, how then shall I look on a maid?" |
19100 | feed my bais''d sheep: lovest thou me? |
19100 | have I said strangers? |
19100 | have they not a dreadful heritage? |
19100 | how Aaron and Jeremiah,& c., were used? |
19100 | how Jeremiah was smitten; and he that did it, got his name changed into Magor Missabib,_ terror round about_? |
19100 | how Zechariah was slain between the porch and the altar? |
19100 | how comes it to pass, that thou art so much slighted and contemned? |
19100 | how sweet was a fasting day? |
19100 | how well doth this become the children of such a father, who hath styled Himself the Father of mercies? |
19100 | is it not true?" |
19100 | made Him and His ways his meat and drink, yea more than his ordinary food? |
19100 | or, to strengthen it while he keeps the sinews of it close shut up? |
19100 | our prophets have prophesied lies, and our priests have pleaded for Baal, and they have rejected the word of the Lord; and what wisdom is in them? |
19100 | to amend myself, and all in my power, and to go before others in the example of a real reformation? |
19100 | what shall we have? |
19100 | where is the man that hath made restitution of his ill- gotten goods since he took this covenant? |
19100 | who but a papist the second? |
19100 | who but an oppressor, or a rebel, the third? |
19100 | who but light and empty men, unstable as water, the sixth? |
19100 | who but men of fortune, desperate cavaliers, the fifth? |
19100 | who but the guilty, the fourth? |
19100 | woe is me, who can dwell with everlasting burnings? |
19100 | ye of little faith? |
13570 | And shall not God avenge His own elect? 13570 And the Lord said, Shall I hide from Abraham that thing which I do?" |
13570 | But O, how will you answer for this day''s work? |
13570 | How durst you convene against my proclamation? |
13570 | How long, O Lord, holy and true, dost Thou not judge and avenge our blood on them that dwell on the earth? |
13570 | Is there no balm in Gilead? 13570 Lord, wilt not Thou give me Scotland?" |
13570 | See the top of yon hill? |
13570 | That is all I wait for,he said, then added in a rapture of joy,"O, death, where is thy sting? |
13570 | Think you that we are the sufferers? 13570 Villain, dost thou say mass at my lug?" |
13570 | What book is that you are reading? |
13570 | What think you now of your companion? |
13570 | What think you of your husband now? |
13570 | Where have you been, Willie? |
13570 | Who dare subscribe this treasonable paper? |
13570 | Who is she that looketh forth as the morning, fair as the moon, clear as the sun, and terrible as an army with banners? |
13570 | Will it hurt much, Janet? |
13570 | Will you attend the curate''s service? |
13570 | Will you pray for King James and his supremacy? |
13570 | Would you know what the devil is doing in hell? |
13570 | ***** POINTS FOR THE CLASS 1 Who was Marquis Argyle? |
13570 | 1. Who succeeded Cameron as leader of the Society people? |
13570 | 1. Who succeeded Renwick as leader of the Covenanters? |
13570 | 10. Who were the men of broad principles in those times? |
13570 | 2 What reverse did they suffer? |
13570 | 2 What service had he formerly rendered the king? |
13570 | 2. Who commanded on each side? |
13570 | 3 How did they account for it? |
13570 | 3. Who was his successor on the throne? |
13570 | 3. Who was his successor? |
13570 | 4 How did the Covenanters receive him? |
13570 | 4. Who visited the home the evening before the sad event? |
13570 | 4. Who were the Scottish commissioners? |
13570 | 5 What was the nature of the government he established? |
13570 | 5. Who were their leaders? |
13570 | 6 What was his attitude toward the Covenanters? |
13570 | 6. Who appeared in search of them? |
13570 | 6. Who introduced confusion into their ranks? |
13570 | 6. Who joined Cameron in carrying out his commission? |
13570 | 6. Who were the Covenanted captains at Drumclog? |
13570 | 7 Who was his first victim? |
13570 | 8. Who won the battle? |
13570 | Against Thy pasture- sheep why doth Thine anger smoke so sore?" |
13570 | Ah, was not Charles the rebel? |
13570 | Are present Covenanters acquainted thus with God? |
13570 | Are the elders of the Covenanted Church worthy of their predecessors? |
13570 | Are they carrying the banner of Christ forward, even beyond the ministers, where the testimony for King Jesus requires it? |
13570 | Are they defenders of the flock against all defection? |
13570 | Are they leaders of the people in every good enterprise? |
13570 | Are they not the zealous defenders of the Reformed faith? |
13570 | Are we amazed at the divine beauty of the martyr''s life? |
13570 | Are we building, as they built, upon the true foundation, which is Jesus Christ? |
13570 | Are we carried to the place of worship at the appointed hour by our love for Jesus Christ? |
13570 | Are we employing our strength against all opposing evils? |
13570 | Are we fulfilling our sworn duties to our country, our Church, and our Lord? |
13570 | Are we full of power in the Lord''s service? |
13570 | Are we keeping step in the Covenanted ranks that are marching on, assured that the principles of the Reformation will yet prevail in every land? |
13570 | Are we lifting up our lives into relationship with our Lord Jesus Christ through our inherited Covenant? |
13570 | Are we loyal as they were to the Covenants? |
13570 | Are we maintaining this exalted truth with the courage of our ancestors? |
13570 | Are we so consumed with the holy passion of love, that we can not rest till we bring others into the house of God? |
13570 | Are we surprised that God permitted him to quench the noisome spark? |
13570 | Are we surprised? |
13570 | Are we using all lawful means to cause true religion to prevail? |
13570 | Are we worthy of our relation to the Covenanted fathers? |
13570 | Are we zealous in making the Church of Christ appear the glorious Temple of truth, the Sanctuary of the living God, the Habitation of the Holy Spirit? |
13570 | Are you willing?" |
13570 | As he came up she humorously said,"Am not I as good as my word?" |
13570 | But could they not find hidden manna on the sand, and kernels of wheat in the chaff? |
13570 | But how could a Covenanter give his approval without perjury? |
13570 | But shall discipline, therefore, fail? |
13570 | But was this the happy condition of many, or merely of a few, in those days of sad adversity? |
13570 | But were they not justifiable? |
13570 | But who were thrown out of the Presbyterian Church in the reign of Charles II.? |
13570 | But who will lead the Covenanters in such a struggle? |
13570 | But why? |
13570 | But will not the dwelling- place of the righteous be protected from harm? |
13570 | By what means was the Church again revived? |
13570 | By whom was the Reformed Presbytery organized? |
13570 | By whom was the truth preserved? |
13570 | By whose hand was it set in its own historic foil? |
13570 | By whose skill was it so admirably cut and polished? |
13570 | Can he suspend the high calling, sunder the holy ties, abandon the field and flock, and go forth, not knowing whither he goeth? |
13570 | Can the Church no more sustain her laws, and administer her censures? |
13570 | Can the Church now furnish such men? |
13570 | Can the Church survive the loss of her external organization? |
13570 | Can the husband, the father, the shepherd, the watchman arise and forsake all? |
13570 | Can we account for these afflictive providences? |
13570 | Can we here find a lesson to lay upon our hearts? |
13570 | Censure the Cameronians for exclusiveness? |
13570 | Could they not get sufficient food in the new ministrations to sustain their souls? |
13570 | Could they not reach heaven by the new road as certainly as by the old? |
13570 | De we appreciate the fruits of the fields, fertilized with the blood of the fathers? |
13570 | Describe Ayrsmoss on the night after the battle? |
13570 | Did it pay to be true to Christ? |
13570 | Did it pay? |
13570 | Do Covenanters feel their obligations to the Lord? |
13570 | Do our lives arise into the heroic spirit, and take on the moral grandeur exhibited by them? |
13570 | Do the children of these Covenanters appreciate the value and power of the truth? |
13570 | Do their children strive after the same attainment? |
13570 | Do we appreciate the value, the dignity, and the advantage of a Covenanted home? |
13570 | Do we keep the home bright, cheerful, and inspiring, by worshiping our Covenant God, and honoring the presence of our Lord Jesus Christ? |
13570 | Do we make the throne of Jesus our viewpoint, from whence we see all things related to Him, and through Him to each other? |
13570 | Do we stand for the right, however weak that side may seem, knowing that all the powers that be of God are on that side? |
13570 | Do we wonder that so many relaxed under the strain of persecution, and returned to their own vine and fig tree? |
13570 | Does the Covenant of the fathers include posterity? |
13570 | For what was it used in those times? |
13570 | For what were the Covenanters contending? |
13570 | Four of them, who were captured in a group, replied thus to their captors, when told that they must be shot:"We are to die, you say? |
13570 | From whence shall light and deliverance now come? |
13570 | Hath He not said,"Upon all the glory shall be a defence?" |
13570 | Have the Covenanters of to- day spirit, power, and character like this? |
13570 | Have the fundamental principles of the kingdom of Jesus Christ become incarnated in our lives? |
13570 | Have they the view that will keep them steadfast, progressive, and enthusiastic in His service? |
13570 | Have we a conscience like that of the Covenanted fathers? |
13570 | Have we incorporated the element of Divine strength into our lives? |
13570 | Have we the zeal of these fathers for the house of our God? |
13570 | Heroes of the Covenant, why fainted ye in the day of battle? |
13570 | How account for God''s people suffering defeat? |
13570 | How account for the success? |
13570 | How can the noble band escape annihilation? |
13570 | How can we hesitate? |
13570 | How could Guthrie have done otherwise, as a faithful minister of Christ Jesus, in the high calling of the Gospel? |
13570 | How could John Brown have saved his life? |
13570 | How could the Church entrust the government of God''s house to the king''s commissioners? |
13570 | How could they have done otherwise? |
13570 | How did Argyle''s death seem to affect the king? |
13570 | How did Bessie Willison meet her trials? |
13570 | How did Cameron and his associates employ their time? |
13570 | How did Cameron''s life and death impress the Covenanters? |
13570 | How did Cargill die? |
13570 | How did Christ''s servants contend for His supremacy? |
13570 | How did Communion Monday service originate? |
13570 | How did God prepare His Church for the approaching trials? |
13570 | How did King Charles regard it? |
13570 | How did Melville resist the king''s attempt to rule the Church? |
13570 | How did he attempt to counteract its power? |
13570 | How did he deal with the Covenanted Church? |
13570 | How did he defend himself in court? |
13570 | How did he meet his death? |
13570 | How did he overcome it? |
13570 | How did he persist in the work of the Gospel? |
13570 | How did he protect himself against wrong criticism? |
13570 | How did he reply? |
13570 | How did he testify against the errors of the Church of Holland? |
13570 | How did it divide the Covenanted Church? |
13570 | How did it issue? |
13570 | How did it terminate? |
13570 | How did the Cameronians regard it? |
13570 | How did the Church thereafter decline? |
13570 | How did the Covenanted Societies survive the general defection? |
13570 | How did the Covenanters esteem the Bible? |
13570 | How did the Covenanters follow up their victory at Drumclog? |
13570 | How did the Covenanters meet the king''s army? |
13570 | How did the Covenanters meet the king''s second appeal to arms? |
13570 | How did the Covenanters prepare for self- defense? |
13570 | How did the Covenanters receive his restrictions? |
13570 | How did the Covenanters treat their captive king? |
13570 | How did the General Meeting provide a ministry? |
13570 | How did the Presbyterian ministers oppose them? |
13570 | How did the children suffer in the persecution? |
13570 | How did the death of Cargill affect him? |
13570 | How did the faithful ministers suffer? |
13570 | How did the king keep his promise? |
13570 | How did the king regard the Covenant? |
13570 | How did the king try to enforce uniformity on the Church? |
13570 | How did the king try to suppress them? |
13570 | How did the persecuted Church keep up her force of elders? |
13570 | How did the persecuted people increase? |
13570 | How did the state make use of Episcopacy in the battle with Presbyterianism? |
13570 | How did the true Covenanters become diminished? |
13570 | How did they entreat the ministers to come to them? |
13570 | How did they show their love for the Church of Christ? |
13570 | How did they succeed when they had no ministers? |
13570 | How did they suffer in Edinburgh? |
13570 | How does God keep His Church pure? |
13570 | How does Jesus reprove His people for growing feeble in love? |
13570 | How does it lay obligations on posterity? |
13570 | How does it show the value of Gospel truth? |
13570 | How had the General Assembly previously deteriorated? |
13570 | How has He sometimes undertaken to revive His Church''s fidelity? |
13570 | How is the Church dependent on woman, for spirited and successful work? |
13570 | How is truest patriotism best displayed? |
13570 | How long after the declaration till this fight occurred? |
13570 | How long did Oliver Cromwell rule Scotland? |
13570 | How long did the Assembly sit? |
13570 | How long did the Solemn League and Covenant remain in force? |
13570 | How long did the persecution last? |
13570 | How long had they to decide? |
13570 | How long was the Assembly suppressed? |
13570 | How long wilt thou suffer this tyranny of man?" |
13570 | How many Indulgences were offered? |
13570 | How many in it represented the Covenanted Societies? |
13570 | How many men were on each side? |
13570 | How many pastors were driven from their churches? |
13570 | How many were enrolled? |
13570 | How many years of persecution did he suffer? |
13570 | How may the study of the martyrs''lives purify, strengthen, and ennoble our lives? |
13570 | How may the young people arise in strength for church service? |
13570 | How may we attain to a similar familiarity with God? |
13570 | How may we have the same rapturous joy at communions now? |
13570 | How may we meet the obligations descending from the fathers? |
13570 | How may we, too, become inspired for service? |
13570 | How much does the spirit of zeal, courage, witness- bearing, and discipline, stir the descendants of the martyred Covenanters in the present day? |
13570 | How much of this Scotch granite is apparent in the faith and firmness of the present generation? |
13570 | How numerous were the Covenanters at this time? |
13570 | How ought we to esteem the Bible? |
13570 | How shall it be distributed? |
13570 | How should a Covenanted home be appreciated? |
13570 | How should the Church guard divine worship against corruption? |
13570 | How should the Church respond to the love of Christ? |
13570 | How should the obligation be met in our day? |
13570 | How should the success of the fathers inspire us? |
13570 | How should we appreciate peaceful worship? |
13570 | How should we guard it for other generations? |
13570 | How was England disturbed at this time? |
13570 | How was John Brown captured? |
13570 | How was he influenced to become a minister? |
13570 | How was he troubled with doubts regarding God? |
13570 | How was her independence affected by state patronage? |
13570 | How was his opposition resisted by the Covenanters? |
13570 | How was his power dreaded by his enemies? |
13570 | How was the Covenant received by the nation? |
13570 | How was the Liturgy received by the Presbyterians? |
13570 | How was the nation stirred at the prospect of renewing the Covenant? |
13570 | How was the reign of King Charles I. ended? |
13570 | How was the true Church kept alive? |
13570 | How was this struggle ended? |
13570 | How were the people prepared for Covenanting? |
13570 | How were the societies unified? |
13570 | How will our delight in the Word of God compare with theirs? |
13570 | How will present zeal for Divine services compare with their zeal? |
13570 | How with the 100,000 Covenanters while suffering in their homes, or roaming through the mountains, or hiding in the caves? |
13570 | How would such a demand agitate the mind? |
13570 | In his dying testimony, he pleaded in the following manner:"Oh, will ye love Him? |
13570 | In the consciousness of this almighty strength, which was at his back, how could he be afraid? |
13570 | In what manner did the Covenanters receive his commissioner? |
13570 | In what manner does the blood cry for vengeance? |
13570 | In what spirit did the people retire from the Covenant Convention in Edinburgh? |
13570 | In what spirit did the women endure the persecution? |
13570 | In what way did the Covenanted ministers explain the trouble? |
13570 | In what way did the king authorize that which corrupted Church services? |
13570 | In what way did these continue their ministry? |
13570 | In what way do the former Covenants bind the present generation? |
13570 | In what way does her love often fail? |
13570 | Is it for evermore? |
13570 | Is our building material like theirs-- gold, silver, and precious stones? |
13570 | Is she incapacitated? |
13570 | Is the Covenant position still held by any? |
13570 | Is the truth, the entire system of truth, every stone in the temple of truth, thus dear to us? |
13570 | Is there no physician there?" |
13570 | Is there no remedy to be found? |
13570 | Is this too strong? |
13570 | James Renwick had been taunted with the question,"Do you believe that none, but those of your principles, can enter heaven?" |
13570 | Less than four months previous, the Covenant had been renewed in that city amid transports of joy; must it now be trampled in the dust? |
13570 | Many weary hearts were crying out,"How long, O Lord?" |
13570 | May he not modify a certain ministerial action so as to save his life, provide for his family, and continue to shepherd his flock? |
13570 | May the ruthless slayer enter this little sanctuary, where God and His children dwell together in mutual and unquenchable love? |
13570 | Must these spirited men bow to the will of the tyrant and see their Church brought into bondage? |
13570 | My life''s strength is the Lord; of whom Then shall I be afraid?" |
13570 | O, grave, where is thy victory?" |
13570 | Oh, Scotland, wherefore didst thou doubt? |
13570 | On what condition may we expect to be strong in the Lord? |
13570 | On what grounds? |
13570 | On what points did they refuse to obey the king? |
13570 | On what terms were ministers permitted to return home? |
13570 | On what terms would they have received the minister? |
13570 | Ought they to go forth against their king in battle? |
13570 | Out of what mine did the priceless diamond come? |
13570 | Overawe and subdue the Covenanters by sacrificing their prominent leaders? |
13570 | Presbyterianism to be succeeded by an uncertainty? |
13570 | Rather, will not the fighting spirit be roused? |
13570 | Shall the cruel persecutor then have power to tread on that sacred threshold? |
13570 | Should they then be reprimanded, for not joining in the general stampede? |
13570 | Should they use the weapons that are carnal, and engage in the shedding of blood? |
13570 | The Bible inspired? |
13570 | The Covenanters rebels, because they declined the king''s authority in matters like these? |
13570 | The Covenants have been the glory and strength of the Church in the past; will they not be safety and stability to the Church in the present? |
13570 | The Psalm is the shout of faith:"The Lord''s my light and saving health, Who shall make me dismayed? |
13570 | The head and hands were presented to him, with the sneering question,"Do you know them?" |
13570 | The sea is roaring, the waves are raging, will Presbyterianism be engulfed? |
13570 | The very sentiment seemed to be the stirring of hearts, that were consciously entering into a forlorn battle:"O God, why hast Thou cast us off? |
13570 | To what did the Church resort for her reviving? |
13570 | To what did they resort for deliverance? |
13570 | To whom could they look for protection? |
13570 | True, she has ceased to shed the blood of saints; but has she repented of the blood she has shed? |
13570 | Under what obligations were future generations placed? |
13570 | Was he not accountable for the souls that waited on his ministry? |
13570 | Was he not entrusted with the truth and claims and glory of Christ? |
13570 | Was he not responsible for the honor of the Church? |
13570 | Was his prophecy fulfilled? |
13570 | Was not he the traitor, the revolutionist, the autocrat who attempted to turn things upside down? |
13570 | Were they justifiable in separating from others? |
13570 | Were they justifiable? |
13570 | Were they not the strong, unyielding, uncompromising Covenanters? |
13570 | What Joint Commission was then created? |
13570 | What aroused him against the king? |
13570 | What aroused their jealousy for the Church? |
13570 | What atrocities committed by Gen. Dalziel''s troops? |
13570 | What became the test for the pastorate? |
13570 | What benefit derived from the study of these manuals? |
13570 | What brought ruin upon him? |
13570 | What can be worse? |
13570 | What caused them the greatest grief? |
13570 | What caused these nations to abandon the Covenant? |
13570 | What champion of freedom arose at this time? |
13570 | What charge was preferred against Guthrie? |
13570 | What charges did the Covenanters prefer against the king? |
13570 | What class of ministers then had the ascendancy? |
13570 | What contributed much to their prominence in history? |
13570 | What could they then do, but deliver him up to the English army, whose battles they were fighting? |
13570 | What course did his son Charles pursue? |
13570 | What course did they take? |
13570 | What cruelties practiced on the Covenanters on Rullion Green field? |
13570 | What dangers arise from the surrender of truth? |
13570 | What dangers did he meet? |
13570 | What demonstration of strength by the Presbyterians? |
13570 | What device for public worship was ratified by parliament? |
13570 | What did Melville''s faithfulness cost him? |
13570 | What did it accomplish? |
13570 | What did the enemy do with Cameron''s body? |
13570 | What did the king require of the ministers? |
13570 | What distinguishes the largest Church? |
13570 | What distress did he meet at his licensure? |
13570 | What distresses fell upon these homes? |
13570 | What dread responsibility attached to this office? |
13570 | What effect had the Covenant on the Church? |
13570 | What effect had the Indulgences on the Covenanters? |
13570 | What effect had the death of Argyle and Guthrie on the Covenanters? |
13570 | What effect should such a life have on us as we study it? |
13570 | What effort on the part of the Covenanters to secure a successor? |
13570 | What event called the Westminster Assembly into being? |
13570 | What event intensified the issue between the king and the Covenanters? |
13570 | What faithful young minister declined the test? |
13570 | What financial question in those days ensnared the Church? |
13570 | What foe attempted her suppression? |
13570 | What fruits of their sufferings do we now enjoy? |
13570 | What gift specially distinguished Peden? |
13570 | What girl would brave such hardships for a day''s preaching? |
13570 | What good work did it accomplish? |
13570 | What great principle in the Church was here at stake? |
13570 | What great reformer appeared at this stage of the conflict? |
13570 | What growth did the Church experience in the next ten years? |
13570 | What had Guthrie done to merit the king''s mortal displeasure? |
13570 | What happened to the sisters and their elderly friend? |
13570 | What heinousness lies in Covenant- breaking? |
13570 | What hope is there of the world- wide success of Covenanted principles? |
13570 | What horrors followed the battle? |
13570 | What interests were here under deliberation? |
13570 | What is its permanent use to the nations? |
13570 | What is known concerning the beginning of the Church in this country? |
13570 | What is the duty of the present generation in the great conflict? |
13570 | What is the estimated number of those who suffered? |
13570 | What is the explanation? |
13570 | What is the only Scriptural form of church government? |
13570 | What is the size? |
13570 | What is the true position of Covenanters? |
13570 | What is their mission in the world? |
13570 | What kind of inspiration did they ascribe to the Bible? |
13570 | What large meaning in the motto? |
13570 | What led to the battle of Rullion Green? |
13570 | What lesson here regarding a pure conscience? |
13570 | What lesson may we learn from this defeat? |
13570 | What lessons may we derive from the fathers? |
13570 | What line of action did the Societies follow? |
13570 | What loyal heart could brook these terms? |
13570 | What may again occasion a sifting time? |
13570 | What may be said of Cargill''s last years of service? |
13570 | What may the Church expect, when her young people are true? |
13570 | What meetings were held in this cottage? |
13570 | What memorials are found at Irongrey? |
13570 | What minister having any regard for conscience could sign this list of errors, after swearing the Covenant? |
13570 | What minister of Christ, bent on preserving honor and conscience, could remain in charge of his church? |
13570 | What monument has been erected at Ayrsmoss? |
13570 | What moral inheritance did the Covenanted fathers leave their children? |
13570 | What motto on the Covenanters''Banner? |
13570 | What name will have the honor of heading the list on that white parchment? |
13570 | What need now to advocate the supremacy of Jesus, and the independence of the Church? |
13570 | What new attempt to divide and destroy them? |
13570 | What new danger loomed up? |
13570 | What new danger was now threatening Scotland? |
13570 | What new effort to suppress the Conventicles? |
13570 | What next? |
13570 | What notable family suffered under him? |
13570 | What notable men did God raise up for the occasion? |
13570 | What now shall be done with the royal captive? |
13570 | What objection had he to the king''s anniversary? |
13570 | What obligation comes with the inheritance? |
13570 | What obligations descend from that Covenant upon the present generation of Covenanters? |
13570 | What occurred to his body after burial? |
13570 | What official act did he perform on the king and six others? |
13570 | What practical lesson here for us? |
13570 | What present danger along the line of Indulgence? |
13570 | What previous proclamation occasioned this battle? |
13570 | What principle governs the true followers of Christ? |
13570 | What proportion remained faithful under the trial? |
13570 | What questions should our elders apply to their own conscience? |
13570 | What reaction followed the ten prosperous years after the Covenant of 1638? |
13570 | What remarkable prophecies did he utter? |
13570 | What saith the Lord? |
13570 | What second inspiration needed to understand it? |
13570 | What sentence did he receive? |
13570 | What separated them from others in worship? |
13570 | What service is much neglected in the Church in our day? |
13570 | What shall be the end of these things? |
13570 | What should be the spirit and character of Covenanters? |
13570 | What significance is attached to the martyrs''blood? |
13570 | What significant providence accompanied this daring act? |
13570 | What special advantages have we for serving God? |
13570 | What success did he have in his ministry? |
13570 | What successive attitudes toward the king did they assume? |
13570 | What task here has fallen to us? |
13570 | What terrors must such a man have to meet at death? |
13570 | What the population? |
13570 | What three men were in great part responsible for the cruelties? |
13570 | What three successive demonstrations of strength did the Covenanted Church give against the new Prayer Book? |
13570 | What trust did it commit to future generations? |
13570 | What two great events in the Church transpired in 1638? |
13570 | What two of their ministers were executed? |
13570 | What two parties henceforth in the Church? |
13570 | What two questions did the Covenanters face in attending Conventicle services? |
13570 | What violence did the Presbyterian Assembly suffer by the king? |
13570 | What was Alexander Henderson''s experience? |
13570 | What was Scotland''s condition when over- ridden by the Roman religion? |
13570 | What was done with, the prisoners taken at Bothwell Bridge? |
13570 | What was he planning when death claimed him? |
13570 | What was high treason in those days? |
13570 | What was his character? |
13570 | What was his character? |
13570 | What was his death cry? |
13570 | What was his demeanor in danger? |
13570 | What was his first notable service in the Covenant? |
13570 | What was his great sorrow? |
13570 | What was its general character? |
13570 | What was its purpose? |
13570 | What was its source? |
13570 | What was the Bible to these sufferers? |
13570 | What was the Covenanters''ideal for nations? |
13570 | What was the agreement known as"The Engagement?" |
13570 | What was the attitude of Knox toward Romanism? |
13570 | What was the character of the members? |
13570 | What was the condition of the Presbyterian Church during 1560- 1570? |
13570 | What was the cost of the liberty we enjoy? |
13570 | What was the double effect of the Indulgence? |
13570 | What was the effect? |
13570 | What was the great doctrine around which the battle was waged? |
13570 | What was the great issue? |
13570 | What was the great question in controversy? |
13570 | What was the growth of their army? |
13570 | What was the intention of the Solemn League and Covenant? |
13570 | What was the manner of the death of the two Margarets? |
13570 | What was the nature of that"high treason?" |
13570 | What was the nature of the Queensferry declaration? |
13570 | What was the nature of this excommunication? |
13570 | What was the oath of membership? |
13570 | What was the respective strength of the forces? |
13570 | What was the secret of power in these defenders of the truth? |
13570 | What was the subject of debate? |
13570 | What was the success of the Gospel during the early centuries? |
13570 | What was the value of the First Book of Discipline? |
13570 | What was the work assigned to the Assembly? |
13570 | What were some of the difficulties faced by Lady Rothes? |
13570 | What were the chief doctrines of the Church in those times? |
13570 | What were the conditions upon which these ministers returned? |
13570 | What were the prospects of the young prince? |
13570 | What were the results of the war? |
13570 | What would have been their eminence among nations had the terms of the Covenant been fulfilled? |
13570 | When He inquireth after blood, what shall Scotland do? |
13570 | When John Knox found the woman of his choice, he said,"My bird, are you willing to marry me?" |
13570 | When and where was the General Assembly reorganized? |
13570 | When did King Charles die? |
13570 | When did the Revolution take place? |
13570 | When did they proclaim a revolutionary war against the king? |
13570 | When was the First Reformation at its climax? |
13570 | When was the General Assembly reorganized? |
13570 | Whence did the Presbyterian Church get its name? |
13570 | Whence the power? |
13570 | Where are the ministers now, when the trumpet blast proclaims a revolutionary war against the king? |
13570 | Where did he study theology? |
13570 | Where did that horrible path lead? |
13570 | Where was James Renwick born? |
13570 | Where was his first pastorate? |
13570 | Where was the declaration of war issued? |
13570 | Where was the engagement fought? |
13570 | Where will we stand in case the trial come? |
13570 | Wherefore does his army hesitate? |
13570 | Wherefore turned ye back, ye sons of the mighty, lacking neither bows nor other arms? |
13570 | Wherein lay Bruce''s great strength? |
13570 | Wherein lay his unwavering strength? |
13570 | Wherein lay the moral strength of the Covenanters? |
13570 | Which way will the man of God take? |
13570 | Which? |
13570 | While reading from the Bible, he suddenly stopped, and exclaimed,"What''s this I hear?" |
13570 | Who are these separated from their brethren, and driven like chaff before the wind over mountains and moors? |
13570 | Who can silence tongues of fire? |
13570 | Who will be able to stand when He arises in wrath to vindicate His own royal rights? |
13570 | Who will command these"little flocks of kids,"when the hosts of Syria fill all the country round about? |
13570 | Who will fill it? |
13570 | Who would not pause in presence of such a serious consideration? |
13570 | Whom did he seize next? |
13570 | Why commit the guardianship to any but the loyal servants of the Lord Jesus Christ? |
13570 | Why did Scotland aid England with her army? |
13570 | Why did he leave Glenluce? |
13570 | Why did the king insist on having bishops in the Church? |
13570 | Why does God send trials upon His Church? |
13570 | Why entrust it to other than His people? |
13570 | Why is the sifting process needed? |
13570 | Why ought the truth of Christ have wide publicity? |
13570 | Why should these exercises be revived? |
13570 | Why should we appreciate our Covenanted inheritance? |
13570 | Why was it repealed? |
13570 | Why were the Cameronians called extremists? |
13570 | Why were the Covenanters now compelled to meet the English in battle? |
13570 | Why were the Covenanters styled rebels? |
13570 | Will a pastor of Christ''s flock hold his position for what he finds in the flesh- pot? |
13570 | Will not his example be to us an inspiration to work with faith and might, to build up the Church and enlarge the Kingdom of Christ? |
13570 | Will not ministers and elders soon be worn out by the incessant and desperate attacks? |
13570 | Will not the Lord, in His glorious presence, hover over them as a cloud by day and as a flaming fire by night? |
13570 | Will not we, for the sake of coming generations, be likewise faithful? |
13570 | Will the ambassador of God submit to be muzzled? |
13570 | Will the herald of Gospel liberty become a slave to vilest men? |
13570 | Will the kindness be returned? |
13570 | Will the minority be censured for not following them? |
13570 | Will the oak wither at the loss of a few boughs? |
13570 | Will the preacher of righteousness connive at wickedness? |
13570 | Will the servant of the Lord take orders from man? |
13570 | Will the sixty be censured for not following the others in submitting to the king''s supremacy over the Church? |
13570 | Will the sun faint and fail beneath the gale? |
13570 | Will the two be censured for separating from the sixty, and holding forth the Banner of Christ? |
13570 | Will the wicked be permitted to draw the sword, and quench the coals on the hearth, and the fire on the altar, with the blood of the worshipers? |
13570 | Will they be censured for withdrawing from their brethren who remained? |
13570 | Will veterans recoil at the first fire? |
13570 | Will we be a strong link, or will we be a broken link, connecting the worthy past with the golden future? |
13570 | Will we be true to the task laid on us by the fathers, who unfalteringly carried the Banner of the Covenant amid fiercest battles? |
13570 | Will we strive to emulate Knox in prayer, courage, self- denial, and pure- heartedness? |
13570 | With what interference did it meet? |
13570 | With what result? |
13570 | With what spirit did the"remnant"sustain their trials? |
13570 | Would he not immediately feel his spiritual life sink below zero? |
13570 | Would it be right to take up arms against the government? |
13570 | Would not his heart chide him bitterly for the degradation of his office and manhood? |
13570 | Would not the Church of Christ take on like activities, proportions, and strength, by following the same course of fidelity in our own times? |
13570 | a conscience that can not submit to a man? |
13570 | a conscience that can take instructions only from God? |
13570 | can flesh and blood endure the ordeal? |
13570 | die? |
13570 | the true soldiers of Jesus Christ? |
13570 | who can estimate the extent of such a calamity? |
13570 | who can reckon the sorrows, sufferings, and stupendous losses, public and private, caused by this iniquitous act of the king? |
13570 | will the supremacy of Jesus Christ go to the bottom? |