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Plunkett And Macleane [DVD]

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a b See at The British Museum, Print; broadside, 'James Macleane, the Gentleman Highwayman at the Bar' (Printed for T. Fox in the Old Baily, Publish'd according to Act of Parliament Sept 29 1750), British Museum accession number 1877,1013.832 (British Museum). Memoirs of the Celebrated Miss Fanny M----, 2 volumes (M. Thrush, London 1759), II. Read in the German edition, Geschichte der berühmten Miss Fanny Murray: In zween Theilen - Aus dem Englischen (Joseph Ehrenreich Ammermüller, Nuremberg 1768), pp. 175-77 (Google).

William Plunkett (highwayman) - Wikipedia William Plunkett (highwayman) - Wikipedia

a b For his speech of defence, see: 'Of Mr MacLean, the Gentleman Highwayman', in S. Urban (ed.), The Gentleman's Magazine, and Historical Chronicle, Vol. XX for the year 1750 (London 1750), pp. 391-92 (Hathi Trust). Plunkett lived during the mid-eighteenth century in London, on Jermyn Street, and was said to have been an apothecary who was also presumed to be a gentleman. With stolen pistols and horses, and their faces hidden by Venetian masks, Plunkett and MacLaine had a short but highly successful career as outlaws. While MacLaine was eventually hanged for his exploits, Plunkett escaped with both his illicit gains and his life. James Macleane', in J. Caulfield, Portraits, Memoirs and Characters of Remarkable Persons, 4 volumes (T.H. Whiteley, London 1820), IV, pp. 87-96 (Google). a b c d e 'Trial of James Macleane, 12th September 1750', in Old Bailey Proceedings Online, ref. (t17500912-22).

J.L. von Mosheim, Institutiones Historiae Ecclesiasticae Novi Testamenti, Libri IV (Ex officina viduae Ioannis Meyeri, Francofurti & Lipsiae 1726).

Plunkett And Macleane Script - Dialogue Transcript Plunkett And Macleane Script - Dialogue Transcript

The band performed their songs for the 1998 junk musical "Strawheaded Peter" live on stage in the touring puppetry production - effectively producing a live, animated concert performance of the album with accompanying puppet show. L. Sabine, Notes on Duels and Duelling: Alphabetically Arranged, with a Preliminary Historical Essay (Crosby, Nichols, and Co., Boston 1855), p. 243 (Google). Some fictional details crept into popular accounts printed soon after the trial, which reappear in later accounts. Maclaine was the younger of two sons of a Scots-Irish presbyterian minister, the Revd. Thomas (?or Lauchlin) Maclaine [7] of 1st Monaghan Presbyterian Church in Ireland. His mother, Elizabeth (née Milling) died when he was five or six years old, and his father when he was sixteen or seventeen. He came of a family of many ministers, his grandfather (a Gaelic-speaking clergyman in the Church of Scotland) having received a calling to Ireland from Argyllshire in 1698. [8] His elder brother Archibald Maclaine (1722-1804) was educated in Glasgow and followed his own vocation as presbyterian minister, scholar and royal preceptor in the Netherlands between 1746 and 1796, famous as the first translator (1765) [9] of Johann Lorenz von Mosheim's Ecclesiastical History (of 1726). [10]transcribed using the screenplay and/or viewings of Plunkett And Macleane. I know, I know, I still need to get the cast names in there and I'll be eternally Execution of Maclean, Commonly Known by the Name of The Gentleman Highwayman, Cheap Repository for Religious and Moral Tracts (S. Hazard, Bath/J. Marshall and R. White, London, n.d.). Read at Google.

Plunkett And Macleane movie review (1999) | Roger Ebert

He was convicted: the jury brought him in Guilty without going out of court. No remission was forthcoming, despite various signs of penitence shown by the prisoner. When the judge asked him why he should not be sentenced, Maclaine, who had prepared a short speech expressing his contrition and pleading for mercy, was unable to say more than one or two words, "My lord, I cannot speak," and stood in silence. The poet Thomas Gray, in his poem "A Long Story", referred to this when he wrote, The Monthly Chronologer: Wednesday 8 November', The London Magazine, or Gentleman's Monthly Intelligencer XVIII (1749), p. 526 (Hathi Trust). Putney', in E. Walford (ed.), Old and New London, volume 6 (Cassell, Petter and Galpin, London 1878), pp. 489-503, at note 2 (British History Online). On one occasion, when taking clothes belonging to a priest (who objected), Plunkett replied that they stole because necessity obliged them to do so, not from wantonness: and on another, he put aside his pistol while robbing a lady because he saw she was alarmed by it. It is said of Plunkett that 'he loved his bottle and a woman.' [2] Reputed immigration to America [ edit ]See John Franklin Meginness, History of Lycoming County, Pennsylvania (reprint Heritage Books 1996), Chapter 42 p. 624. [2]

The Tiger Lillies Discography | Discogs The Tiger Lillies Discography | Discogs

I will publish the answer at the end of the next millennium or when the sequel to this movie is released, whichever comes first. You are the one I adore # You're the one # My heart beats for # You are my whore # Even now, old and poor # You're the one that my twisted heart beats for # You are my whore # Like the dog, I will gnaw # Like the dog, a dog # I will paw # You are my whore # On my knees on the floor On 26 June 1750, Plunkett and Maclaine held up the coach of the Earl of Eglinton on Hounslow Heath. Plunkett went forward of the carriage and took hold of the postilion, so that Lord Eglinton, who was carrying his famous blunderbuss, could not fire at him without killing his own servant. Maclaine, who was behind, commanded his Lordship to throw his blunderbuss out of the chaise, or he would "blow his brains through his face". They took the blunderbuss, together with a portmanteau and 50 guineas. [25]

A short view of the Rev. Dr. Allen's account', Gentleman's Magazine, Vol. XX (for October 1750), pp. 435-37 (Hathi Trust). Plunketts Creek in Lycoming County bears the name of Col. William Plunkett. He reputedly died aged around 100 at Sunbury (Pennsylvania [5]), quite blind, and was buried there in 1791. [6] But if this is true, and if he were the same man, he must already have been 60 at the time of the highway robberies on Hounslow Heath, and almost 85 when commanding the Northumberland Militia. The facts can be reconciled if the estimate of his age at death is exaggerated.

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