| Great Britain - 1856 - 420 pages
...no longer visible in the original manuscript, but they are given from Gale's edition. Since the date of its publication they have been so carefully erased from the vellum, that there does not remain even the vestige of a single letter. 3 This inroad took place between the 15th Aug. and 8th... | |
| England - 1856 - 422 pages
...no longer visible in the original manuscript, but they are given from Gale.s edition. Since the date of its publication they have been so carefully erased from the vellum, that there does not remain even the vestige of a single letter. 4 Egglesbirch, Leland, Collect. l . 856. Chalmers, in his... | |
| Andrew (of Wyntoun) - Scotland - 1914 - 360 pages
...is, that those three words, which were in the MS. of the Melrose Chronicle when Gale published it, "have been so carefully erased from the vellum, that...does not now remain the vestige of a single letter." (J. Stevenson.) Ingulf (Gale, I. 459) explains why William was so " fleyit " at Durham. He had requested... | |
| Alan Orr Anderson - Scotland - 1922 - 830 pages
...original manuscript, but they are given in Gale's edition. Since the date of its publication [1684] they have been so carefully erased from the vellum that there does not remain even the vestige of a single letter" Stevenson, Church Historians, iv, 116, note. This paragraph... | |
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