[A Short History of Scotland by Andrew Lang]@TWC D-Link book
A Short History of Scotland

CHAPTER VIII
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BRUCE AND THE WAR OF INDEPENDENCE.
The position towards France of Edward I.made it really more desirable for him that Scotland should be independent and friendly, than half subdued and hostile to his rule.

While she was hostile, England, in attacking France, always left an enemy in her rear.

But Edward supposed that by clemency to all the Scottish leaders except Wallace, by giving them great appointments and trusting them fully, and by calling them to his Parliament in London, he could combine England and Scotland in affectionate union.

He repaired the ruins of war in Scotland; he began to study her laws and customs; he hastily ran up for her a new constitution, and appointed his nephew, John of Brittany, as governor.
But he had overlooked two facts: the Scottish clergy, from the highest to the lowest, were irreconcilably opposed to union with England; and the greatest and most warlike of the Scottish nobles, if not patriotic, were fickle and insatiably ambitious.


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