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Melville has left ample materials for the history of his time from the
Presbyterian standpoint, in (a) correspondence with his uncle Andrew Melville (MS. in the library of the university of Edinburgh), and (b) a diary (MS. in the Advocates Library, Edinburgh). The latter is written in a vigorous,
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The uncompromising attitude of the kinsmen, though it was made the excuse for sending the elder to the Tower, brought no further punishment to James than easy detention within ten miles of
Newcastle-on-Tyne. During his residence there it was made clear to him by the king's agents that he would
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in 1585 having changed the political and ecclesiastical positions in the north, he returned to
Scotland in November of that year, and was restored to his office at St Andrews. From 1586 to his death he took an active part in Church controversy.
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receive high reward if he supported the royal plans. In 1613 negotiations were begun for his return to
Scotland, but his health was broken, and he died at Berwick in January 1614.
131:'s episcopal schemes, he appears to have won the king's respect. He answered, with his uncle, a royal summons to London in 1606 for the discussion of Church policy.
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In 1589 James was moderator of the
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at St
Andrews is one of his best passages. It is an original authority for the period, written with much naïveté, and revealing an attractive personality.
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in May 1584 (a few months after his uncle's exile) to escape the attacks of his ecclesiastical enemy, Bishop
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As a writer of verse he compares unfavourably with his uncle. All his pieces, with the exception of a
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fresh style, and is especially direct in its descriptions of contemporaries. His sketch of
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Moderators of the
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show no originality and indifferent technical ability.
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51:and reformer, son of the laird of Baldovie, in
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30:Not to be confused with
351:, Bannatyne Club (1829)
305:Encyclopædia Britannica
232:Life of Andrew Melville
63:James was educated at
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324:Cousin, John William
214:in 1829, and by the
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276:References
69:St Andrews
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59:Education
326:(1910).
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187:(1598),
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169:James VI
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