Robert the Bruce Trilogy (#1-3) by Nigel Tranter
Requirements: ePUB / MOBI Reader, 6.2 MB
Overview: One of Scotland’s best-loved authors, Nigel Tranter wrote over ninety novels on Scottish history.
Genre: Fiction, Historical
#1 – The Steps to the Empty Throne: That terrible forcing-ground of heroism and treachery alike, the Wars of Independence from 1296 to 1314, hammered Scotland into the very dust until only the enduring idea of freedom remained to her. But the idea was made flesh. Robert the Bruce—Nor-man lord and Celtic earl—fought Edward Longshanks, King of England, in a desperate and appalling struggle with bloody Scotland as the prize. This is a story of fire and blood, color and beauty, faith and love, and even humor and laughter. Beauti-fully told, it is the beginning of a brilliant and ambitious trilogy that does full justice to the vast, heroic theme of Robert the Bruce.
#2 – The Path of the Hero King: Robert the Bruce—his rise from the ashes of defeat to the glowing triumph of Bannockburn. At the opening of this stirring novel, the reader meets Bruce as a man broken in every way except in spirit. He has been excommunicated and is a fugitive from the English. With the exception of his wife, nobody has any faith in him and his vision of freedom. Indeed, the war-weary Scots seem long past caring.But from this desperate situation and in the face of apparently unbearable setbacks where he loses all but his life, Robert the Bruce rises and finally faces the English at the memorable battle of Bannockburn.
#3 – The Price of the King’s Peace: Bannockburn was far from the end for Robert Bruce and Scotland; not even the beginning of the end—only the end of the beginning. There remained fourteen years of struggle, savagery, heroism and treachery before the English could be brought to sit at a peace table with their proclaimed rebels, and so to acknowledge Bruce as sovereign King. In these years of stress and fulfilment, Bruce’s character burgeoned to its splendid flowering. The hero-king, moulded by sorrow, remorse and in grievous sickness, equally with triumph, became the foremost prince of Christendom—despite continuing Papal excommunication. That the fighting now was done mainly deep in England, over the sea in Ireland and in the hearts of men—his own not the least—was none the less taxing for a sick man with the seeds of grim fate in his body, and the sin of murder on his conscience. But Elizabeth de Burgh was at his side again, after the long years of imprisonment, and a great love sustained them both. Love, indeed, is the key to Robert the Bruce—his passionate love for his land and his people, for his friends, his forgiveness for his enemies, and the love he engendered in others; for surely never did a king arouse such love and devotion in those around him, in his lieutenants, as did he—even though, in the famous Declaration of Independence, at Arbroath in 1320, the same devoted comrades swore that they would put even their Lord Robert from them were he to fail in his adherence to the burning concept of freedom. Freedom, then, with love—here is the theme and trumpet-call of this, the final volume of Nigel Tranter’s triumphant trilogy about Robert the Bruce.
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