stuffnads, local and safe classifieds market in the USA.

Zac Brown Band Uncaged Tour Concert Tickets at BMO Harris Bank Center Feb 7 in Rockford, Illinois For Sale

Seller:
Type: Tickets & Traveling, For Sale - Private.

ZAC BROWN BAND xxxx xxxx TOUR DATES & TICKETS
Zac Brown Band
BMO Harris Bank Center
Rockford, IL
Friday
2/7/xxxx
7:00 PM
View Best Concert Tickets
We have a fantastic inventory of tickets for all of the Zac Brown Band Uncaged Tour xxxx xxxx Concerts.
Ticket options will vary depending venue hosting the ZBB concert.
OnlineTicketWindow.com has a wide variety of tickets available for all North American venues of "Zac Brown Band" tour. Tickets can include Presale tickets & all seating options available at each venue. Seating can include Pit Tickets, VIP Field Tickets, Floor Tickets, Mezzanine Tickets, VIP Boxes, Balcony Tickets & Orchestra seats as well as Lawn & General Admission Tickets.
Our Customer Service department can help anyone looking for that special ticket for one fan or assist in Large Group sales for those wanting to attend the concerts with friends. We are Event Tickets Specialists you can trust!
Don't want to miss Zac Brown Band in concert? See Zac Brown Band in concert by using the link below for an updated tour schedule. Zac Brown Band may add more dates to the tour in the future:
Zac Brown Band Uncaged Tour xxxx xxxx- North American Tour Dates & Tickets
Zac Brown Band
California Mid-state Fair Grounds
Paso Robles, CA
Wednesday
7/16/xxxx
7:30 PM
View Best Concert Tickets
Zac Brown Band
Harrah's Cherokee Resort Event Center
Cherokee, NC
Saturday
3/29/xxxx
7:30 PM
View Best Concert Tickets
Zac Brown Band
CFSB Center (formerly Regional Special Events Center)
Murray, KY
Saturday
2/8/xxxx
TBD
View Best Concert Tickets
M`Aulay, whose strength did not lie in oratory, intimated his wish that Lord Menteith should open the business of the council. With great modesty, and at the same time with spirit, that young lord said, ``he wished what he was about to propose had come from some person of better known and more established character. Since, however, it lay with him to be spokesman, he had to state to the Chiefs assembled, that those who wished to throw off the base yoke which fanaticism had endeavoured to wreathe round their necks, had not a moment to lose. The Covenanters,'' he said, ``after having twice made war upon their sovereign, and having extorted from him every request, reasonable or unreasonable, which they thought proper to demand--- after their Chiefs had been loaded with dignities and favours--- after having publicly declared, when his Majesty, after a gracious visit to the land of his nativity, was upon his return to England, that he returned a contented king, from a contented people,--- after all this, and without even the pretext for a national grievance, the same men have, upon doubts and suspicions, equally dishonourable to the King, and groundless in themselves, detached a strong army to assist his rebels in England, in a quarrel with which Scotland had no more to do than she has with the wars in Germany. It was well,'' he said, ``that the eagerness with which this treasonable purpose was pursued, had blinded the junta who now usurped the government of Scotland to the risk which they were about to incur. The army which they had despatched to England under old Leven comprehended their veteran soldiers, the strength of those armies which had been levied in Scotland during the two former wars''------ ``The moment,'' he said, ``was most favourable for all true-hearted and loyal Scotsmen to show, that the reproach their country had lately undergone arose from the selfish ambition of a few turbulent and seditious men, joined to the absurd fanaticism which, disseminated from five hundred pulpits, had spread like a land-flood over the Lowlands of Scotland. He had letters from the Marquis of Huntly in the north, which he should show to the Chiefs separately. That nobleman, equally loyal and powerful, was determined to exert his utmost energy in the common cause, and the powerful Earl of Seaforth was prepared to join the same standard. From the Earl of Airly, and the Ogilvies in Angusshire, he had had communications equally decided; and there was no doubt that these, who, with the Hays, Leiths, Burnets, and other loyal gentlemen, would soon be on horseback, would form a body far more than sufficient to overawe the northern Covenanters, who had already experienced their valour in the well-known rout which was popularly termed the Trot of Turiff. South of Forth and Tay,'' he said, ``the King had many friends, who, oppressed by enforced oaths, compulsatory levies, heavy taxes, unjustly imposed and unequally levied, by the tyranny of the Committee of Estates, and the inquisitorial insolence of the Presbyterian divines, waited but the waving of the royal banner to take up arms. Douglas, Traquair, Roxburgh, Hume, all friendly to the royal cause, would counterbalance,'' he said, ``the Covenanting interest in the south; and two gentlemen, of name and quality, here present, from the north of England, would answer for the zeal of Cumberland, Westmoreland, and Northumberland. Against so many gallant gentlemen the southern Covenanters could but arm raw levies; the Whigamores of the western shires, and the ploughmen and mechanics of the Low Country. For the West Highlands, he knew no interest which the Covenanters possessed there, except that of one individual, as well known as he was odious. But was there a single man, who, on casting his eye round this hall, and recognising the power, the gallantry, and the dignity of the Chiefs assembled, could entertain a moment's doubt of their success against the utmost force which Gillespie Grumach could collect against them? He had only farther to add, that considerable funds, both of money and ammunition, had been provided for the army,''---(here Dalgetty pricked up his ears),---``that officers of ability and experience in the foreign wars, one of whom was now present,'' (the Captain drew himself up, and looked round), ``had engaged to train such levies as might require to be disciplined;--- and that a numerous body of auxiliary forces from Ireland, having been detached from the Earl of Antrim, from Ulster, had successfully accomplished their descent upon the main land, and, with the assistance of Clanranald's people, having taken and fortified the Castle of Mingarry, in spite of Argyle's attempts to intercept them, were in full march to this place of rendezvous. It only remained,'' he said, ``that the noble Chiefs assembled, laying aside every lesser consideration, should unite, heart and hand, in the common cause; send the fiery cross through their clans, in order to collect their utmost force, and form their junction with such celerity as to leave the enemy no time, either for preparation, or recovery from the panic which would spread at the first sound of their pibroch. He himself,'' he said, ``though neither among the richest nor the most powerful of the Scottish nobility, felt that he had to support the dignity of an ancient and honourable house, the independence of an ancient and honourable nation, and to that cause he was determined to devote both life and fortune. If those who were more powerful were equally prompt, he trusted they would deserve the thanks of their King, and the gratitude of posterity.'' ``Thane of Menteith,'' he said, ``you have well spoken; nor is there one of us in whose bosom the same sentiments do not burn like fire. But it is not strength alone that wins the fight; it is the head of the commander, as well as the arm of the soldier, that brings victory. I ask of you, who is to raise and sustain the banner under which we are invited to rise and muster ourselves? Will it be expected that we should risk our children, and the flower of our kinsmen, ere we know to whose guidance they are to be entrusted? This were leading those to slaughter, whom, by the laws of God and man, it is our duty to protect. Where is the royal commission, under which the lieges are to be convocated in arms? Simple and rude as we may be deemed, we know something of the established rules of war, as well as of the laws of our country; nor will we arm ourselves against the general peace of Scotland, unless by the express commands of the King, and under a leader fit to command such men as are here assembled.'' No sooner had the general acclamation of joyful surprise subsided, than silence was eagerly demanded for reading the royal commission; and the bonnets, which hitherto each Chief had worn, probably because unwilling to be the first to uncover, were now at once vailed in honour of the royal warrant. It was couched in the most full and ample terms, authorising the Earl of Montrose to assemble the subjects in arms, for the putting down the present rebellion, which divers traitors and seditious persons had levied against the King, to the manifest forfaulture, as it stated, of their allegiance, and to the breach of the pacification between the two kingdoms. It enjoined all subordinate authorities to be obedient and assisting to Montrose in his enterprise; gave him the power of making ordinances and proclamations, punishing misdemeanours, pardoning criminals, placing and displacing governors and commanders. In fine, it was as large and full a commission as any with which a prince could entrust a subject. As soon as it was finished, a shout burst from the assembled Chiefs, in testimony of their ready submission to the will of their sovereign. Not contented with generally thanking them for a reception so favourable, Montrose hastened to address himself to individuals. The most important Chiefs had already been long personally known to him, but even to those of inferior consequence he now introduced himself, and by the acquaintance he displayed with their peculiar designations, and the circumstances and history of their clans, he showed how long he must have studied the character of the mountaineers, and prepared himself for such a situation as he now held. While he was engaged in these acts of courtesy, his graceful manner, expressive features, and dignity of deportment, made a singular contrast with the coarseness and meanness of his dress. Montrose possessed that sort of form and face, in which the beholder, at the first glance, sees nothing extraordinary, but of which the interest becomes more impressive the longer we gaze upon them. His stature was very little above the middle size, but in person he was uncommonly well built, and capable both of exerting great force, and enduring much fatigue. In fact, he enjoyed a constitution of iron, without which he could not have sustained the trials of his extraordinary campaigns, through all of which he subjected himself to the hardships of the meanest soldier. He was perfect in all exercises, whether peaceful or martial, and possessed, of course, that graceful ease of deportment proper to those to whom habit has rendered all postures easy. His long brown hair, according to the custom of men of quality among the Royalists, was parted on the top of his head, and trained to hang down on each side in curled locks, one of which, descending two or three inches lower than the others, intimated Montrose's compliance with that fashion against which it pleased Mr. Prynne, the puritan, to write a treatise, entitled, ``The Unloveliness of Love-locks.'' The features which these tresses enclosed, were of that kind which derive their interest from the character of the man, rather than from the regularity of their form. But a high nose, a full, decided, well-opened, quick grey eye, and a sanguine complexion, made amends for some coarseness and irregularity in the subordinate parts of the face; so that, altogether, Montrose might be termed rather a handsome than a hard-featured man. But those who saw him when his soul looked through those eyes with all the energy and fire of genius---those who heard him speak with the authority of talent, and the eloquence of nature, were impressed with an opinion even of his external form, more enthusiastically favourable than the portraits which still survive would entitle us to ascribe to it. Such, at least, was the impression he made upon the assembled Chiefs of the mountaineers, over whom, as upon all persons in their state of society, personal appearance has no small influence. In the discussions which followed his discovering himself, Montrose explained the various risks which he had run in his present undertaking. His first attempt had been to assemble a body of loyalists in the north of England, who, in obedience to the orders of the Marquis of Newcastle, he expected would have marched into Scotland; but the disinclination of the English to cross the Border, and the delay of the Earl of Antrim, who was to have landed in the Solway Firth with his Irish army, prevented his executing this design. Other plans having in like manner failed, he stated that he found himself under the necessity of assuming a disguise to, render his passage secure through the Lowlands, in which he had been kindly assisted by his kinsman of Menteith. By what means Allan M`Aulay had come to know him, he could not pretend to explain. Those who knew Allan's prophetic pretensions, smiled mysteriously; but he himself only replied, that the ``Earl of Montrose need not be surprised if he was known to thousands, of whom he himself could retain no memory.'' ``By the honour of a cavalier,'' said Captain Dalgetty, finding at length an opportunity to thrust in his word, ``I am proud and happy in having an opportunity of drawing a sword under your lordship's command; and I do forgive all grudge, malecontent, and malice of my heart, to Mr. Allan M`Aulay, for having thrust me down to the lowest seat of the board yestreen. Certes, he hath this day spoken so like a man having full command of his senses, that I had resolved in my secret purpose that he was no way entitled to claim the privilege of insanity. But since I was only postponed to a noble earl, my future commander-in-chief, I do, before you all, recognise the justice of the preference, and heartily salute Allan as one who is to be his _bon-camarado._'' ``And respecting arms,'' said Captain Dalgetty, ``if your lordship will permit an old cavalier to speak his mind, so that the one-third have muskets, my darling weapon would be the pike for the remainder, whether for resisting a charge of horse, or for breaking the infantry. A common smith will make a hundred pike-heads in a day; here is plenty of wood for shafts; and I will uphold, that, according to the best usages of war, a strong battalion of pikes, drawn up in the fashion of the Lion of the North, the immortal Gustavus, would beat the Macedonian phalanx, of which I used to read in the Mareschal College, when I studied in the ancient town of Bon-Accord; and farther, I will venture to predicate''------ ``My worthy friends,'' said he, ``Gustavus is not new to the dangers of travelling, and the mountains of Bohemia; and (no disparagement to the beals and corries Mr. Angus is pleased to mention, and of which Sir Miles, who never saw them, confirms the horrors) these mountains may compete with the vilest roads in Europe. In fact, my horse hath a most excellent and social quality; for although he cannot pledge in my cup, yet we share our loaf between us, and it will be hard if he suffers famine where cakes or bannocks are to be found. And, to cut this matter short, I beseech you, my good friends, to observe the state of Sir Duncan Campbell's palfrey, which stands in that stall before us, fat and fair; and, in return for your anxiety on my account, I give you my honest asseveration, that while we travel the same road, both that palfrey and his rider shall lack for food before either Gustavus or I.'' ``It grieved him to the very heart,'' he said, ``to see that friends and neighbours, who should stand shoulder to shoulder, were likely to be engaged hand to hand in a cause which so little concerned them. What signifies it,'' he said, ``to the Highland Chiefs, whether King or Parliament got uppermost? Were it not better to let them settle their own differences without interference, while the Chiefs, in the meantime, took the opportunity of establishing their own authority in a manner not to be called in question hereafter by either King or Parliament?'' He reminded Allan M`Aulay that the measures taken in the last reign to settle the peace, as was alleged, of the Highlands, were in fact levelled at the patriarchal power of the Chieftains; and he mentioned the celebrated settlement of the Fife Undertakers, as they were called, in the Lewis, as part of a deliberate plan, formed to introduce strangers among the Celtic tribes, to destroy by degrees their ancient customs and mode of government, and to despoil them of the inheritance of their fathers. ``And yet,'' he continued, addressing Allan,.
&#xxxx; Location: Rockford, Rockford, IL
&#xxxx; Post ID: xxxxxxxx rockford
&#xxxx; Other ads by this user:
Zac Brown Band Uncaged Tour Concert Tickets at BMO Harris Bank Center Feb 7 (Rockford, IL) buy, sell, trade: tickets for sale
Sting & Paul Simon Concert at United Center in Chicago, IL Tickets (On Stage Together Tour February 25) buy, sell, trade: tickets for sale
Jay-Z Tickets at United Center in Chicago, IL (Concert on January 9, xxxx) buy, sell, trade: tickets for sale
Miley Cyrus "Bangerz" Tour xxxx Concert Schedule & Tickets at Allstate Arena (VIP Fan Packages - Meet & Greet Tickets) buy, sell, trade: tickets for sale
One Direction "Where We Are" Stadium Tour xxxx Concert Tickets at Soldier Field Stadium (1D on August 29, xxxx & August 30, xxxx) buy, sell, trade: tickets for sale
//
//]]>
Email this ad
Play it safe. Avoid Scammers.
Most of the time, transactions outside of your local area involving money orders, cashier checks, wire transfers or shipping (especially overseas shipping) are scams or frauds.
Report all scam attempts to abuse@backpage.com.
//
//]]>
Account Login | Affiliate Program | Promote Us | Help | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | User Safety | backpage.com  © Copyright xxxx
rockford.backpage.com is an interactive computer service that enables access by multiple users and should not be treated as the publisher or speaker of any information provided by another information content provider.
Zac Brown Band
BMO Harris Bank Center (Formerly Rockford Metrocentre)
Rockford, IL
Friday
2/7/xxxx
TBD
View Best Concert Tickets
Zac Brown Band
Resch Center
Green Bay, WI
Thursday
2/6/xxxx
TBD
View Best Concert Tickets
Zac Brown Band
Huntington Center (Formerly Lucas County Arena)
Toledo, OH
Wednesday
2/5/xxxx
7:00 PM
View Best Concert Tickets
Zac Brown Band
James Brown Arena (formerly Augusta Richmond County Civic Center)
Augusta, GA
Friday
1/31/xxxx
7:00 PM
View Best Concert Tickets
Zac Brown Band
Columbus Civic Center
Columbus, GA
Thursday
1/30/xxxx
7:00 PM
View Best Concert Tickets
Zac Brown Band
UTC Mckenzie Arena
Chattanooga, TN
Wednesday
1/29/xxxx
TBD
View Best Concert Tickets
Zac Brown Band
The Joint - Hard Rock Hotel Las Vegas
Las Vegas, NV
Sunday
1/12/xxxx
8:00 PM
View Best Concert Tickets
Zac Brown Band
The Joint - Hard Rock Hotel Las Vegas
Las Vegas, NV
Saturday
1/11/xxxx
8:00 PM
View Best Concert Tickets
Zac Brown Band
Joe Louis Arena
Detroit, MI
Wednesday
1/1/xxxx
7:30 PM
View Best Concert Tickets
Zac Brown Band
Joe Louis Arena
Detroit, MI
Tuesday
12/31/xxxx
8:30 PM
View Best Concert Tickets
Zac Brown Band
Ford Center - IN
Evansville, IN
Sunday
12/29/xxxx
7:00 PM
View Best Concert Tickets
Zac Brown Band
Bank Of Oklahoma Center
Tulsa, OK
Saturday
12/28/xxxx
7:00 PM
View Best Concert Tickets
Zac Brown Band
Fedex Forum
Memphis, TN
Friday
12/27/xxxx
7:00 PM
View Best Concert Tickets