| Celts - 1888 - 920 pages
...Boisterous day till (Jhamberlain Drummond was so kind as to go down to the Strath and bring wrights, and carts, and smiths, to our assistance, who dragged...to the plain, where we were forced to stay five or sia hours till there was a new axletre made, so that it was dark night before we came to Dunblaine,... | |
| Inverness Gaelic Society - Celtic literature - 1889 - 476 pages
...Boisterous day till Chamberlain Drummond was so kind as to go down to the Strath and bring wrights, and carts, and smiths, to our assistance, who dragged...forced to stay five or six hours till there was a new axletre made, so that it was dark night oefore we came to Dunblaine, which is but eight miles from... | |
| Inverness Gaelic Society - Celtic literature - 1889 - 436 pages
...Drummond was so kind as to go down to the Strath and bring wrights, and carts, and smiths, to ovir assistance, who dragged us to the plain, where we...forced to stay five or six hours till there was a new axletre made, so that it was dark night before we came to Dunblaine, which is but eight miles from... | |
| Inverness Gaelic Society - Celtic literature - 1889 - 442 pages
...to go down to the Strath and bring wrights, and carts, and smiths, to our assistance, who dragged ns to the plain, where we were forced to stay five or six hours till there was a new axletre made, so that it was dark night before we came to Dunblaine, which is but eight miles from... | |
| Alexander Porteous - Crieff (Scotland) - 1912 - 556 pages
...got to Castle Drummond, where he was storm-stayed ' by the most tempestuous weather of wind and ram I ever remember.' Setting forth, ' I was not three...safety, having taken eleven days for the journey." 1 At the early period when Crieff clustered round the church and the bridge was yet unbuilt, the main... | |
| 1846 - 652 pages
...boisterous day, till chamberlain Drummond was so kind as to go down to the Stralh, and bring Wrights, and carts, and smiths to our assistance, who dragged us...was a new axletree made ; so that it was dark night hefore we came to Dnnblaine, which is but eight miles from Castle Drummond ; and we were all much fatigued.... | |
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