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Sir William Wallace
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The Capture of Lanark
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A Treacherous Plot
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The Barns of Ayr
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The Cave in the Pentlands
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The Council at Stirling
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The Battle of Stirling Bridge
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The Battle of Falkirk
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Robert the Bruce
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The Battle of Methven
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The Castle of Dunstaffnage
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Colonsay
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A Mission to Ireland
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An Irish Rising
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The King's Blood-Hound
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The Hound Restored
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The Convent of St. Kenneth
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The Heiress of the Kerrs
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The Siege of Aberfilly
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A Prisoner
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The Escape from Berwick
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The Progress of the War
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The Capture of a Stronghold
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Edinburgh
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Bannockburn
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Front Matter
PREFACE
MY DEAR LADS,
There are few figures in history who have
individually exercised so great an influence upon
events as William Wallace and Robert Bruce. It was to
the extraordinary personal courage, indomitable
perseverance, and immense energy of these two men that
Scotland owed her freedom from English domination. So
surprising were the traditions of the feats performed
by these heroes that it was at one time the fashion to
treat them as belonging as purely to legend as the
feats of St. George or King Arthur. Careful
investigation, however, has shown that so far from this
being the case, almost every deed reported to have been
performed by them is verified by contemporary
historians. Sir William Wallace had the especial bad
fortune of having come down to us principally by the
writings of his bitter enemies, and even modern
historians, who should have taken a fairer view of his
life, repeated the cry of the old English writers that
he was a blood-thirsty robber. Mr. W. Burns, however,
in his masterly and exhaustive work, The Scottish
War of Independence, has torn these
calumnies to shreds, and has displayed Wallace as he
was, a high-minded and noble patriot. While consulting
other writers, especially those who wrote at the time
of or but shortly after
the events they record, I have for the most part
followed Burns in all the historical portions of the
narrative. Throughout the story, therefore, wherein it
at all relates to Wallace, Bruce, and the other
historical characters, the circumstances and events can
be relied upon as strictly accurate, save only in the
earlier events of the career of Wallace, of which the
details that have come down to us are somewhat
conflicting, although the main features are now settled
past question.
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