| Joseph Ritson - 1810 - Liczba stron: 232
...iron made ; But [now] a long rapier doth hang by his side, And huffling doth this bonny Scot ride. Bonny Scot, we all witness can That England hath made thee a gentleman. FINIS. : ; Harding arid Wright, Printers, St. John's Square, < , - / k,N\ 'T ... | |
| John Nichols, John Bowyer Nichols - 1818 - Liczba stron: 890
...in his Treasury. The case is altered, I perceive, at present ; but whom have you to thank for it ? ' Bonny Scot, we all witness can That England hath made thee a Gentleman.' " Your narrative of the dying moments and last advice of poor Cumyng* is really so ludicrous, and so... | |
| John Nichols, John Bowyer Nichols - 1818 - Liczba stron: 894
...in his Treasury. The case is altered, I perceive, at present ; but whom have you to thank for it ? * Bonny Scot, we all witness can That England hath made thee a Gentleman.' " Your narrative of the dying moments and last advice of poor Cumyng* is really so ludicrous, and so... | |
| 1822 - Liczba stron: 424
...of iron made; But now a long rapier doth hang at thy side, And buffingly doth the bonny Scot ride. Bonny Scot we all witness can, That England hath made thee a gentleman. Somerset knew these verses had been applied to his master, and he was not a little staggered to hear... | |
| Joseph Ritson - 1833 - Liczba stron: 262
...in his Treasury. The case is altered, I perceive, at present; but whom have you to thank for it ? " Bonny Scot we all witness can That England hath made thee a gentleman." Your narrative of the dying moments and last advice of poor Cumyng is really so ludicrous and so lamentable,... | |
| Joseph Ritson, Sir Nicholas Harris Nicolas - 1833 - Liczba stron: 314
...in his Treasury. The case is altered, I perceive, at present; but 'whom have you to thank for it ? " Bonny Scot we all witness can That England hath made thee a gentleman." Your narrative of the dying moments and last advice of poor Cumyng is really so ludicrous and so lamentable,... | |
| Joseph Ritson, Sir Nicholas Harris Nicolas - 1833 - Liczba stron: 262
...in his Treasury. The case is altered, I perceive, at present ; but whom have you to thank for it ? " Bonny Scot we all witness can That England hath made thee a gentleman." Your narrative of the dying moments and last advice of poor Cumyng is really so ludicrous and so lamentable,... | |
| James I (King of England) - 1835 - Liczba stron: 174
...little of that character, and is withal a fair and clever pasquinade, as to entitle it to notice here. " Bonny Scot, we all witness can. That England hath...now it is turned to a hat and feather, Thy bonnet is blown the devil knows whither. Thy shoes on thy feet, when thou earnest from plough, Were made of the... | |
| James I (King of England) - 1835 - Liczba stron: 248
...of iron made, But now a long rapier doth hang by his side, And huffingly doth this bonny Scot ride. Bonny Scot, we all witness can, That England hath made thee a gentleman." The above, though sufficiently pointed, is almost a solitary exception to the discreditable character... | |
| Alexander Macdonald - 1835 - Liczba stron: 178
...of iron made, But now a long rapier doth hang by his side, And huffingly doth this bonny Scot ride. Bonny Scot, we all witness can, That England hath made thee a gentleman." The above, though sufficiently pointed, is almost a solitary exception to the discreditable character... | |
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