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authornfenwick <nfenwick@pglaf.org>2025-01-27 21:59:42 -0800
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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #61314 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/61314)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, Traditions of Edinburgh, by Robert Chambers,
-Illustrated by James Riddel
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: Traditions of Edinburgh
-
-
-Author: Robert Chambers
-
-
-
-Release Date: February 4, 2020 [eBook #61314]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TRADITIONS OF EDINBURGH***
-
-
-E-text prepared by Susan Skinner and the Online Distributed Proofreading
-Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made available by
-Internet Archive (https://archive.org)
-
-
-
-Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
- file which includes the original illustrations.
- See 61314-h.htm or 61314-h.zip:
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/61314/61314-h/61314-h.htm)
- or
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/61314/61314-h.zip)
-
-
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- https://archive.org/details/traditionsofedin00chamuoft
-
-
-
-
-
-TRADITIONS OF EDINBURGH
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Illustration: AN ELEGANT MODERN CITY.
-
-PAGE 8.]
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-TRADITIONS OF EDINBURGH
-
-by
-
-ROBERT CHAMBERS, LL.D.
-
-Illustrated by James Riddel, R.S.W.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
-
-
-London: 38 Soho Square, W.
-W. & R. Chambers, Limited
-Edinburgh: 339 High Street
-J. B. Lippincott Company, Philadelphia
-1912
-
-Edinburgh:
-Printed by W. & R. Chambers, Limited.
-
-
-
-
-INTRODUCTORY NOTICE.
-
-1868.
-
-
-I am about to do what very few could do without emotion—revise a
-book which I wrote forty-five years ago. This little work came out in
-the Augustan days of Edinburgh, when Jeffrey and Scott, Wilson and
-the Ettrick Shepherd, Dugald Stewart and Alison, were daily giving
-the productions of their minds to the public, and while yet Archibald
-Constable acted as the unquestioned emperor of the publishing world. I
-was then an insignificant person of the age of twenty; yet, destitute
-as I was both of means and friends, I formed the hope of writing
-something which would attract attention. The subject I proposed was
-one lying readily at hand, the romantic things connected with Old
-Edinburgh. If, I calculated, a first _part_ or _number_ could be
-issued, materials for others might be expected to come in, for scores
-of old inhabitants, even up perhaps to the very ‘oldest,’ would then
-contribute their reminiscences.
-
-The plan met with success. Materials almost unbounded came to me,
-chiefly from aged professional and mercantile gentlemen, who usually,
-at my first introduction to them, started at my youthful appearance,
-having formed the notion that none but an old person would have thought
-of writing such a book. A friend gave me a letter to Mr Charles
-Kirkpatrick Sharpe, who, I was told, knew the scandal of the time of
-Charles II. as well as he did the merest gossip of the day, and had
-much to say regarding the good society of a hundred years ago.
-
-Looking back from the year 1868, I feel that C. K. S. has himself
-become, as it were, a tradition of Edinburgh. His thin effeminate
-figure, his voice pitched _in alt_—his attire, as he took his daily
-walks on Princes Street, a long blue frock-coat, black trousers,
-rather wide below, and sweeping over white stockings and neat
-shoes—something like a web of white cambric round his neck, and a
-brown wig coming down to his eyebrows—had long established him as
-what is called a character. He had recently edited a book containing
-many stories of diablerie, and another in which the original narrative
-of ultra-presbyterian church history had to bear a series of cavalier
-notes of the most mocking character. He had a quaint biting wit, which
-people bore as they would a scratch from a provoked cat. Essentially,
-he was good-natured, and fond of merriment. He had considerable gifts
-of drawing, and one caricature portrait by him, of Queen Elizabeth
-dancing, ‘high and disposedly,’ before the Scotch ambassadors, is the
-delight of everybody who has seen it. In jest upon his own peculiarity
-of voice, he formed an address-card for himself consisting simply of
-the following anagram:
-
-[Illustration]
-
-_quasi dicitur_ C sharp. He was intensely aristocratic, and cared
-nothing for the interests of the great multitude. He complained that
-one never heard of any gentlefolks committing crimes nowadays, as if
-that were a disadvantage to them or the public. Any case of a Lady
-Jane stabbing a perjured lover would have delighted him. While the
-child of whim, Mr Sharpe was generally believed to possess respectable
-talents by which, with a need for exerting them, he might have achieved
-distinction. His ballad of the ‘Murder of Caerlaverock,’ in the
-_Minstrelsy_, is a masterly production; and the concluding verses haunt
-one like a beautiful strain of music:
-
- ‘To sweet Lincluden’s haly cells
- Fu’ dowie I’ll repair;
- There Peace wi’ gentle Patience dwells,
- Nae deadly feuds are there.
- In tears I’ll wither ilka charm,
- Like draps o’ balefu’ yew;
- And wail the beauty that cou’d harm
- A knight sae brave and true.’
-
-After what I had heard and read of Charles Sharpe, I called upon him at
-his mother’s house, No. 93 Princes Street, in a somewhat excited frame
-of mind. His servant conducted me to the first floor, and showed me
-into what is generally called amongst us the back drawing-room, which
-I found carpeted with green cloth, and full of old family portraits,
-some on the walls, but many more on the floor. A small room leading
-off this one behind, was the place where Mr Sharpe gave audience. Its
-diminutive space was stuffed full of old curiosities, cases with family
-bijouterie, &c. One petty object was strongly indicative of the man—a
-calling-card of Lady Charlotte Campbell, the once adored beauty, stuck
-into the frame of a picture. He must have kept it at that time about
-thirty years. On appearing, Mr Sharpe received me very cordially,
-telling me he had seen and been pleased with my first two numbers.
-Indeed, he and Sir Walter Scott had talked together of writing a book
-of the same kind in company, and calling it _Reekiana_, which plan,
-however, being anticipated by me, the only thing that remained for him
-was to cast any little matters of the kind he possessed into my care. I
-expressed myself duly grateful, and took my leave. The consequence was
-the appearance of notices regarding the eccentric Lady Anne Dick, the
-beautiful Susanna, Countess of Eglintoune, the Lord Justice-clerk Alva,
-and the Duchess of Queensberry (the ‘Kitty’ of Prior), before the close
-of my first volume. Mr Sharpe’s contributions were all of them given
-in brief notes, and had to be written out on an enlarged scale, with
-what I thought a regard to literary effect as far as the telling was
-concerned.
-
-By an introduction from Dr Chalmers, I visited a living lady who might
-be considered as belonging to the generation at the beginning of the
-reign of George III. Her husband, Alexander Murray, had, I believe,
-been Lord North’s Solicitor-general for Scotland. She herself, born
-before the Porteous Riot, and well remembering the Forty-five, was
-now within a very brief space of the age of a hundred. Although she
-had not married in her earlier years, her children, Mr Murray of
-Henderland and others, were all elderly people. I found the venerable
-lady seated at a window in her drawing-room in George Street, with her
-daughter, Miss Murray, taking the care of her which her extreme age
-required, and with some help from this lady, we had a conversation of
-about an hour. She spoke with due reverence of her mother’s brother,
-the Lord Chief-justice Mansfield, and when I adverted to the long
-pamphlet against him written by Mr Andrew Stuart at the conclusion
-of the Douglas Cause, she said that, to her knowledge, he had never
-read it, such being his practice in respect of all attacks made upon
-him, lest they should disturb his equanimity in judgment. As the old
-lady was on intimate terms with Boswell, and had seen Johnson on his
-visit to Edinburgh—as she was the sister-in-law of Allan Ramsay the
-painter, and had lived in the most cultivated society of Scotland
-all her long life—there were ample materials for conversation with
-her; but her small strength made this shorter and slower than I could
-have wished. When we came upon the _poet_ Ramsay, she seemed to have
-caught new vigour from the subject: she spoke with animation of the
-child-parties she had attended in his house on the Castle-hill during a
-course of ten years before his death—an event which happened in 1757.
-He was ‘charming,’ she said; he entered so heartily into the plays of
-children. He, in particular, gained their hearts by making houses for
-their dolls. How pleasant it was to learn that our great pastoral poet
-was a man who, in his private capacity, loved to sweeten the daily life
-of his fellow-creatures, and particularly of the young! At a warning
-from Miss Murray, I had to tear myself away from this delightful and
-never-to-be-forgotten interview.
-
-I had, one or two years before, when not out of my teens, attracted
-some attention from Sir Walter Scott by writing for him and presenting
-(through Mr Constable) a transcript of the songs of the _Lady of the
-Lake_, in a style of peculiar calligraphy, which I practised for want
-of any better way of attracting the notice of people superior to
-myself. When George IV. some months afterwards came to Edinburgh, good
-Sir Walter remembered me, and procured for me the business of writing
-the address of the Royal Society of Edinburgh to His Majesty, for
-which I was handsomely paid. Several other learned bodies followed the
-example, for Sir Walter Scott was the arbiter of everything during that
-frantic time, and thus I was substantially benefited by his means.
-
-According to what Mr Constable told me, the great man liked me, in
-part because he understood I was from Tweedside. On seeing the earlier
-numbers of the _Traditions_, he expressed astonishment as to ‘where
-the boy got all the information.’ But I did not see or hear from him
-till the first volume had been completed. He then called upon me one
-day, along with Mr Lockhart. I was overwhelmed with the honour, for Sir
-Walter Scott was almost an object of worship to me. I literally could
-not utter a word. While I stood silent, I heard him tell his companion
-that Charles Sharpe was a writer in the _Traditions_, and taking up the
-volume, he read aloud what he called one of his _quaint bits_. ‘The
-ninth Earl of Eglintoune was one of those patriarchal peers who live to
-an advanced age—indefatigable in the frequency of their marriages and
-the number of their children—who linger on and on, with an unfailing
-succession of young countesses, and die at last leaving a progeny
-interspersed throughout the whole of Douglas’s _Peerage_, two volumes,
-folio, re-edited by Wood.’ And then both gentlemen went on laughing for
-perhaps two minutes, with interjections: ‘How like Charlie!’—‘What a
-strange being he is!’—‘_Two volumes, folio, re-edited by Wood_—ha,
-ha, ha! There you have him past all doubt;’ and so on. I was too much
-abashed to tell Sir Walter that it was only an impudent little bit
-of writing of my own, part of the solution into which I had diffused
-the actual notes of Sharpe. But, having occasion to write next day to
-Mr Lockhart, I mentioned Sir Walter’s mistake, and he was soon after
-good enough to inform me that he had set his friend right as to the
-authorship, and they had had a _second_ hearty laugh on the subject.
-
-A very few days after this visit, Sir Walter sent me, along with a kind
-letter, a packet of manuscript, consisting of sixteen folio pages, in
-his usual close handwriting, and containing all the reminiscences he
-could at the time summon up of old persons and things in Edinburgh.
-Such a treasure to me! And such a gift from the greatest literary man
-of the age to the humblest! Is there a literary man of the present
-age who would scribble as much for any humble aspirant? Nor was this
-the only act of liberality of Scott to me. When I was preparing a
-subsequent work, _The Popular Rhymes of Scotland_, he sent me whole
-sheets of his recollections, with appropriate explanations. For years
-thereafter he allowed me to join him in his walks home from the
-Parliament House, in the course of which he freely poured into my
-greedy ears anything he knew regarding the subjects of my studies. His
-kindness and good-humour on these occasions were untiring. I have since
-found, from his journal, that I had met him on certain days when his
-heart was overladen with woe. Yet his welcome to me was the same. After
-1826, however, I saw him much less frequently than before, for I knew
-he grudged every moment not spent in thinking and working on the fatal
-tasks he had assigned to himself for the redemption of his debts.
-
-All through the preparation of this book, I was indebted a good deal
-to a gentleman who was neither a literary man nor an artist himself,
-but hovered round the outskirts of both professions, and might be
-considered as a useful adjunct to both. Every votary of pen or pencil
-amongst us knew David Bridges at his drapery establishment in the
-Lawnmarket, and many had been indebted to his obliging disposition. A
-quick, dark-eyed little man, with lips full of sensibility and a tongue
-unloving of rest, such a man in a degree as one can suppose Garrick to
-have been, he held a sort of court every day, where wits and painters
-jostled with people wanting coats, jerkins, and spotted handkerchiefs.
-The place was small, and had no saloon behind; so, whenever David
-had got some ‘bit’ to show you, he dragged you down a dark stair to
-a packing-place, lighted only by a grate from the street, and there,
-amidst plaster-casts numberless, would fix you with his glittering eye,
-till he had convinced you of the fine handling, the ‘buttery touches’
-(a great phrase with him), the admirable ‘scummling’ (another), and
-so forth. It was in the days prior to the Royal Scottish Academy and
-its exhibitions; and it was left in a great measure to David Bridges
-to bring forward aspirants in art. Did such a person long for notice,
-he had only to give David one of his best ‘bits,’ and in a short
-time he would find himself chattered into fame in that profound, the
-grate of which I never can pass without recalling something of the
-buttery touches of those old days. The Blackwood wits, who laughed at
-everything, fixed upon our friend the title of ‘Director-general of the
-Fine Arts,’ which was, however, too much of a truth to be a jest. To
-this extraordinary being I had been introduced somehow, and, entering
-heartily into my views, he brought me information, brought me friends,
-read and criticised my proofs, and would, I dare say, have written
-the book itself if I had so desired. It is impossible to think of him
-without a smile, but at the same time a certain melancholy, for his
-life was one which, I fear, proved a poor one for himself.
-
-Before the _Traditions_ were finished, I had become favourably
-acquainted with many gentlemen of letters and others, who were pleased
-to think that Old Edinburgh had been chronicled. Wilson gave me a
-laudatory sentence in the _Noctes Ambrosianæ_. The Bard of Ettrick,
-viewing my boyish years, always spoke of and to me as an unaccountable
-sort of person, but never could be induced to believe otherwise than
-that I had written all my traditions from my own head. I had also
-the pleasure of enjoying some intercourse with the venerable Henry
-Mackenzie, who had been born in 1745, but always seemed to feel as if
-the _Man of Feeling_ had been written only one instead of sixty years
-ago, and as if there was nothing particular in antique occurrences.
-The whole affair was pretty much of a triumph at the time. Now, when I
-am giving it a final revision, I reflect with touched feelings, that
-all the brilliant men of the time when it was written are, without an
-exception, passed away, while, for myself, I am forced to claim the
-benefit of Horace’s humanity:
-
- ‘Solve senescentem mature sanus equum, ne
- Peccet ad extremum ridendus, et ilia ducat.’
-
-
-
-
-INTRODUCTION TO PRESENT ISSUE.
-
-
-It has been very shrewdly remarked by a famous essayist and critic
-that a book is none the worse for having survived a generation or
-two. Robert Chambers’s _Traditions of Edinburgh_ has survived many
-generations since its first appearance in 1825, and I have before me
-a copy of this edition in the original six parts, published at two
-shillings each, the first of which aroused in Sir Walter Scott so much
-interest. The work when completed appears to have passed through many
-reprints, but retained its original form until it was remodelled and
-almost rewritten in 1846, much new matter being then added, and certain
-passages altogether omitted. Shortly before his death the author again
-revised the work, adding a new introduction, in which he reviewed the
-changes of the preceding forty years. This was in 1868, and since that
-time old Edinburgh has almost ceased to exist. Many an ancient wynd
-and close has disappeared, or remains simply as a right of way, on
-all sides surrounded by modern buildings. The City Improvements Act,
-obtained by Dr William Chambers when Lord Provost of Edinburgh in 1865
-and again in 1868, swept away hundreds of old buildings; and to it is
-due the disappearance of Leith Wynd, St Mary’s Wynd, Blackfriars Wynd,
-the Ancient Scottish Mint in the Cowgate, and other landmarks more or
-less familiar to our grandfathers. These changes are confined not alone
-to the old town of Edinburgh, but extend to other districts which at
-the beginning of the nineteenth century were comparatively modern and
-fashionable. Brown Square and the buildings adjoining it known as ‘the
-Society’ have passed away, being intersected by the modern Chambers
-Street. Adam Square, adjoining the College, has been absorbed in South
-Bridge Street; Park Street and Park Place, where was once a fashionable
-boarding-school for young ladies, have disappeared to make room for
-the M’Ewan Hall and other University buildings.
-
-If it is true that the old town of Edinburgh has been modernised out of
-existence, the remark applies equally to its immediate suburbs. Indeed
-the all-round changes of the last forty years can fitly be compared
-to like changes which within the same period have taken place in the
-city of Rome. Until within very recent times Edinburgh bore some slight
-resemblance to the Rome of the Popes, with its stately villas and great
-extent of walled-in garden ground. Much of this aristocratic old-world
-aspect has passed away, and one can but lament the disappearance of
-many an eighteenth-century house and grounds, interesting in not a few
-cases as the former residence of a citizen whose memory extended back
-to the Edinburgh of Sir Walter Scott and the famous men who were his
-contemporaries and friends.
-
-Falcon Hall on the south side of the town, with its great gardens and
-walled-in parks, has disappeared. So also has the interesting villa
-of Abbey Hill, occupied until very recent times by the Dowager Lady
-Menzies. The Clock Mill House adjoining Holyrood Palace and the Duke’s
-Walk, and surrounded by ancient trees, has gone, as have likewise the
-many fine old residences with pleasant gardens which adjoined the two
-main roads between Edinburgh and Leith. All have passed away, giving
-place to rows of semi-detached villas and endless lines of streets
-erected for the housing of an ever-increasing population.
-
-One of the few surviving examples of the old Scotch baronial mansion
-is Coates House, standing within the grounds of St Mary’s Episcopal
-Cathedral at the west end of the city. This house was occupied by
-Robert Chambers for several years prior to his removal to St Andrews
-in 1840. It has since been modernised, and is now used for various
-purposes in connection with the Cathedral.
-
-Although Robert Chambers died so long ago as 1871, no adequate story of
-his life has since been attempted. This is a matter for regret in view
-of some comparatively recent discoveries, particularly those relating
-to the history of the authorship of that famous work, _Vestiges of the
-Natural History of Creation_, made public for the first time in 1884.
-Of that work, written between the years 1841-44, in the solitude of
-Abbey Park, St Andrews, a recent writer has said: ‘This book was almost
-as great a source of wonder in its time as the _Letters of Junius_, or
-_Waverley_ itself. The learning and common-sense of the book, its rare
-temperateness and common-sense, commanded immediate attention. It was
-the wonder of the world at that period, nor was the authorship ever
-acknowledged, I believe.’ The mystery is now solved; but be it said
-that in the opinion of many Robert Chambers is more interesting as an
-antiquary than a scientist. It is in the former capacity that his name
-will be handed down to posterity as author of the standard work on the
-tradition and antiquities of the Scottish capital. The outstanding
-feature of the present issue of the _Traditions_ is the series of
-original drawings which have been provided by Mr James Riddel, R.S.W.,
-and it is hoped they will enable the reader more readily to realise
-the city’s old world charm, so sympathetically described by Robert
-Chambers. While a few notes have been added to this edition, it has not
-been deemed advisable to alter the text, and therefore that fact must
-be borne in mind where dates and lapses of time are mentioned.
-
- C. E. S. CHAMBERS.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- PAGE
-
-THE CHANGES OF THE LAST HUNDRED YEARS 1
-
-THE CASTLE-HILL 11
-
- Hugo Arnot—Allan Ramsay—House of the Gordon Family—Sir David
- Baird—Dr Webster—House of Mary de Guise.
-
-THE WEST BOW 26
-
- The Bowhead—Weigh-house—Anderson’s Pills—Oratories—Colonel
- Gardiner—‘Bowhead Saints’—‘The Seizers’—Story of a Jacobite
- Canary—Major Weir—Tulzies—The Tinklarian Doctor—Old
- Assembly Room—Paul Romieu—‘He that Tholes Overcomes’—Provost
- Stewart—Donaldsons the Booksellers—Bowfoot—The Templars’
- Lands—The Gallows Stone.
-
-JAMES’S COURT 55
-
- David Hume—James Boswell—Lord Fountainhall.
-
-STORY OF THE COUNTESS OF STAIR 63
-
-THE OLD BANK CLOSE 70
-
- The Regent Morton—The Old Bank—Sir Thomas Hope—Chiesly of
- Dalry—Rich Merchants of the Sixteenth Century—Sir William
- Dick—The Birth of Lord Brougham.
-
-THE OLD TOLBOOTH 82
-
-SOME MEMORIES OF THE LUCKENBOOTHS 95
-
- Lord Coalstoun and his Wig—Commendator Bothwell’s House—Lady
- Anne Bothwell—Mahogany Lands and Fore-stairs—The
- Krames—Creech’s Shop.
-
-SOME MEMORANDA OF THE OLD KIRK OF ST GILES 105
-
-THE PARLIAMENT CLOSE 109
-
- Ancient Churchyard—Booths attached to the High
- Church—Goldsmiths—George Heriot—The Deid-Chack.
-
-MEMORIALS OF THE NOR’ LOCH 117
-
-THE PARLIAMENT HOUSE 119
-
- Old Arrangements of the House—Justice in Bygone Times—_Court
- of Session Garland_—Parliament House Worthies.
-
-CONVIVIALIA 138
-
-TAVERNS OF OLD TIMES 158
-
-THE CROSS—CADDIES 174
-
-THE TOWN-GUARD 179
-
-EDINBURGH MOBS 183
-
- The Blue Blanket—Mobs of the Seventeenth Century—Bowed Joseph.
-
-BICKERS 189
-
-SUSANNA, COUNTESS OF EGLINTOUNE 192
-
-FEMALE DRESSES OF LAST CENTURY 199
-
-THE LORD JUSTICE-CLERK ALVA 204
-
- Ladies Sutherland and Glenorchy—The Pin or Risp.
-
-MARLIN’S AND NIDDRY’S WYNDS 209
-
- Tradition of Marlin the Pavier—House of Provost Edward—Story
- of Lady Grange.
-
-ABBOT OF MELROSE’S LODGING 223
-
- Sir George Mackenzie—Lady Anne Dick.
-
-BLACKFRIARS WYND 228
-
- Palace of Archbishop Bethune—Boarding-Schools of the Last
- Century—The Last of the Lorimers—Lady Lovat.
-
-THE COWGATE 240
-
- House of Gavin Douglas the Poet—Skirmish of Cleanse-the-Causeway
- —College Wynd—Birthplace of Sir Walter Scott—The Horse
- Wynd—Tam o’ the Cowgate—Magdalen Chapel.
-
-ST CECILIA’S HALL 249
-
-THE MURDER OF DARNLEY 256
-
-MINT CLOSE 260
-
- The Mint—Robert Cullen—Lord Chancellor Loughborough.
-
-MISS NICKY MURRAY 265
-
-THE BISHOP’S LAND 269
-
-JOHN KNOX’S MANSE 271
-
-HYNDFORD’S CLOSE 275
-
-HOUSE OF THE MARQUISES OF TWEEDDALE—THE BEGBIE TRAGEDY 279
-
-THE LADIES OF TRAQUAIR 286
-
-GREYFRIARS CHURCHYARD 288
-
- Signing of the Covenant—Henderson’s Monument—Bothwell Bridge
- Prisoners—A Romance.
-
-STORY OF MRS MACFARLANE 291
-
-THE CANONGATE 295
-
- Distinguished Inhabitants in Former Times—Story of a
- Burning—Morocco’s Land—New Street.
-
-ST JOHN STREET 302
-
- Lord Monboddo’s Suppers—The Sister of Smollett—Anecdote of
- Henry Dundas.
-
-MORAY HOUSE 306
-
-THE SPEAKING HOUSE 312
-
-PANMURE HOUSE—ADAM SMITH 318
-
-JOHN PATERSON THE GOLFER 320
-
-LOTHIAN HUT 323
-
-HENRY PRENTICE AND POTATOES 325
-
-THE DUCHESS OF BUCCLEUCH AND MONMOUTH 327
-
-CLAUDERO 330
-
-QUEENSBERRY HOUSE 336
-
-TENNIS COURT 344
-
- Early Theatricals—The Canongate Theatre—Digges and Mrs
- Bellamy—A Theatrical Riot.
-
-MARIONVILLE—STORY OF CAPTAIN MACRAE 351
-
-ALISON SQUARE 358
-
-LEITH WALK 360
-
-GABRIEL’S ROAD 366
-
-INDEX 369
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.
-
-
- PAGE
-
-An Elegant Modern City _Frontispiece_
-
-Map of Edinburgh, Old and New xxvi
-
-A series of towers rising from a palace on the plain
- to a castle in the air _Colour Drawing_ 1
-
-White Hart Inn, Grassmarket ” ” 2
-
-Newhaven Fishwife ” ” 4
-
-Rouping-Wife ” ” 9
-
-The Castle-Hill ” ” 11
-
-Duke of Gordon’s House ” ” 18
-
-The Bowhead ” ” 27
-
-Grassmarket, from west end of Cowgate ” ” 50
-
-Edinburgh, from the Calton Hill ” ” 83
-
-St Giles, West Window ” ” 105
-
-Heriot’s Hospital, from Greyfriars Churchyard ” ” 113
-
-A Suggestion of the North Loch and St Cuthbert’s,
- from Allan Ramsay’s Garden ” ” 117
-
-The Parliament House ” ” 128
-
-‘Auld Reekie,’ from Largo ” ” 152
-
-Upper Baxter’s Close, where Burns first resided
- in Edinburgh ” ” 164
-
-White Horse Inn ” ” 170
-
-Forenoon at the Cross ” ” 174
-
-The Town-Guard ” ” 179
-
-The Castle, from Princes Street ” ” 214
-
-Blackfriars Wynd ” ” 228
-
-The Cowgate ” ” 240
-
-Old Houses, College Wynd (near here Sir Walter
- Scott was born) ” ” 242
-
-John Knox’s Manse ” ” 274
-
-Greyfriars Churchyard ” ” 288
-
-St John’s Close, Entrance to Canongate Kilwinning
- Mason Lodge ” ” 305
-
- * * * * *
-
-The objects of interest between the Castle and Holyrood are grouped
-topographically in the following list, with references to the Map.
-
- CASTLE.
-Blair’s or Baird’s Close 1| Castlehill Walk or A| Allan Ramsay’s House a
-Brown’s Close 3| Esplanade | Blyth’s Close 2
-Webster’s Close 5| CASTLEHILL B| Nairn’s Close 4
-Site of the Duke of b| Weigh-House d| Tod’s Close 6
- Gordon’s House | | Site of Mary of c
- | Guise’s House
-
-West Bow CC| LAWNMARKET D| Mylne’s Court 8
-Angle of Bow Z| Tolbooth e| James’s Court 10
-Riddel’s Close 7| Luckenbooths f| Lady Stair’s Close 12
-Brodie’s Close 9| St Giles’ | Upper Baxter’s 14
-Old Bank Close 11| {Haddo’s Hole Church g| Close
-Liberton’s Wynd 13| {Tolbooth Church h| Wardrop’s Court 16
- | {Old Church | Paterson’s Court 18
- | {New Church |
-
-Hope’s Close 15| HIGH STREET EE| Dunbar’s Close 20
-Beith’s or Bess Wynd 17| Cross x| Byres’s Close 22
-Parliament Close 19| Guard House i| Writers’ Court 24
-Parliament House k| Tron Church j| Royal Exchange 26
-Back Stairs 21| | Mary King’s Close 28
-Fishmarket Close 23| | Post-Office Close 30
-Assembly Close 25| | Anchor Close 32
-Bell’s Wynd 27| | Lyon Close 34
-Peebles Wynd 29| | Jackson’s Close 36
-Marlin’s Wynd 31| | Fleshmarket Close 38
-Niddry’s Wynd 33| | Fleshmarket m
-Site of St Cecilia’s Hall l| | Greenmarket n
-Dickson’s Close 35| | Halkerston’s Wynd 40
-Cant’s Close 37| | Carrubber’s Close 42
-Strichen’s Close 39| | Bailie Fife’s Close 44
-Blackfriars Wynd 41| | Chalmers’ Close 46
-Todrick’s Wynd 43| | John Knox’s Manse p
-Mint Close 45| |
-The Old Mint o| |
-Hyndford’s Close 47| |
-Tweeddale Court 49| Nether Bow Port. F|
-
-St Mary’s Wynd 51| | Leith Wynd 48
-Chessels’s Court 53| | Morocco’s Land 50
-Weir’s Close 55| | New Street 52
-Old Playhouse Close 57| | Jack’s Land 54
-St John’s Close 59| | Tolbooth Wynd 56
-St John’s Street 61| CANONGATE. | Canongate Church 58
-Moray House 63| | Canongate Churchyard q
-Speaking House 65| | Panmure House 60
-Acheson House 67| | Golfers’ Land 62
-Queensberry House 69| | White Horse Inn 64
- | | Water Gate r
-
-
-
-
-EDINBURGH OLD AND NEW.
-
-
-In the map the streets and buildings printed in black represent the
-historic Old Town; those in red indicate not merely the ‘New Town’ to
-the north, specifically so called, but some part of the alterations,
-additions, and extensions round the ancient nucleus that have gone to
-constitute the Edinburgh of the present day.
-
-[Illustration: Map]
-
-
-KEY TO THE STREETS AND BUILDINGS NOT NAMED ON MAP.
-
-Acheson House 67
-Allan Ramsay’s House a
-Anchor Close 32
-Angle of Bow Z
-Assembly Close 25
-Back Stairs 21
-Bailie Fife’s Close 44
-Bank of Scotland red F
-Beith’s or Bess Wynd 17
-Bell’s Wynd 27
-Blackfriars Wynd 41
-Blair’s or Baird’s Close 1
-Blyth’s Close 2
-Bristo N
-Bristo Port O
-Brodie’s Close 9
-Brown’s Close 3
-Byres’s Close 22
-Calton Burying-Ground t
-Candlemaker Row T
-Canongate Church 58
-Canongate Churchyard q
-Cant’s Close 37
-Carrubber’s Close 42
-Castlehill B
-Castlehill Walk or Esplanade A
-Castle Wynd 74
-Chalmers’ Close 46
-Chessels’s Court 53
-College Wynd 71
-Council Chambers red G
-County Buildings red I
-Court of Session red K
-Cowgate J J
-Cowgate Port L
-Cross x
-Dickson’s Close 35
-Dunbar’s Close 20
-Established Church Assembly Hall red h
-Fishmarket Close 23
-Fleshmarket m
-Fleshmarket Close 88
-Free Library red L
-General Post-Office red E
-Golfers’ Land 62
-Gordon’s (Duke of) House b
-Greenmarket n
-Guard House i
-Halkerston’s Wynd 40
-Heriot’s Hospital V
-Heriot-Watt College red n n
-High School Wynd 72
-High Street E E
-Holyrood G
-Hope’s Close 15
-Horse Wynd 70
-Hyndford’s Close 47
-Jack’s Land 54
-Jackson’s Close 36
-James’s Court 10
-John Knox’s Manse p
-Lady Stair’s Close 12
-Lauriston M M
-Lawnmarket D
-Leith Wynd 48
-Liberton’s Wynd 13
-Luckenbooths f
-Lyon Close 34
-Magdalen Chapel 66
-Marlin’s Wynd 31
-Mary King’s Close 28
-Mary of Guise’s House, Site of c
-Mint Close 45
-Mint, The Old o
-Moray House 63
-Morocco’s Land 50
-Mutrie’s Hill u
-Mylne’s Court 8
-Nairn’s Close 4
-Nether Bow Port F
-New Street 52
-Niddry’s Wynd 33
-Old Bank Close 11
-Old Playhouse Close 57
-Panmure House 60
-Parliament Close 19
-Parliament House k
-Paterson’s Court 18
-Peebles Wynd 29
-Pleasance R
-Portsburgh H
-Post-Office Close 80
-Potterrow P
-Potterrow Port Q
-Queensberry House 69
-Register House red A
-Riddel’s Close 7
-Royal Exchange 26
-Royal Infirmary K
-Royal Scottish Academy Galleries red B
-St Cecilia’s Hall, Site of l
-St Giles’—
- Haddo’s Hole Church g
- Tolbooth Church h
-St John’s Close 59
-St John’s Street 61
-St Mary’s Wynd 51
-Scottish National Gallery red C
-Scott’s (Sir Walter) Monument red D
-Sheriff Court House red M
-Speaking House 65
-S.S.C. Library red J
-Strichen’s Close 39
-Surgeons’ Hall red o
-Tailors’ Hall 68
-Todrick’s Wynd 43
-Tod’s Close 6
-Tolbooth e
-Tolbooth Wynd 56
-Trinity College Church S
-Tron Church j
-Tweeddale Court 49
-Upper Baxter’s Close 14
-Wardrop’s Court 16
-Water Gate r
-Webster’s Close 5
-Weigh-House d
-Weir’s Close 55
-West Bow C C
-West Port I
-White Hart Inn 73
-White Horse Inn 64
-Writers’ Court 24
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Illustration: A series of towers rising from a palace on the plain to
-a castle in the air.
-
-PAGE 1.]
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-TRADITIONS OF EDINBURGH.
-
-
-
-
-THE CHANGES OF THE LAST HUNDRED YEARS.
-
-[1745-1845.]
-
-
-[Illustration: Fortified Gate,
-Nether Bow Port, from Canongate.]
-
-Edinburgh was, at the beginning of George III.’s reign, a picturesque,
-odorous, inconvenient, old-fashioned town, of about seventy thousand
-inhabitants. It had no court, no factories, no commerce; but there
-was a nest of lawyers in it, attending upon the Court of Session; and
-a considerable number of the Scotch gentry—one of whom then passed
-as rich with a thousand a year—gave it the benefit of their presence
-during the winter. Thus the town had lived for some ages, during
-which political discontent and division had kept the country poor. A
-stranger approaching the city, seeing it piled ‘close and massy, deep
-and high’—a series of towers, rising from a palace on the plain to
-a castle in the air—would have thought it a truly romantic place;
-and the impression would not have subsided much on a near inspection,
-when he would have found himself admitted by a fortified gate through
-an ancient wall, still kept in repair. Even on entering the one old
-street of which the city chiefly consisted, he would have seen much
-to admire—houses of substantial architecture and lofty proportions,
-mingled with more lowly, but also more arresting wooden fabrics; a
-huge and irregular, but venerable Gothic church, surmounted by an
-aërial crown of masonry; finally, an esplanade towards the Castle,
-from which he could have looked abroad upon half a score of counties,
-upon firth and fell, yea, even to the blue Grampians. Everywhere he
-would have seen symptoms of denseness of population; the open street a
-universal market; a pell-mell of people everywhere. The eye would have
-been, upon the whole, gratified, whatever might be the effect of the
-_clangor strepitusque_ upon the ear, or whatever might have been the
-private meditations of the nose. It would have only been on coming to
-close quarters, or to quarters at all, that our stranger would have
-begun to think of serious drawbacks from the first impression. For an
-inn, he would have had the White Horse, in a close in the Canongate;
-or the White Hart, a house which now appears like a carrier’s inn,
-in the Grassmarket. Or, had he betaken himself to a private lodging,
-which he would have probably done under the conduct of a ragged varlet,
-speaking more of his native Gaelic than English, he would have had to
-ascend four or five stories of a common stair, into the narrow chambers
-of some Mrs Balgray or Luckie Fergusson, where a closet-bed in the
-sitting-room would have been displayed as the most comfortable place in
-the world; and he would have had, for amusement, a choice between an
-extensive view of house-tops from the window and the study of a series
-of prints of the four seasons, a sampler, and a portrait of the Marquis
-of Granby, upon the wall.
-
-[Illustration: House-tops.]
-
-[Illustration: WHITE HART INN, GRASSMARKET.
-
-PAGE 2.]
-
-On being introduced into society, our stranger might have discovered
-cause for content with his lodging on finding how poorly off were the
-first people with respect to domestic accommodations. I can imagine
-him going to tea at Mr Bruce of Kennet’s, in Forrester’s Wynd—a
-country gentleman and a lawyer (not long after raised to the bench),
-yet happy to live with his wife and children in a house of fifteen
-pounds of rent, in a region of profound darkness and mystery, now
-no more. Had he got into familiar terms with the worthy lady of the
-mansion, he might have ascertained that they had just three rooms and
-a kitchen; one room, ‘my lady’s’—that is, the kind of parlour he was
-sitting in; another, a consulting-room for the gentleman; the third,
-a bedroom. The children, with their maid, had beds laid down for
-them at night in their father’s room; the housemaid slept under the
-kitchen dresser; and the one man-servant was turned at night out of the
-house. Had our friend chanced to get amongst tradespeople, he might
-have found Mr Kerr, the eminent goldsmith in the Parliament Square,
-stowing his _ménage_ into a couple of small rooms above his booth-like
-shop, plastered against the wall of St Giles’s Church; the nursery
-and kitchen, however, being placed in a cellar under the level of the
-street, where the children are said to have rotted off like sheep.
-
-But indeed everything was on a homely and narrow scale. The
-College—where Munro, Cullen, and Black were already making themselves
-great names—was to be approached through a mean alley, the College
-Wynd. The churches were chiefly clustered under one roof; the jail
-was a narrow building, half-filling up the breadth of the street; the
-public offices, for the most part, obscure places in lanes and dark
-entries. The men of learning and wit, united with a proportion of men
-of rank, met as the _Poker Club_ in a tavern, the best of its day, but
-only a dark house in a close, to which our stranger could scarcely have
-made his way without a guide. In a similar situation across the way,
-he would have found, at the proper season, the _Assembly_; that is, a
-congregation of ladies met for dancing, and whom the gentlemen usually
-joined rather late, and rather merry. The only theatre was also a poor
-and obscure place in some indescribable part of the Canongate.
-
-The town was, nevertheless, a funny, familiar, compact, and not
-unlikable place. Gentle and semple living within the compass of a
-single close, or even a single stair, knew and took an interest
-in each other.[1] Acquaintances might not only be formed,
-Pyramus-and-Thisbe fashion, through party-walls, but from window to
-window across alleys, narrow enough in many cases to allow of hand
-coming to hand, and even lip to lip. There was little elegance, but
-a vast amount of cheap sociality. Provokingly comical clubs, founded
-each upon one joke, were abundant. The ladies had tea-drinkings at the
-primitive hour of six, from which they cruised home under the care
-of a lantern-bearing, patten-shod lass; or perhaps, if a bad night,
-in Saunders Macalpine’s sedan-chair. Every forenoon, for several
-hours, the only clear space which the town presented—that around the
-Cross—was crowded with loungers of all ranks, whom it had been an
-amusement to the poet Gay to survey from the neighbouring windows of
-Allan Ramsay’s shop. The jostle and huddlement was extreme everywhere.
-Gentlemen and ladies paraded along in the stately attire of the period;
-tradesmen chatted in groups, often bareheaded, at their shop-doors;
-caddies whisked about, bearing messages, or attending to the affairs
-of strangers; children filled the kennel with their noisy sports. Add
-to all this, corduroyed men from Gilmerton, bawling coals or yellow
-sand, and spending as much breath in a minute as could have served
-poor asthmatic Hugo Arnot for a month; fishwomen crying their caller
-haddies from Newhaven; whimsicals and idiots going along, each with
-his or her crowd of listeners or tormentors; sootymen with their bags;
-town-guardsmen with their antique Lochaber axes; water-carriers with
-their dripping barrels; barbers with their hair-dressing materials;
-and so forth—and our stranger would have been disposed to acknowledge
-that, though a coarse and confused, it was a perfectly unique scene,
-and one which, once contemplated, was not easily to be forgotten.
-
-A change at length began. Our northern country had settled to sober
-courses in the reign of George II., and the usual results of industry
-were soon apparent. Edinburgh by-and-by felt much like a lady who,
-after long being content with a small and inconvenient house, is
-taught, by the money in her husband’s pockets, that such a place is no
-longer to be put up with. There was a wish to expatiate over some of
-the neighbouring grounds, so as to get more space and freer air; only
-it was difficult to do, considering the physical circumstances of the
-town, and the character of the existing outlets. Space, space!—air,
-air! was, however, a strong and a general cry, and the old romantic
-city did at length burst from its bounds, though not in a very regular
-way, or for a time to much good purpose.
-
-[Illustration: NEWHAVEN FISHWIFE.
-
-PAGE 4.]
-
-A project for a new street on the site of Halkerston’s Wynd, leading
-by a bridge to the grounds of Mutrie’s Hill, where a suburb might be
-erected, was formed before the end of the seventeenth century.[2] It
-was a subject of speculation to John, Earl of Mar, during his years
-of exile, as were many other schemes of national improvement which
-have since been realised—for example, the Forth and Clyde Canal. The
-grounds to the north lay so invitingly open that the early formation
-of such a project is not wonderful. Want of spirit and of means
-alone could delay its execution. After the Rebellion of 1745, when
-a general spirit of improvement began to be shown in Scotland, the
-scheme was taken up by a public-spirited provost, Mr George Drummond,
-but it had to struggle for years with local difficulties. Meanwhile,
-a sagacious builder, by name James Brown, resolved to take advantage
-of the growing taste; he purchased a field near the town for £1200,
-and _feued_ it out for a square. The speculation is said to have ended
-in something like giving him his own money as an annual return. This
-place (George Square) became the residence of several of the judges
-and gentry. I was amused a few years ago hearing an old gentleman in
-the country begin a story thus: ‘When I was in Edinburgh, in the year
-’67, I went to George Square, to call for Mrs Scott of Sinton,’ &c.
-To this day some relics of gentry cling to its grass-green causeways,
-charmed, perhaps, by its propinquity to the Meadows and Bruntsfield
-Links. Another place sprang into being, a smaller quadrangle of neat
-houses, called Brown’s Square.[3] So much was thought of it at first
-that a correspondent of the _Edinburgh Advertiser_, in 1764, seriously
-counsels his fellow-citizens to erect in it an equestrian statue of
-the then popular young king, George III.! This place, too, had some
-distinguished inhabitants; till 1846, one of the houses continued to
-be nominally the town mansion of a venerable judge, Lord Glenlee. We
-pass willingly from these traits of grandeur to dwell on the fact of
-its having been the residence of Miss Jeanie Elliot of Minto, the
-authoress of the original song, _The Flowers of the Forest_; and even
-to bethink ourselves that here Scott placed the ideal abode of Saunders
-Fairford and the adventure of Green Mantle. Sir Walter has informed
-us, from his own recollections, that the inhabitants of these southern
-districts formed for a long time a distinct class of themselves, having
-even places of polite amusement for their own recreation, independent
-of the rest of Edinburgh. He tells us that the society was of the first
-description, including, for one thing, most of the gentlemen who wrote
-in the _Mirror_ and the _Lounger_. There was one venerable inhabitant
-who did not die till half the New Town was finished, yet he had never
-once seen it!
-
-The exertions of Drummond at length procured an act (1767) for
-extending the royalty of the city over the northern fields; and a
-bridge was then erected to connect these with the elder city. The
-scheme was at first far from popular. The exposure to the north and
-east winds was felt as a grievous disadvantage, especially while houses
-were few. So unpleasant even was the North Bridge considered that a
-lover told a New-Town mistress—to be sure only in an epigram—that
-when he visited her, he felt as performing an adventure not much short
-of that of Leander. The aristocratic style of the place alarmed a
-number of pockets, and legal men trembled lest their clients and other
-employers should forget them if they removed so far from the centre
-of things as Princes Street and St Andrew Square. Still, the move was
-unavoidable, and behoved to be made.
-
-It is curious to cast the eye over the beautiful city which now extends
-over this district, the residence of as refined a mass of people as
-could be found in any similar space of ground upon earth, and reflect
-on what the place was a hundred years ago. The bulk of it was a farm,
-usually called Wood’s Farm, from its tenant (the father of a clever
-surgeon, well known in Edinburgh in the last age under the familiar
-appellation of _Lang Sandy Wood_). Henry Mackenzie, author of the _Man
-of Feeling_, who died in 1831, remembered shooting snipes, hares, and
-partridges about that very spot to which he alludes at the beginning of
-the paper on Nancy Collins in the _Mirror_ (July 1779): ‘As I walked
-one evening, about a fortnight ago, _through St Andrew Square_, I
-observed a girl meanly dressed,’ &c. Nearly along the line now occupied
-by Princes Street was a rough enclosed road, called the _Lang Gait_ or
-_Lang Dykes_, the way along which Claverhouse went with his troopers
-in 1689, when he retired in disgust from the Convention, with the
-resolution of raising a rebellion in the Highlands. On the site of the
-present Register House was a hamlet or small group of houses called
-_Mutrie’s Hill_; and where the Royal Bank now stands was a cottage
-wherein ambulative citizens regaled themselves with fruit and curds and
-cream. Broughton, which latterly has been surprised and swamped by the
-spreading city, was then a village, considered as so far afield that
-people went to live in it for the summer months, under the pleasing
-idea that they had got into the country. It is related that Whitefield
-used to preach to vast multitudes on the spot which by-and-by became
-appropriated for the _Theatre Royal_. Coming back one year, and finding
-a playhouse on the site of his tub, he was extremely incensed. Could it
-be, as Burns suggests,
-
- ‘There was rivalry just in the job!’
-
-James Craig, a nephew of the poet Thomson, was entrusted with the duty
-of planning the new city. In the engraved plan, he appropriately quotes
-from his uncle:
-
- ‘August, around, what PUBLIC WORKS I see!
- Lo, stately streets! lo, squares that court the breeze!
- See long canals and deepened rivers join
- Each part with each, and with the circling main,
- The whole entwined isle.’
-
-The names of the streets and squares were taken from the royal family
-and the tutelary saints of the island. The honest citizens had
-originally intended to put their own local saint in the foreground; but
-when the plan was shown to the king for his approval, he cried: ‘Hey,
-hey—what, what—_St Giles Street!_—never do, never do!’ And so, to
-escape from an unpleasant association of ideas, this street was called
-_Princes Street_, in honour of the king’s two sons, afterwards George
-IV. and the Duke of York. So difficult was it at the very first to
-induce men to build that a premium of twenty pounds was offered by the
-magistrates to him who should raise the first house; it was awarded to
-Mr John Young, on account of a mansion erected by him in Rose Court,
-George Street. An exemption from burghal taxes was granted to the
-first house in the line of Princes Street, built by Mr John Neale,
-haberdasher (afterwards occupied by Archibald Constable, and then
-as the Crown Hotel), in consequence of a bargain made by Mr Graham,
-plumber, who sold this and the adjoining ground to the town.[4] Mr
-Shadrach Moyes, when having a house built for himself in Princes
-Street, in 1769, took the builder bound to rear another farther along
-besides his, to shield him from the west wind! Other quaint particulars
-are remembered; as, for instance: Mr Wight, an eminent lawyer, who had
-planted himself in St Andrew Square, finding he was in danger of having
-his view of St Giles’s clock shut up by the advancing line of Princes
-Street, built the intervening house himself, that he might have it in
-his power to keep the roof low for the sake of the view in question;
-important to him, he said, as enabling him to regulate his movements in
-the morning, when it was necessary that he should be punctual in his
-attendance at the Parliament House.
-
-[Illustration: ROUPING-WIFE.
-
-PAGE 9.]
-
-The foundation was at length laid of that revolution which has ended
-in making Edinburgh a kind of double city—_first_, an ancient and
-picturesque hill-built one, occupied chiefly by the humbler classes;
-and _second_, an elegant modern one, of much regularity of aspect,
-and possessed almost as exclusively by the more refined portion of
-society. The New Town, keeping pace with the growing prosperity of
-the country, had, in 1790, been extended to Castle Street; in 1800
-the necessity for a second plan of the same extent still farther to
-the north had been felt, and this was after acted upon. Forty years
-saw the Old Town thoroughly changed as respects population. One after
-another, its nobles and gentry, its men of the robe, its ‘writers,’
-and even its substantial burghers, had during that time deserted
-their mansions in the High Street and Canongate, till few were left.
-Even those modern districts connected with it, as St John Street, New
-Street, George Square, &c., were beginning to be forsaken for the sake
-of more elegantly circumstanced habitations beyond the North Loch. Into
-the remote social consequences of this change it is not my purpose
-to enter, beyond the bare remark that it was only too accordant with
-that tendency of our present form of civilisation to separate the high
-from the low, the intelligent from the ignorant—that dissociation,
-in short, which would in itself run nigh to be a condemnation of
-all progress, if we were not allowed to suppose that better forms
-of civilisation are realisable. Enough that I mention the tangible
-consequences of the revolution—a flooding in of the humbler trading
-classes where gentles once had been; the houses of these classes,
-again, filled with the vile and miserable. Now were to be seen
-hundreds of instances of such changes as Provost Creech indicates in
-1783: ‘The Lord Justice-Clerk Tinwald’s house possessed by a French
-teacher—Lord President Craigie’s house by a rouping-wife or salewoman
-of old furniture—and Lord Drummore’s house left by a chairman for want
-of accommodation.’ ‘The house of the Duke of Douglas at the Union, now
-possessed by a wheelwright!’ To one who, like myself, was young in
-the early part of the present century, it was scarcely possible, as
-he permeated the streets and closes of ancient Edinburgh, to realise
-the idea of a time when the great were housed therein. But many a
-gentleman in middle life, then living perhaps in Queen Street or
-Charlotte Square, could recollect the close or the common stair where
-he had been born and spent his earliest years, now altogether given up
-to a different portion of society. And when the younger perambulator
-inquired more narrowly, he could discover traces of this former
-population. Here and there a carved coat-armorial, with supporters,
-perhaps even a coronet, arrested attention amidst the obscurities of
-some _wynd_ or court. Did he ascend a stair and enter a floor, now
-subdivided perhaps into four or five distinct dwellings, he might
-readily perceive, in the massive wainscot of the lobby, a proof that
-the refinements of life had once been there. Still more would this idea
-be impressed upon him when, passing into one of the best rooms of the
-old house, he would find not only a continuation of such wainscoting,
-but perhaps a tolerable landscape by Norie on a panel above the
-fireplace, or a ceiling decorated by De la Cour, a French artist,
-who flourished in Edinburgh about 1740. Even yet he would discover a
-very few relics of gentry maintaining their ground in the Old Town,
-as if faintly to show what it had once been. These were generally old
-people, who did not think it worth while to make any change till the
-great one. There is a melancholy pleasure in recalling what I myself
-found about 1820, when my researches for this work were commenced.
-In that year I was in the house of Governor Fergusson, an ancient
-gentleman of the Pitfour family, in a floor, one stair up, in the
-Luckenbooths. About the same time I attended the book-sale of Dr Arrot,
-a physician of good figure, newly deceased, in the Mint Close. For
-several years later, any one ascending a now miserable-looking stair
-in Blackfriars Wynd would have seen a door-plate inscribed with the
-name MISS OLIPHANT, a member of the Gask family. Nay, so late as 1832,
-I had the pleasure of breakfasting with Sir William Macleod Bannatyne
-in Whiteford House, Canongate (afterwards a type-foundry), on which
-occasion the venerable old gentleman talked as familiarly of the levees
-of the _sous-ministre_ for Lord Bute in the old villa at the Abbey Hill
-as I could have talked of the affairs of the Canning administration;
-and even recalled, as a fresh picture of his memory, his father drawing
-on his boots to go to make interest in London in behalf of some of the
-men in trouble for the Forty-five, particularly his own brother-in-law,
-the Clanranald of that day. Such were the connections recently existing
-between the past system of things and the present. Now, alas! the sun
-of Old-Town glory has set for ever. Nothing is left but the decaying
-and rapidly diminishing masses of ancient masonry, and a handful of
-traditionary recollections, which be it my humble but not unworthy task
-to transmit to future generations.[5]
-
-[Illustration: Carved Armorial, with Supporters.]
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[1] Mr W. B. Blaikie (_The Book of the Old Edinburgh Club_, vol.
-ii.) gives a list of the occupants of a first-class tenement some
-years subsequent to the ’45 Rebellion: ‘First-floor, Mrs Stirling,
-fishmonger; second, Mrs Urquhart, lodging-house keeper; third-floor,
-the Countess Dowager of Balcarres; fourth, Mrs Buchan of Kelloe; fifth,
-the Misses Elliot, milliners and mantua-makers; garrets, a variety of
-tailors and other tradesmen.’
-
-[2] Pamphlet _circa_ 1700, Wodrow Collection, Adv. Lib.
-
-[3] Brown Square finally disappeared with the making of Chambers Street.
-
-[4] Mr William Cowan, in vol. i. of _The Book of the Old Edinburgh
-Club_, says this exemption applied to the three eastmost tenements in
-Princes Street.
-
-[5] The late Bruce J. Home drew up in 1908 ‘A Provisional List of Old
-Houses Remaining in High Street and Canongate,’ which was printed,
-with accompanying map, in the first volume of _The Old Edinburgh Club
-Book_. The statement is therein made ‘that since 1860 two-thirds of the
-ancient buildings in the Old Town of Edinburgh have been demolished.’
-The map showed, coloured in red, the remaining buildings of the Old
-Town which had survived until the beginning of the twentieth century.
-
-
-
-
-THE CASTLE-HILL.
-
- HUGO ARNOT—ALLAN RAMSAY—HOUSE OF THE GORDON FAMILY—SIR DAVID
- BAIRD—DR WEBSTER—HOUSE OF MARY DE GUISE.
-
-
-[Illustration: THE CASTLE-HILL.
-
-PAGE 11.]
-
-The saunter which I contemplate through the streets and stories, the
-lanes and legends, of Old Edinburgh may properly commence at the
-Castle-hill, as it is a marked extremity of the city as well as its
-highest ground.
-
-The Castle-hill is partly an esplanade, serving as a parade-ground for
-the garrison of the Castle, and partly a street, the upper portion of
-that vertebral line which, under the various names of Lawnmarket, High
-Street, and Canongate, extends to Holyrood Palace. The open ground—a
-scene of warfare during the sieges of the fortress, often a place of
-execution in rude times—the place, too, where, by a curious legal
-fiction, the Nova Scotia baronets were enfeoffed in their ideal estates
-on the other side of the Atlantic—was all that Edinburgh possessed
-as a readily accessible promenade before the extension of the city.
-We find the severe acts for a strict observance of the Sabbath, which
-appeared from time to time in the latter part of the seventeenth and
-early part of the eighteenth century, denouncing the King’s Park, the
-Pier of Leith, and the _Castle-hill_ as the places chiefly resorted
-to for the profane sport of walking on ‘the Lord’s Day.’ Denounce as
-they might, human nature could never, I believe, be altogether kept
-off the Castle-hill; even the most respectable people walked there in
-multitudes during the intervals between morning and evening service.
-We have an allusion to the promenade character of the Castle-hill in
-Ramsay’s city pastoral, as it may be called, of _The Young Laird and
-Edinburgh Katy_—
-
- ‘Wat ye wha I met yestreen,
- Coming down the street, my jo?
- My mistress in her tartan screen,
- Fu’ bonny, braw, and sweet, my jo.
-
- “My dear,” quoth I, “thanks to the night,
- That never wished a lover ill,
- Since ye’re out o’ your mother’s sight,
- Let’s tak’ a walk up to _the hill_.”’
-
-A memory of these Sunday promenadings here calls me to introduce what I
-have to say regarding a man of whom there used to be a strong popular
-remembrance in Edinburgh.
-
-
-HUGO ARNOT.
-
-The cleverly executed _History of Edinburgh_, published by Arnot
-in 1779, and which to this day has not been superseded, gives some
-respectability to a name which tradition would have otherwise handed
-down to us as only that of an eccentric gentleman, of remarkably
-scarecrow figure, and the subject of a few _bon-mots_.
-
-He was the son of a Leith shipmaster, named Pollock, and took the name
-of Arnot from a small inheritance in Fife. Many who have read his
-laborious work will be little prepared to hear that it was written when
-the author was between twenty and thirty; and that, antiquated as his
-meagre figure looks in Kay’s Portraits, he was at his death, in 1786,
-only thirty-seven. His body had been, in reality, made prematurely old
-by a confirmed asthma, accompanied by a cough, which he himself said
-would carry him off like a rocket some day, when a friend remarked,
-with reference to his known latitudinarianism: ‘Possibly, Hugo, in the
-contrary direction.’
-
-[Illustration: Hugo Arnot, looking so like his meat.]
-
-Most of the jokes about poor Hugo’s person have been frequently
-printed—as Harry Erskine meeting him on the street when he was gnawing
-at a spelding or dried haddock, and congratulating him on _looking so
-like his meat_; and his offending the piety of an old woman who was
-cheapening a Bible in Creech’s shop, by some thoughtless remark, when
-she first burst out with: ‘Oh, you monster!’ and then turning round and
-seeing him, added: ‘And he’s an anatomy too!’ An epigram by Erskine is
-less known:
-
- ‘The Scriptures assure us that much is forgiven
- _To flesh and to blood_ by the mercy of Heaven;
- But I’ve searched the whole Bible, and texts can find none
- That extend the assurance _to skin and to bone_.’
-
-Arnot was afflicted by a constitutional irritability to an extent
-which can hardly be conceived. A printer’s boy, handing papers to him
-over his shoulder, happened to touch his ear with one of them, when he
-started up in a rage, and demanded of the trembling youth what he meant
-by insulting him in that manner! Probably from some quarrel arising
-out of this nervous weakness—for such it really was—the Edinburgh
-booksellers, to a man, refused to have anything to do with the
-prospectuses of his _Criminal Trials_, and Arnot had to advertise that
-they were to be seen in the coffee-houses, instead of the booksellers’
-shops.
-
-About the time when he entered at the bar (1772), he had a fancy for a
-young lady named Hay (afterwards Mrs Macdougall), sister of a gentleman
-who succeeded as Marquis of Tweeddale, and then a reigning toast.
-One Sunday, when he contemplated making up to his divinity on the
-Castle-hill, after forenoon service, he entertained two young friends
-at breakfast in his lodgings at the head of the Canongate. By-and-by
-the affairs of the toilet came to be considered. It was then found that
-Hugo’s washerwoman had played false, leaving him in a total destitution
-of clean linen, or at least of clean linen that was also _whole_. A
-dreadful storm took place, but at length, on its calming a little, love
-found out a way, by taking the hand-ruffles of one cast garment, in
-connection with the front of another, and adding both to the body of
-a third. In this eclectic form of shirt the meagre young philosopher
-marched forth with his friends, and was rewarded for his perseverance
-by being allowed a very pleasant chat with the young lady on ‘the
-hill.’ His friends standing by had their own enjoyment in reflecting
-what the beauteous Miss Hay would think if she knew the struggles which
-her admirer had had that morning in preparing to make his appearance
-before her.
-
-Arnot latterly dwelt in a small house at the end of the Meuse Lane in
-St Andrew Street, with an old and very particular lady for a neighbour
-in the upper-floor. Disturbed by the enthusiastic way in which he
-sometimes rang his bell, the lady ventured to send a remonstrance,
-which, however, produced no effect. This led to a bad state of matters
-between them. At length a very pressing and petulant message being
-handed in one day, insisting that he should endeavour to call his
-servants _in a different manner_, what was the lady’s astonishment
-next morning to hear a pistol discharged in Arnot’s house! He was
-simply complying with the letter of his neighbour’s request, by firing,
-instead of ringing, as a signal for shaving-water.
-
-
-ALLAN RAMSAY.
-
-On the north side of the esplanade—enjoying a splendid view of the
-Firth of Forth, Fife and Stirling shires—is the neat little villa of
-Allan Ramsay, surrounded by its miniature pleasure-grounds. The sober,
-industrious life of this exception to the race of poets having resulted
-in a small competency, he built this odd-shaped house in his latter
-days, designing to enjoy in it the Horatian quiet which he had so often
-eulogised in his verse. The story goes that, showing it soon after to
-the clever Patrick, Lord Elibank, with much fussy interest in all its
-externals and accommodations, he remarked that the wags were already at
-work on the subject—they likened it to a goose-pie[6] (owing to the
-roundness of the shape). ‘Indeed, Allan,’ said his lordship, ‘now I see
-you in it, I think the wags are not far wrong.’
-
-[Illustration: Allan Ramsay’s Villa.]
-
-The splendid reputation of Burns has eclipsed that of Ramsay so
-effectually that this pleasing poet, and, upon the whole, amiable and
-worthy man, is now little regarded. Yet Ramsay can never be deprived
-of the credit of having written the best pastoral poem in the range of
-British literature—if even that be not too narrow a word—and many of
-his songs are of great merit.
-
-Ramsay was secretly a Jacobite, openly a dissenter from the severe
-manners and feelings of his day, although a very decent and regular
-attender of the Old Church in St Giles’s. He delighted in music and
-theatricals, and, as we shall see, encouraged the Assembly. It was also
-no doubt his own taste which led him, in 1725, to set up a circulating
-library, whence he diffused plays and other works of fiction among
-the people of Edinburgh. It appears, from the private notes of the
-historian Wodrow, that, in 1728, the magistrates, moved by some
-meddling spirits, took alarm at the effect of this kind of reading on
-the minds of youth, and made an attempt to put it down, but without
-effect. One cannot but be amused to find amongst these self-constituted
-guardians of morality Lord Grange, who kept his wife in unauthorised
-restraint for several years, and whose own life was a scandal to his
-professions. Ramsay, as is well known, also attempted to establish a
-theatre in Edinburgh, but failed. The following advertisement on this
-subject appears in the _Caledonian Mercury_, September 1736: ‘The New
-Theatre in Carrubber’s Close being in great forwardness, will be opened
-the 1st of November. These are to advertise the gentlemen and ladies
-who incline to purchase annual tickets, to enter their names before the
-20th of October next, on which day they shall receive their tickets
-from Allan Ramsay, on paying 30s.—no more than forty to be subscribed
-for; after which none will be disposed of under two guineas.’
-
-The late Mrs Murray of Henderland knew Ramsay for the last ten years of
-his life, her sister having married his son, the celebrated painter.
-She spoke of him to me in 1825, with kindly enthusiasm, as one of the
-most amiable men she had ever known. His constant cheerfulness and
-lively conversational powers had made him a favourite amongst persons
-of rank, whose guest he frequently was. Being very fond of children,
-he encouraged his daughters in bringing troops of young ladies about
-the house, in whose sports he would mix with a patience and vivacity
-wonderful in an old man. He used to give these young friends a kind
-of ball once a year. From pure kindness for the young, he would help
-to make dolls for them, and cradles wherein to place these little
-effigies, with his own hands.[7] But here a fashion of the age must
-be held in view; for, however odd it may appear, it is undoubtedly
-true that to make and dispose of dolls, such as children now alone are
-interested in, was a practice in vogue amongst grown-up ladies who had
-little to do about a hundred years ago.
-
-Ramsay died in 1757. An elderly female told a friend of mine that
-she remembered, when a girl, living as an apprentice with a milliner
-in the Grassmarket, being sent to Ramsay Garden to assist in
-making _dead-clothes_ for the poet. She could recall, however, no
-particulars of the scene but the roses blooming in at the window of the
-death-chamber.
-
-The poet’s house passed to his son, of the same name, eminent as a
-painter—portrait-painter to King George III. and his queen—and a man
-of high mental culture; consequently much a favourite in the circles
-of Johnson and Boswell. The younger Allan enlarged the house, and
-built three additional houses to the eastward, bearing the title of
-Ramsay Garden. At his death, in 1784, the property went to his son,
-General John Ramsay, who, dying in 1845, left this mansion and a large
-fortune to Mr Murray of Henderland. So ended the line of the poet. His
-daughter Christian, an amiable, kind-hearted woman, said to possess a
-gift of verse, lived for many years in New Street. At seventy-four she
-had the misfortune to be thrown down by a hackney-coach, and had her
-leg broken; yet she recovered, and lived to the age of eighty-eight.
-Leading a solitary life, she took a great fancy for cats. Besides
-supporting many in her own house, curiously disposed in bandboxes,
-with doors to go in and out at, she caused food to be laid out for
-others on her stair and around her house. Not a word of obloquy would
-she listen to against the species, alleging, when any wickedness of a
-cat was spoken of, that the animal must have acted under provocation,
-for by nature, she asserted, cats are harmless. Often did her maid go
-with morning messages to her friends, inquiring, with her compliments,
-after their pet cats. Good Miss Ramsay was also a friend to horses, and
-indeed to all creatures. When she observed a carter ill-treating his
-horse, she would march up to him, tax him with cruelty, and, by the
-very earnestness of her remonstrances, arrest the barbarian’s hand. So
-also, when she saw one labouring on the street, with the appearance of
-defective diet, she would send rolls to its master, entreating him to
-feed the animal. These peculiarities, although a little eccentric, are
-not unpleasing; and I cannot be sorry to record them of the daughter of
-one whose heart and head were an honour to his country.
-
-[Illustration: Happy.]
-
-[Illustration: Contented.]
-
-[Illustration: Repose.]
-
-[Illustration: Convivial.]
-
-[1868.—It seems to have been unknown to the biographers of Allan
-Ramsay the painter that he made a romantic marriage. In his early
-days, while teaching the art of drawing in the family of Sir Alexander
-Lindsay of Evelick, one of the young ladies fell in love with him,
-captivated probably by the tongue which afterwards gave him the
-intimacy of princes, and was undoubtedly a great source of his success
-in life. The father of the enamoured girl was an old proud baronet; her
-mother, a sister of the Chief-Justice, Earl of Mansfield. A marriage
-with consent of parents was consequently impossible. The young people,
-nevertheless, contrived to get themselves united in wedlock.
-
-[Illustration: Allan Ramsay’s Monument, Princes Street Gardens.]
-
-The speedily developed talent of Ramsay, the illustrious patronage they
-secured to him, and the very considerable wealth which he acquired must
-have in time made him an acceptable relation to those proud people. A
-time came when their descendants held the connection even as an honour.
-The wealth of the painter ultimately, on the death of his son in 1845,
-became the property of Mr Murray of Henderland, a grandson of Sir
-Alexander Lindsay and nephew of Mrs Allan Ramsay; thence it not long
-after passed to Mr Murray’s brother, Sir John Archibald Murray, better
-known by his judicial name of Lord Murray. This gentleman admired the
-poet, and resolved to raise a statue to him beside his goose-pie house
-on the Castlehill; but the situation proved unsuitable, and since his
-own lamented death, in 1858, the marble full-length of worthy Allan,
-from the studio of John Steell, has found a noble place in the Princes
-Street Gardens, resting on a pedestal, containing on its principal side
-a medallion portrait of Lord Murray, on the reverse one of General
-Ramsay, on the west side one of the General’s lady, and on the east
-similar representations of the General’s two daughters, Lady Campbell
-and Mrs Malcolm. Thus we find—owing to the esteem which genius ever
-commands—the poet of the _Gentle Shepherd_ in the immortality of
-marble, surrounded by the figures of relatives and descendants who so
-acknowledged their aristocratic rank to be inferior to his, derived
-from mind alone.]
-
-
-HOUSE OF THE GORDON FAMILY.
-
-[Illustration: Doorway of Duke of Gordon’s House.
-Now built into School in Boswell’s Court.]
-
-Tradition points out, as the residence of the Gordon family, a house,
-or rather range of buildings, situated between Blair’s and Brown’s
-Closes, being almost the first mass of building in the Castle-hill
-Street on the right-hand side. The southern portion is a structure
-of lofty and massive form, battlemented at top, and looking out upon
-a garden which formerly stretched down to the old town-wall near
-the Grassmarket, but is now crossed by the access from the King’s
-Bridge.[8] From the style of building, I should be disposed to assign
-it a date a little subsequent to the Restoration. There are, however,
-no authentic memorials respecting the alleged connection of the
-Gordon family with this house,[9] unless we are to consider as of
-that character a coronet resembling that of a marquis, flanked by two
-deer-hounds, the well-known supporters of this noble family, which
-figures over a finely moulded door in Blair’s Close.[10] The coronet
-will readily be supposed to point to the time when the _Marquis of
-Huntly_ was the principal honour of the family—that is, previous to
-1684, when the title of Duke of Gordon was conferred.[11]
-
-[Illustration: DUKE OF GORDON’S HOUSE.
-
-PAGE 18.]
-
-In more recent times, this substantial mansion was the abode of Mr
-Baird of Newbyth; and here it was that the late gallant Sir David
-Baird, the hero of Seringapatam, was born and brought up. Returning in
-advanced life from long foreign service, this distinguished soldier
-came to see the home of his youth on the Castle-hill. The respectable
-individual whom I found occupying the house in 1824 received his
-visitor with due respect, and after showing him through the house,
-conducted him out to the garden. Here the boys of the existing tenant
-were found actively engaged in throwing cabbage-stalks at the tops
-of the chimneys of the houses of the Grassmarket, situated a little
-below the level of the garden. On making one plump down the vent, the
-youngsters set up a great shout of triumph. Sir David fell a-laughing
-at sight of this example of practical waggery, and entreated the father
-of the lads ‘not to be too angry; he and his brother, when living here
-at the same age, had indulged in precisely the same amiable amusement,
-the chimneys then, as now, being so provokingly open to such attacks
-that there was no resisting the temptation.’
-
-The whole matter might have been put into an axiomatic form—Given a
-garden with cabbage-stalks, and a set of chimneys situated at an angle
-of forty-five degrees below the spot, any boys turned loose into the
-said garden will be sure to endeavour to bring the cabbage-stalks and
-the chimneys into acquaintance.
-
-The Citadel seems to have been a little nest of aristocracy, of the
-Cavalier party. In 1745 one of its inhabitants was Dame Magdalen Bruce
-of Kinross, widow of the baronet who had assisted in the Restoration.
-Here lived with her the Rev. Robert Forbes, Episcopal minister of
-Leith [afterwards Bishop of Orkney], from whose collections regarding
-Charles Edward and his adventures a volume of extracts was published
-by me in 1834. [The _Lyon in Mourning_ is here referred to, from which
-Dr Chambers published a number of the narratives in his _Jacobite
-Memoirs_ (1834), and from which he also utilised some information
-of the Rebellion of 1745 in the preparation of his _History of the
-Rebellion_. At his death he bequeathed the work to the Advocates’
-Library, Edinburgh, where it now remains. It consists of eight small
-octavo volumes of manuscript of about two hundred pages, each bound
-in black leather, with blackened edges, and around the title-page of
-each volume a deep black border. The collection was the work of the
-Rev. Robert Forbes, a clergyman of the Episcopal Church of Scotland,
-who became in 1762 Bishop of Ross and Caithness. It was treasured
-by his widow for thirty years, and then bought by Sir Henry Stewart
-of Allanton in 1806. Dr Robert Chambers unearthed it for historical
-purposes, and later purchased it from Sir Henry Stewart. Some relics
-which Forbes succeeded in obtaining from his correspondents—such as
-a piece of the Prince’s garter, a piece of the gown he wore as Betty
-Burke, and of the string of the apron he then had on, a fragment of a
-waistcoat worn by the Prince, and other things—were preserved on the
-inside of some of the boards of the volumes. The _Lyon in Mourning_ was
-edited by Mr Henry Paton from the manuscript in the Advocates’ Library,
-and published in three volumes by the Scottish History Society (1895).]
-Throughout those troublous days, a little Episcopal congregation was
-kept together in Leith; their place of worship being the _first floor_
-of an old, dull-looking house in Queen Street (dated 1615), the lower
-floor of which was, in my recollection, a police-office.
-
-
-DR WEBSTER.
-
-An isolated house which formerly stood in Webster’s Close,[12] a little
-way down the Castle-hill, was the residence of the Rev. Dr Webster,
-a man eminent in his day on many accounts—a leading evangelical
-clergyman in Edinburgh, a statist and calculator of extraordinary
-talent, and a distinguished figure in festive scenes. The first
-population returns of Scotland were obtained by him in 1755; and he was
-the author of that fund for the widows of the clergy of the Established
-Church which has proved so great a blessing to many, and still exists
-in a flourishing state.[13] He was also deep in the consultations of
-the magistrates regarding the New Town.
-
-It is not easy to reconcile the two leading characteristics of this
-divine—his being the pastor of a flock of noted sternness, called,
-from the church in which they assembled, the _Tolbooth Whigs_; and his
-at the same time entering heartily and freely into the convivialities
-of the more mirthful portion of society. Perhaps he illustrated the
-maxim that one man may steal horses with impunity, &c.; for it is
-related that, going home early one morning with strong symptoms of
-over-indulgence upon him, and being asked by a friend who met him
-‘what the Tolbooth Whigs would say if they were to see him at this
-moment,’ he instantly replied: ‘They would not believe their own eyes.’
-Sometimes he did fall on such occasions under plebeian observation, but
-the usual remark was: ‘Ah, there’s Dr Webster, honest man, going hame,
-nae doubt, frae some puir afflicted soul he has been visiting. Never
-does he tire o’ well-doing!’ And so forth.
-
-The history of Dr Webster’s marriage is romantic. When a young and
-unknown man, he was employed by a friend to act as go-between,
-or, as it is termed in Scotland, black-fit, or black-foot, in a
-correspondence which he was carrying on with a young lady of great
-beauty and accomplishment. Webster had not acted long in that
-character, till the young lady, who had never entertained any affection
-for his constituent, fell deeply in love with himself. Her birth and
-expectations were better than his; and however much he might have been
-disposed to address her on his own behalf, he never could have thought
-of such a thing so long as there was such a difference between their
-circumstances. The lady saw his difficulty, and resolved to overcome
-it, and that in the frankest manner. At one of these interviews,
-when he was exerting all his eloquence in favour of his friend, she
-plainly told him that he would probably come better speed if he were
-to speak for himself. He took the hint, and, in a word, was soon
-after married to her. He wrote upon the occasion an amorous lyric,
-which exhibits in warm colours the gratitude of a humble lover for
-the favour of a mistress of superior station, and which is perhaps
-as excellent altogether in its way as the finest compositions of
-the kind produced in either ancient or modern times. There is one
-particularly impassioned verse, in which, after describing a process of
-the imagination by which, in gazing upon her, he comes to think her a
-creature of more than mortal nature, he says that at length, unable to
-contain, he clasps her to his bosom, and—
-
- ‘Kissing her lips, she turns woman again!’
-
-
-HOUSE OF MARY DE GUISE.
-
-The restrictions imposed upon a city requiring defence appear as one of
-the forms of misery leading to strange associations. We become, in a
-special degree, sensible of this truth when we see the house of a royal
-personage sunk amidst the impurities of a narrow close in the Old Town
-of Edinburgh. Such was literally the case of an aged pile of buildings
-on the north side of the Castle-hill, behind the front line of the
-street, and accessible by Blyth’s, Nairn’s, and Tod’s Closes, which was
-declared by tradition to have been the residence of Mary de Guise, the
-widow of James V., and from 1554 to 1560 regent of this realm.
-
-[Illustration: Ancient Pile of Buildings, North Side of Castle-Hill.]
-
-Descending the first of these alleys about thirty yards, we came to
-a dusky, half-ruinous building on the left-hand side, presenting one
-or two lofty windows and a doorway, surrounded by handsome mouldings;
-the whole bearing that appearance which says: ‘There is here something
-that has been of consequence, all haggard and disgraced though it now
-be.’ Glancing to the opposite side of the close, where stood another
-portion of the same building, the impression was confirmed by further
-appearances of a goodly style of architecture. These were, in reality,
-the principal portions of the palace of the Regent Mary; the former
-being popularly described as her _house_, the latter as her _oratory_
-or chapel. The close terminated under a portion of the building; and
-when the visitor made his way so far, he found an exterior presented
-northwards, with many windows, whence of old a view must have been
-commanded, first of the gardens descending to the North Loch, and
-second, of the Firth of Forth and Fife. One could easily understand
-that, when the gardens existed, the north side of the house might have
-had many pleasant apartments, and been, upon the whole, tolerable as
-a place of residence, albeit the access by a narrow alley could never
-have been agreeable. Latterly the site of the upper part of the garden
-was occupied by a brushmaker’s workshops and yard, while the lower was
-covered by the Earthen Mound. In the wall on the east side there was
-included, as a mere portion of the masonry, a stray stone, which had
-once been an architrave or lintel; it contained, besides an armorial
-device flanked by the initials A. A., the legend NOSCE TEIPSUM, and the
-date 1557.
-
-Reverting to the door of the queen’s house, which was simply the access
-of a common stair, we there found an ornamented architrave, bearing the
-legend,
-
- LAUS ET HONOR DEO,
-
-terminated by two pieces of complicated lettering, one much
-obliterated, the other a monogram of the name of the Virgin Mary,
-formed of the letters M. R.[14] Finally, at the extremities of this
-stone, were two Roman letters of larger size—I. R.—doubtless the
-initials of James Rex, for James V., the style of cutting being
-precisely the same as in the initials seen on the palace built by that
-king in Stirling Castle; an indirect proof, it may be remarked, of this
-having been the residence of the Regent Mary.
-
-Passing up a spiral flight of steps, we came to a darksome lobby,
-leading to a series of mean apartments, occupied by persons of the
-humblest grade. Immediately within the door was a small recess in the
-wall, composed of Gothic stonework, and supposed by the people to
-have been designed for containing holy-water, though this may well be
-matter of doubt. Overhead, in the ceiling, was a round entablature,
-presenting a faded coronet over the defaced outline of a shield. A
-similar object adorned the ceiling of the lobby in the second floor,
-but in better preservation, as the shield bore three _fleurs de lis_,
-with the coronet above, and the letters H. R. below. There was a third
-of these entablatures, containing the arms of the city of Edinburgh,
-in the centre of the top of the staircase. The only other curious
-object in this part of the mansion was the door of one of the wretched
-apartments—a specimen of carving, bearing all the appearance of having
-been contemporary with the building, and containing, besides other
-devices, bust portraits of a gentleman and lady. This is now in the
-possession of the Society of the Antiquaries of Scotland.
-
-A portion of the same building, accessible by a stair nearer the head
-of the close, contained a hall-like apartment, with other apartments,
-all remarkable for their unusually lofty ceilings. In the large room
-were the remains of a spacious decorated chimney, to which, in the
-recollection of persons still living, there had been attached a chain,
-serving to confine the tongs to their proper domain. This was the
-memorial of an old custom, of which it is not easy to see the utility,
-unless some light be held as thrown upon it by a Scottish proverb,
-used when a child takes a thing and says he found it: ‘You found it,
-I suppose, where the Highlandman found the tongs.’ In the centre of
-almost all the ceilings of this part of the mansion I found, in 1824,
-circular entablatures, with coats of arms and other devices, in stucco,
-evidently of good workmanship, but obscured by successive coats of
-whitening.
-
-The place pointed out by tradition as the queen-regent’s oratory was in
-the first-floor of the building opposite—a spacious and lofty hall,
-with large windows designed to make up for the obscurity of the close.
-Here, besides a finely carved piscina, was a pretty large recess, of
-Gothic structure, in the back-wall, evidently designed for keeping
-things of importance. Many years ago, out of the wall behind this
-recess, there had been taken a small iron box, such as might have been
-employed to keep jewellery, but empty. I was the means of its being
-gifted to Sir Walter Scott, who had previously told me that ‘a passion
-for such little boxes was one of those that most did beset him;’ and it
-is now in the collection at Abbotsford.
-
-The other portions of the mansion, accessible from different alleys,
-were generally similar to these, but somewhat finer. One chamber was
-recognised as the _Deid-room_; that is, the room where individuals of
-the queen’s establishment were kept between their death and burial.
-
-It was interesting to wander through the dusky mazes of this ancient
-building, and reflect that they had been occupied three centuries ago
-by a sovereign princess, and one of the most illustrious lineage.
-Here was the substantial monument of a connection between France and
-Scotland, a totally past state of things. She whose ancestors owned
-Lorraine as a sovereignty, who had spent her youth in the proud halls
-of the Guises in Picardy, and been the spouse of a Longueville,
-was here content to live—in a _close_ in Edinburgh! In these
-obscurities, too, was a government conducted, which had to struggle
-with Knox, Glencairn, James Stewart, Morton, and many other powerful
-men, backed by a popular sentiment which never fails to triumph. It
-was the misfortune of Mary to be placed in a position to resist the
-Reformation. Her own character deserved that she should have stood
-in a more agreeable relation to what Scotland now venerates, for she
-was mild and just, and sincerely anxious for the good of her adopted
-country. It is also proper to remember on the present occasion that ‘in
-her court she maintained a decent gravity, nor would she tolerate any
-licentious practices therein. Her maids of honour were always busied in
-commendable exercises, she herself being an example to them in virtue,
-piety, and modesty.’[15] When all is considered, and we further know
-that the building was strong enough to have lasted many more ages,
-one cannot but regret that the palace of Mary de Guise, reduced as it
-was to vileness, should not now be in existence. The site having been
-purchased by individuals connected with the Free Church, the buildings
-were removed in 1846 to make room for the erection of an academical
-institution or college for the use of that body.[16]
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[6] This jest was doubtless based on Swift’s famous poem on Vanbrugh’s
-house (1704). The peculiar architectural features of Allan’s ‘goose
-pie’ have been almost entirely obliterated by recent alterations. Only
-the two circular upper stories remain in their original form.
-
-[7] ‘My mother was told by those who had enjoyed his plays, that he had
-a child’s puppet stage and a set of dressed dolls for actors, which
-were in great favour with old and young.’—C. K. Sharpe’s note in
-Wilson’s _Reminiscences_.
-
-[8] King’s Bridge crosses King’s Stables Road, and the access from it
-is Johnston Terrace.
-
-[9] When Mrs Cockburn, author of ‘Flowers of the Forest,’ entered on
-occupation of the house in 1756, it was described in the Baird titles
-as ‘my lodging in the castle-hill of Edinburgh, formerly possessed by
-the Duchess of Gordon.’
-
-[10] A Board-school now occupies the site of the mansion. The doorway
-referred to is rebuilt into the school-house.
-
-[11] George, sixth Earl of Huntly, took his last illness, June 1636,
-in ‘his house in the Canongate.’ George, the first duke, who had held
-out the Castle at the Revolution, died December 1716, at his house in
-the Citadel of Leith, where he appears to have occasionally resided for
-some years. I should suppose the house on the Castle-hill to have been
-inhabited by the family in the interval.
-
-[12] Webster’s Close became Brown’s Close when the property changed
-hands, and two brothers of that name occupied the house. To Brown’s
-Close the recently formed Society of Antiquaries of Scotland removed in
-1794 from Gosford’s Close, because the latter was too narrow to admit
-of the members being carried to the place of meeting in sedan-chairs.
-
-[13] Before the Government bounty had supplemented the poor stipends
-of the Scotch Church up to £150, many of them were so small that the
-widow’s allowance from this fund nearly equalled them. Such was the
-case of Cranshaws, a pastoral parish among the Lammermoor Hills. A
-former minister of Cranshaws having wooed a lass of humble rank, the
-father of the lady, when consulted on the subject, said, ‘Tak’ him,
-Jenny; he’s as gude deid as living!’ meaning, of course, that she would
-be as well off as a widow as in the quality of a wife.
-
-[14] ‘The monograms of the name of our blessed lady are formed of the
-letters M. A., M. R., and A. M., and these stand respectively for
-Maria, Maria Regina, and Ave Maria. The letter M. was often used by
-itself to express the name of the Blessed Virgin, and became a vehicle
-for the most beautiful ornament and design; the letter itself being
-entirely composed of emblems, with some passage from the life of our
-lady in the void spaces.’—_Pugin’s Glossary of Ecclesiastical Ornament
-and Costume_, 1844.
-
-[15] Keith’s History.
-
-[16] The New College and Assembly Hall of the (United) Free Church.
-
-
-
-
-THE WEST BOW.
-
- THE BOWHEAD—WEIGH-HOUSE—ANDERSON’S PILLS—ORATORIES—COLONEL
- GARDINER—‘BOWHEAD SAINTS’—‘THE SEIZERS’—STORY OF A JACOBITE
- CANARY—MAJOR WEIR—TULZIES—THE TINKLARIAN DOCTOR—OLD
- ASSEMBLY ROOM—PAUL ROMIEU—‘HE THAT THOLES OVERCOMES’—PROVOST
- STEWART—DONALDSONS THE BOOKSELLERS—BOWFOOT—THE TEMPLARS’
- LANDS—THE GALLOWS STONE.
-
- [The West Bow has long since disappeared as a street; see note
- on p. 54.]
-
-
-In a central part of Old Edinburgh—the very Little Britain of our
-city—is a curious, angular, whimsical-looking street, of great
-steepness and narrowness, called the West Bow. Serving as a connection
-between the Grassmarket and Lawnmarket, between the Low and the High
-Town, it is of considerable fame in our city annals as a passage for
-the entry of sovereigns, and the scene of the quaint ceremonials used
-on those occasions. In more modern times, it has been chiefly notable
-in the recollections of country-people as a nest of the peculiarly
-noisy tradesmen, the white-iron smiths, which causes Robert Fergusson
-to mark, as one of the features of Edinburgh deserted for a holiday:
-
- ‘The tinkler billies[17] o’ the Bow
- Are now less eident[18] clinkin.’
-
-Another remarkable circumstance connected with the street in the
-popular mind is its having been the residence of the famed wizard,
-Major Weir. All of these particulars serve to make it a noteworthy
-sort of place, and the impression is much favoured by its actual
-appearance. A perfect Z in figure, composed of tall antique houses,
-with numerous dovecot-like gables projecting over the footway, full
-of old inscriptions and sculpturings, presenting at every few steps
-some darksome lateral profundity, into which the imagination wanders
-without hindrance or exhaustion, it seems eminently a place of old
-grandmothers’ tales, and sure at all times to maintain a ghost or two
-in its community. When I descend into particulars, it will be seen what
-grounds there truly are for such a surmise.
-
-To begin with
-
-
-THE BOWHEAD.
-
-[Illustration: THE BOWHEAD.
-
-PAGE 27.]
-
-This is a comparatively open space, though partially straightened
-again by the insertion in it of a clumsy, detached old building
-called the _Weigh-house_, where enormous masses of butter and cheese
-are continually getting disposed of. Prince Charles had his guard
-at the Weigh-house when blockading the Castle; using, however, for
-this purpose, not the house itself, but a floor of the adjacent tall
-tenement in the Lawnmarket, which appears to have been selected on a
-very intelligible principle, in as far as it was the deserted mansion
-of one of the city clergy, the same Rev. George Logan who carried on a
-controversy with Thomas Ruddiman, in which he took unfavourable views
-of the title of the Stuart family to the throne, not only then, but at
-any time. It was, no doubt, as an additional answer to a bad pamphlet
-that the Highlanders took up their quarters at Mr Logan’s.
-
-
-ANDERSON’S PILLS.
-
-In this tall _land_, dated 1690, there is a house on the second-floor
-where that venerable drug, Dr Anderson’s pills, is sold, and has
-been so for above a century. As is well known, the country-people in
-Scotland have to this day [1824] a peculiar reverence for these pills,
-which are, I believe, really a good form of aloetic medicine. They
-took their origin from a physician of the time of Charles I., who gave
-them his name. From his daughter, Lillias Anderson, the patent came
-to a person designed Thomas Weir, who left it to his daughter. The
-widow of this last person’s nephew, Mrs Irving, is now the patentee; a
-lady of advanced age, who facetiously points to the very brief series
-of proprietors intervening between Dr Anderson and herself, as no
-inexpressive indication of the virtue of the medicine. [Mrs Irving died
-in 1837, at the age of ninety-nine.] Portraits of Anderson and his
-daughter are preserved in this house: the physician in a Vandyke dress,
-with a book in his hand; the lady, a precise-looking dame, with a pill
-in her hand about the size of a walnut, saying a good deal for the
-stomachs of our ancestors. The people also show a glove which belonged
-to the learned physician.
-
-[1868.—In 1829 Mrs Irving lived in a neat, self-contained mansion in
-Chessels’s Court, in the Canongate, along with her son, General Irving,
-and some members of his family. The old lady, then ninety-one, was
-good enough to invite me to dinner, when I likewise found two younger
-sisters of hers, respectively eighty-nine and ninety. She sat firm and
-collected at the head of the table, and carved a leg of mutton with
-perfect propriety. She then told me, at her son’s request, that in the
-year 1745, when Prince Charles’s army was in possession of the town,
-she, a child of four years, walked with her nurse to Holyrood Palace,
-and seeing a Highland gentleman standing in the doorway, she went
-up to him to examine his peculiar attire. She even took the liberty
-of lifting up his kilt a little way; whereupon her nurse, fearing
-some danger, started forward for her protection. But the gentleman
-only patted her head, and said something kind to her. I felt it as
-very curious to sit as guest with a person who had mingled in the
-Forty-five. But my excitement was brought to a higher pitch when,
-on ascending to the drawing-room, I found the general’s daughter, a
-pretty young woman recently married, sitting there, dressed in a suit
-of clothes belonging to one of the nonagenarian aunts—a very fine one
-of flowered satin, with elegant cap and lappets, and silk shoes three
-inches deep in the heel—the same having been worn by the venerable
-owner just seventy years before at a Hunters’ Ball at Holyrood Palace.
-The contrast between the former and the present wearer—the old lady
-shrunk and taciturn, and her young representative full of life and
-resplendent in joyous beauty—had an effect upon me which it would be
-impossible to describe. To this day, I look upon the Chessels’s Court
-dinner as one of the most extraordinary events in my life.]
-
-[Illustration: Chessels’s Court, Canongate.]
-
-
-ORATORIES—COLONEL GARDINER.
-
-This house presents a feature which forms a curious memorial of the
-manners of a past age. In common with all the houses built from
-about 1690 to 1740—a substantial class, still abundant in the High
-Street—there is at the end of each row of windows corresponding to
-a separate mansion, a narrow slit-like window, such as might suffice
-for a closet. In reality, each of these narrow apertures gives light
-to a small cell—much too small to require such a window—usually
-entering from the dining-room or some other principal apartment.
-The use of these cells was to serve as a retreat for the master of
-the house, wherein he might perform his devotions. The father of a
-family was in those days a sacred kind of person, not to be approached
-by wife or children too familiarly, and expected to be a priest in
-his own household. Besides his family devotions, he retired to a
-closet for perhaps an hour each day to utter his own prayers;[19]
-and so regular was the custom that it gave rise, as we see, to this
-peculiarity in house-building. Nothing could enable us more clearly
-to appreciate that strong outward demonstration of religious feeling
-which pervaded the nation for half a century after the agonies of ‘the
-Persecution.’ I cannot help here mentioning the interest with which
-I have visited Bankton House,[20] in East Lothian, where, as is well
-known, Colonel Gardiner spent several years of his life. The oratory
-of the pious soldier is pointed out by tradition, and it forms even a
-more expressive memorial of the time than the closets in the Edinburgh
-houses. Connected with a small front room, which might have been a
-library or _study_, is a little recess, such as dust-pans and brooms
-are kept in, consisting of the angular space formed by a stair which
-passes overhead to the upper floor. This place is wholly without light,
-yet it is said to have been the place sacred to poor Gardiner’s private
-devotions. What leaves hardly any doubt on the matter is that there has
-been a wooden bolt within, capable only of being shot from the inside,
-and therefore unquestionably used by a person desiring to shut himself
-in. Here, therefore, in this darksome, stifling little cell, had this
-extraordinary man spent hours in those devotional exercises by which he
-was so much distinguished from his class.[21]
-
-
-BOWHEAD SAINTS—SEIZERS—A JACOBITE BLACKBIRD.
-
-In the latter part of the seventeenth century, the inhabitants of
-the West Bow enjoyed a peculiar fame for their piety and zeal in
-the Covenanting cause. The wits of the opposite faction are full of
-allusions to them as ‘the Bowhead Saints,’ ‘the godly plants of the
-Bowhead,’ and so forth. [This is the basis of an allusion by a later
-Cavalier wit, when describing the exit of Lord Dundee from Edinburgh,
-on the occasion of the settlement of the crown upon William and Mary:
-
- ‘As he rode down the sanctified bends of the Bow,
- Ilka carline was flyting, and shaking her pow;
- But some young plants of grace, that looked couthie and slie,
- Said: “Luck to thy bonnet, thou bonnie Dundee!”’
-
-It is to be feared that Sir Walter has here shown a relenting towards
-the ‘young plants,’ for which they would not have thanked him.] All the
-writings of the wits of their own time speak of the system to which
-they were opposed as one of unmitigated sternness. It was in those days
-a custom to patrol the streets during the time of divine service, and
-take into captivity all persons found walking abroad; and indeed make
-seizure of whatever could be regarded as guilty of Sabbath-breaking.
-It is said that, led by a sneaking sense, the patrol one day lighted
-upon a joint of meat in the course of being roasted, and made prize of
-it, leaving the graceless owner to chew the spit. On another occasion,
-about the year 1735, a capture of a different kind was made. ‘The
-people about that time,’ says Arnot, ‘were in use to teach their birds
-to chant the songs of their party. It happened that the blackbird of an
-honest Jacobitical barber, which from his cage on the outside of the
-window gave offence to the zealous Whigs by his songs, was neglected,
-on a Saturday evening, to be brought within the house. Next morning
-he tuned his pipe to the usual air, _The king shall enjoy his own
-again_. One of the _seizers_, in his holy zeal, was enraged at this
-manifestation of impiety and treason in one of the feathered tribe.
-He went up to the house, seized the bird and the cage, and with much
-solemnity lodged them in the City-Guard.’[22] Pennycook, a burgess
-bard of the time, represents the officer as addressing the bird:
-
- ‘Had ye been taught by me, a _Bowhead saint_,
- You’d sung the Solemn League and Covenant,
- Bessy of Lanark, or the Last Good-night;
- But you’re a bird prelatic—that’s not right....
- Oh could my baton reach the laverocks too,
- They’re chirping _Jamie, Jamie_, just like you:
- I hate vain birds that lead malignant lives,
- But love the chanters to the Bowhead wives.’
-
-
-MAJOR WEIR.[23]
-
-[Illustration: Major Weir’s House.]
-
-It must have been a sad scandal to this peculiar community when
-Major Weir, one of their number, was found to have been so wretched
-an example of human infirmity. The house occupied by this man still
-exists, though in an altered shape, in a little court accessible by
-a narrow passage near the first angle of the street. His history is
-obscurely reported; but it appears that he was of a good family in
-Lanarkshire, and had been one of the ten thousand men sent by the
-Scottish Covenanting Estates in 1641 to assist in suppressing the Irish
-Papists. He became distinguished for a life of peculiar sanctity,
-even in an age when that was the prevailing tone of the public mind.
-According to a contemporary account: ‘His garb was still a cloak, and
-somewhat dark, and he never went without his staff. He was a tall black
-man, and ordinarily looked down to the ground; _a grim countenance,
-and a big nose_. At length he became so notoriously regarded among the
-Presbyterian strict sect, that if four met together, be sure Major
-Weir was one. At private meetings he prayed to admiration, which made
-many of that stamp court his converse. He never married, but lived in
-a private lodging with his sister, Grizel Weir. Many resorted to his
-house, to join him and hear him pray; but it was observed that he could
-not officiate in any holy duty without the black staff, or rod, in his
-hand, and leaning upon it, which made those who heard him pray admire
-his flood in prayer, his ready extemporary expression, his heavenly
-gesture; so that he was thought more angel than man, and was termed
-by some of the holy sisters ordinarily _Angelical Thomas_.’ Plebeian
-imaginations have since fructified regarding the staff, and crones
-will still seriously tell how it could run a message to a shop for
-any article which its proprietor wanted; how it could answer the door
-when any one called upon its master; and that it used to be often seen
-running before him, in the capacity of a link-boy, as he walked down
-the Lawnmarket.
-
-After a life characterised externally by all the graces of devotion,
-but polluted in secret by crimes of the most revolting nature, and
-which little needed the addition of wizardry to excite the horror of
-living men, Major Weir fell into a severe sickness, which affected his
-mind so much that he made open and voluntary confession of all his
-wickedness. The tale was at first so incredible that the provost, Sir
-Andrew Ramsay,[24] refused for some time to take him into custody. At
-length himself, his sister (partner of one of his crimes), and his
-staff were secured by the magistrates, together with certain sums
-of money, which were found wrapped up in rags in different parts of
-the house. One of these pieces of rag being thrown into the fire by
-a bailie, who had taken the whole in charge, flew up the chimney,
-and made an explosion like a cannon. While the wretched man lay in
-prison, he made no scruple to disclose the particulars of his guilt,
-but refused to address himself to the Almighty for pardon. To every
-request that he would pray, he answered in screams: ‘Torment me no
-more—I am tormented enough already!’ Even the offer of a Presbyterian
-clergyman, instead of an established Episcopal minister of the city,
-had no effect upon him. He was tried April 9, 1670, and being found
-guilty, was sentenced to be strangled and burnt between Edinburgh and
-Leith. His sister, who was tried at the same time, was sentenced to be
-hanged in the Grassmarket. The execution of the profligate major took
-place, April 14, at the place indicated by the judge. When the rope
-was about his neck, to prepare him for the fire, he was bid to say:
-‘Lord, be merciful to me!’ but he answered as before: ‘Let me alone—I
-will not—I have lived as a beast, and I must die as a beast!’ After
-he had dropped lifeless in the flames, his stick was also cast into
-the fire; and, ‘whatever incantation was in it,’ says the contemporary
-writer already quoted,[25] ‘the persons present own that it gave rare
-turnings, and was long a-burning, as also himself.’
-
-The conclusion to which the humanity of the present age would come
-regarding Weir—that he was mad—is favoured by some circumstances;
-for instance, his answering one who asked if he had ever seen the
-devil, that ‘the only feeling he ever had of him was in the dark.’ What
-chiefly countenances the idea is the unequivocal lunacy of the sister.
-This miserable woman confessed to witchcraft, and related, in a serious
-manner, many things which could not be true. Many years before, a fiery
-coach, she said, had come to her brother’s door in broad day, and a
-stranger invited them to enter, and they proceeded to Dalkeith. On the
-way, another person came and whispered in her brother’s ear something
-which affected him; it proved to be supernatural intelligence of the
-defeat of the Scotch army at Worcester, which took place that day. Her
-brother’s power, she said, lay in his staff. She also had a gift for
-spinning above other women, but the yarn broke to pieces in the loom.
-Her mother, she declared, had been also a witch. ‘The secretest thing
-that I, or any of the family could do, when once a mark appeared upon
-her brow, she could tell it them, though done at a great distance.’
-This mark could also appear on her own forehead when she pleased. At
-the request of the company present, ‘she put back her head-dress, and
-seeming to frown, there was an exact horse-shoe shaped for nails in her
-wrinkles, terrible enough, I assure you, to the stoutest beholder.’[26]
-At the place of execution she acted in a furious manner, and with
-difficulty could be prevented from throwing off her clothes, in order
-to die, as she said, ‘with all the shame she could.’
-
-The treatise just quoted makes it plain that the case of Weir and his
-sister had immediately become a fruitful theme for the imaginations
-of the vulgar. We there receive the following story: ‘Some few
-days before he discovered himself, a gentlewoman coming from the
-Castle-hill, where her husband’s niece was lying-in of a child, about
-midnight perceived about the Bowhead three women in windows shouting,
-laughing, and clapping their hands. The gentlewoman went forward,
-till, at Major Weir’s door, there arose, as from the street, a woman
-about the length of two ordinary females, and stepped forward. The
-gentlewoman, not as yet excessively feared, bid her maid step on, if
-by the lantern they could see what she was; but haste what they could,
-this long-legged spectre was still before them, moving her body with a
-vehement cachinnation and great unmeasurable laughter. At this rate the
-two strove for place, till the giantess came to a narrow lane in the
-Bow, commonly called the Stinking Close, into which she turning, and
-the gentlewoman looking after her, perceived the close full of flaming
-torches (she could give them no other name), and as if it had been a
-great number of people stentoriously laughing, and gaping with tahees
-of laughter. This sight, at so dead a time of night, no people being
-in the windows belonging to the close, made her and her servant haste
-home, declaring all that they saw to the rest of the family.’
-
-For upwards of a century after Major Weir’s death, he continued to
-be the bugbear of the Bow, and his house remained uninhabited. His
-apparition was frequently seen at night, flitting, like a black and
-silent shadow, about the street. His house, though known to be deserted
-by everything human, was sometimes observed at midnight to be full of
-lights, and heard to emit strange sounds, as of dancing, howling, and,
-what is strangest of all, spinning. Some people occasionally saw the
-major issue from the low close at midnight, mounted on a black horse
-without a head, and gallop off in a whirlwind of flame. Nay, sometimes
-the whole of the inhabitants of the Bow would be roused from their
-sleep at an early hour in the morning by the sound as of a coach and
-six, first rattling up the Lawnmarket, and then thundering down the
-Bow, stopping at the head of the terrible close for a few minutes, and
-then rattling and thundering back again—being neither more nor less
-than Satan come in one of his best equipages to take home the major and
-his sister, after they had spent a night’s leave of absence in their
-terrestrial dwelling.
-
-About fifty years ago, when the shades of superstition began
-universally to give way in Scotland, Major Weir’s house came to be
-regarded with less terror by the neighbours, and an attempt was made
-by the proprietor to find a person who should be bold enough to
-inhabit it. Such a person was procured in William Patullo, a poor man
-of dissipated habits, who, having been at one time a soldier and a
-traveller, had come to disregard in a great measure the superstitions
-of his native country, and was now glad to possess a house upon the
-low terms offered by the landlord, at whatever risk. Upon its being
-known that Major Weir’s house was about to be reinhabited, a great deal
-of curiosity was felt by people of all ranks as to the result of the
-experiment; for there was scarcely a native of the city who had not
-felt, since his boyhood, an intense interest in all that concerned that
-awful fabric, and yet remembered the numerous terrible stories which
-he had heard respecting it. Even before entering upon his hazardous
-undertaking, William Patullo was looked upon with a flattering sort
-of interest, similar to that which we feel respecting a regiment on
-the march to active conflict. It was the hope of many that he would
-be the means of retrieving a valuable possession from the dominion
-of darkness. But Satan soon let them know that he does not tamely
-relinquish any of the outposts of his kingdom.
-
-On the very first night after Patullo and his spouse had taken up their
-abode in the house, as the worthy couple were lying awake in their bed,
-not unconscious of a certain degree of fear—a dim, uncertain light
-proceeding from the gathered embers of their fire, and all being silent
-around them—they suddenly saw a form like that of a calf, which came
-forward to the bed, and, setting its forefeet upon the stock, looked
-steadfastly at the unfortunate pair. When it had contemplated them thus
-for a few minutes, to their great relief it at length took itself away,
-and, slowly retiring, gradually vanished from their sight. As might
-be expected, they deserted the house next morning; and for another
-half-century no other attempt was made to embank this part of the world
-of light from the aggressions of the world of darkness.
-
-It may here be mentioned that, at no very remote time, there were
-several houses in the Old Town which had the credit of being haunted.
-It is said there is one at this day in the Lawnmarket (a flat), which
-has been shut up from time immemorial. The story goes that one night,
-as preparations were making for a supper-party, something occurred
-which obliged the family, as well as all the assembled guests, to
-retire with precipitation, and lock up the house. From that night it
-has never once been opened, nor was any of the furniture withdrawn:
-the very goose which was undergoing the process of being roasted at
-the time of the occurrence is still at the fire! No one knows to whom
-the house belongs; no one ever inquires after it; no one living ever
-saw the inside of it; it is a condemned house! There is something
-peculiarly dreadful about a house under these circumstances. What
-sights of horror might present themselves if it were entered! Satan is
-the _ultimus hæres_ of all such unclaimed property!
-
-Besides the many old houses that are haunted, there are several endowed
-with the simple credit of having been the scenes of murders and
-suicides. Some contain rooms which had particular names commemorative
-of such events, and these names, handed down as they had been from
-one generation to another, usually suggested the remembrance of some
-dignified Scottish families, probably the former tenants of the houses.
-There is a common-stair in the Lawnmarket which was supposed to be
-haunted by the ghost of a gentleman who had been mysteriously killed,
-about a century ago, in open daylight, as he was ascending to his own
-house: the affair was called to mind by old people on the similar
-occasion of the murder of Begbie. A deserted house in Mary King’s
-Close (behind the Royal Exchange) is believed by some to have met
-with that fate for a very fearful reason. The inhabitants of a remote
-period were, it is said, compelled to abandon it by the supernatural
-appearances which took place in it on the very first night after they
-had made it their residence. At midnight, as the goodman was sitting
-with his wife by the fire reading his Bible, and intending immediately
-to go to bed, a strange dimness which suddenly fell upon his light
-caused him to raise his eyes from the book. He looked at the candle,
-and saw it burning blue. Terror took possession of his frame. Turning
-away his eyes, there was, directly before him, and apparently not two
-yards off, the head as of a dead person, looking him straight in the
-face. There was nothing but a head, though that seemed to occupy the
-precise situation in regard to the floor which it might have done had
-it been supported by a body of the ordinary stature. The man and his
-wife fainted with terror. On awaking, darkness pervaded the room.
-Presently the door opened, and in came a hand holding a candle. This
-came and stood—that is, the body supposed to be attached to the hand
-stood—beside the table, whilst the terrified pair saw two or three
-couples of feet skip along the floor, as if dancing. The scene lasted
-a short time, but vanished quite away upon the man gathering strength
-to invoke the protection of Heaven. The house was of course abandoned,
-and remained ever afterwards shut up. Such were grandams’ tales at no
-remote period in our northern capital:
-
- ‘Where Learning, with his eagle eyes,
- Seeks Science in her coy abode.’
-
-
-TULZIES.
-
-At the Bowhead there happened, in the year 1596, a combat between James
-Johnston of Westerhall and a gentleman of the house of Somerville,
-which is thus related in that curious book, the _Memorie of the
-Somervilles_.
-
-‘The other actione wherein Westerhall was concerned happened three
-years thereftir in Edinburgh, and was only personal on the same
-account, betwext Westerhall and Bread (Broad) Hugh Somervill of the
-Writes. This gentleman had often formerly foughten with Westerhall upon
-equal termes, and being now in Edinburgh about his privat affaires,
-standing at the head of the West Bow, Westerhall by accident comeing up
-the same, some officious and unhappy fellow says to Westerhall: “There
-is Bread Hugh Somervill of the Writes.” Whereupon Westerhall, fancying
-he stood there either to waitt him, or out of contempt, he immediately
-marches up with his sword drawen, and with the opening of his mouth,
-crying: “Turne, villane;” he cuttes Writes in the hint head a deep and
-sore wound, the foullest stroak that ever Westerhall was knoune to
-give, acknowledged soe, and much regrated eftirwards by himself. Writes
-finding himself strucken and wounded, seeing Westerhall (who had not
-offered to double his stroak), drawes, and within a short tyme puttes
-Westerhall to the defensive part; for being the taller man, and one of
-the strongest of his time, with the advantage of the hill, he presses
-him sore. Westerhall reteires by little, traverseing the breadth of
-the Bow, to gain the advantage of the ascent, to supply the defect of
-nature, being of low stature, which Writes observeing, keepes closse to
-him, and beares him in front, that he might not quyte what good-fortune
-and nature had given him. Thus they continued neer a quarter of ane
-hour, clearing the callsay,[27] so that in all the strait Bow there
-was not one to be seen without their shop doores, neither durst any man
-attempt to red them, every stroak of their swords threatening present
-death both to themselves and others that should come neer them. Haveing
-now come from the head of the Bow neer to the foot thereof, Westerhall
-being in a pair of black buites, which for ordinary he wore closse
-drawen up, was quyte tyred. Therefore he stepes back within a shop
-doore, and stood upon his defence. The very last stroak that Writes
-gave went neer to have brocken his broad sword in peaces, haveing
-hitt the lintell of the door, the marke whereof remained there a long
-tyme. Thereftir, the toune being by this tyme all in ane uproar, the
-halbertiers comeing to seaze upon them, they wer separated and privatly
-convoyed to ther chambers. Ther wounds but slight, except that which
-Writes had upon his head proved very dangerous; for ther was many bones
-taken out of it; however, at lenth, he was perfectly cured, and the
-parties themselves, eftir Hugh Lord Somerville’s death, reconcealled,
-and all injuries forgotten.’
-
-In times of civil war, personal rencontres of this kind, and even
-skirmishes between bands of armed men—usually called tulzies—were of
-no unfrequent occurrence upon the streets of Edinburgh. They abounded
-during the troublous time of the minority of James VI. On the 24th of
-November 1567, the Laird of Airth and the Laird of Wemyss met upon
-the High Street, and, together with their followers, fought a bloody
-battle, ‘many,’ as Birrel the chronicler reports, ‘being hurte on both
-sides by shote of pistoll.’ Three days afterwards there was a strict
-proclamation, forbidding ‘the wearing of guns or pistolls, or aney
-sick-like fyerwork ingyne, under ye paine of death, the king’s guards
-and shouldours only excepted.’ This circumstance seems to be referred
-to in _The Abbot_, where the Regent Murray, in allusion to Lord
-Seyton’s rencontre with the Leslies, in which Roland Græme had borne
-a distinguished part, says: ‘These broils and feuds would shame the
-capital of the Great Turk, let alone that of a Christian and reformed
-state. But if I live, this gear shall be amended; and men shall say,’
-&c.
-
-On the 30th of July 1588, according to the same authority, Sir William
-Stewart was slain in Blackfriars Wynd by the Earl of Bothwell [the
-fifth earl], who was the most famed disturber of the public peace in
-those times. The quarrel had arisen on a former occasion, on account of
-some despiteful language used by Sir William, when the fiery earl vowed
-the destruction of his enemy in words too shocking to be repeated; ‘sua
-therafter rancountering Sir William in ye Blackfriar Wynd by chance,
-told him he vold now ...; and vith yat drew his sword; Sir William
-standing to hes defence, and having hes back at ye vall, ye earle mad a
-thrust at him vith his raper, and strake him in at the back and out at
-the belley, and killed him.’
-
-Ten years thereafter, one Robert Cathcart, who had been with the Earl
-of Bothwell on this occasion, though it does not appear that he took an
-active hand in the murder, was slain in revenge by William Stewart, son
-of the deceased, while standing inoffensively at the head of Peebles
-Wynd, near the Tron.
-
-In June 1605, one William Thomson, a dagger-maker in the West Bow,
-which was even then remarkable for iron-working handicraftsmen, was
-slain by John Waterstone, a neighbour of his own, who was next day
-beheaded on the Castle-hill for his crime.
-
-In 1640, the Lawnmarket was the scene of a personal combat between
-Major Somerville, commander of the forces then in the Castle, devoted
-to the Covenanting interest (a relation of Braid Hugh in the preceding
-extract), and one Captain Crawfuird, which is related in the following
-picturesque and interesting manner by the same writer: ‘But it would
-appear this gentleman conceived his affront being publict, noe
-satisfactione acted in a private way could save his honour; therefore
-to repair the same, he resolves to challange and fight Somervill upon
-the High Street of Edenburgh, and at such a tyme when ther should be
-most spectators. In order to this designe, he takes the occasione, as
-this gentleman was betwext ten and eleven hours in the foirnoon hastily
-comeing from the Castle (haveing been then sent for to the Committie of
-Estates and General Leslie anent some important busines), to assault
-him in this manner; Somervill being past the Weigh-house, Captaine
-Crawfuird observeing him, presentlie steps into a high chope upon the
-south side of the Landmercat, and there layes by his cloak, haveing a
-long broad sword and a large Highland durke by his side; he comes up to
-Somervill, and without farder ceremonie sayes: “If you be a pretty man,
-draw your sword;” and with that word pulles out his oune sword with
-the dagger. Somervill at first was somewhat stertled at the impudence
-and boldnesse of the man that durst soe openly and avowedly assault
-him, being in publict charge, and even then on his duty. But his honour
-and present preservatione gave him noe tyme to consult the conveniency
-or inconveniency he was now under, either as to his present charge or
-disadvantage of weapons, haveing only a great kaine staff[28] in his
-hand, which for ordinary he walked still with, and that same sword
-which Generall Rivane had lately gifted him, being a half-rapper sword
-backed, hinging in a shoulder-belt far back, as the fashion was then,
-he was forced to guaird two or three strokes with his kaine before he
-got out his sword, which being now drawne, he soon puts his adversary
-to the defencive part, by bearing up soe close to him, and putting home
-his thrusts, that the captaine, for all his courage and advantage of
-weapons, was forced to give back, having now much adoe to parie the
-redoubled thrusts that Somervill let in at him, being now agoeing.
-
-‘The combat (for soe in effect it was, albeit accidental) begane about
-the midle of the Landmercat. Somervill drives doune the captaine, still
-fighting, neer to the goldsmiths’ chops, where, fearing to be nailled
-to the boords (these chops being then all of timber), he resolved by
-ane notable blow to revenge all his former affronts; makeing thairfor a
-fent, as if he had designed at Somervill’s right side, haveing parried
-his thrust with his dagger, he suddenly turnes his hand, and by a
-back-blow with his broadsword he thought to have hamshekelled[29] him
-in one, if not both of his legges, which Somervill only prevented by
-nimbly leaping backward at the tyme, interposeing the great kaine that
-was in his left hand, which was quyte cut through with the violence of
-the blow. And now Providence soe ordered it, that the captaine missing
-his mark, overstrake himself soe far, that in tyme he could not recover
-his sword to a fit posture of defence, untill Somervill, haveing beaten
-up the dagger that was in the captaine’s left hand with the remaineing
-part of his oune stick, he instantly closes with him, and with the
-pummil of his sword he instantly strikes him doune to the ground, where
-at first, because of his baseness, he was mynded to have nailled him
-to the ground, but that his heart relented, haveing him in his mercy.
-And att that same instant ther happened several of his oune soulders
-to come in, who wer soe incensed, that they wer ready to have cut the
-poor captaine all in pieces, if he had not rescued him out of theire
-hands, and saw him safely convoyed to prisone, where he was layd in
-the irones, and continued in prisone in a most miserable and wretched
-condition somewhat more than a year.’[30]
-
-
-THE TINKLARIAN DOCTOR.
-
-In the early part of the last century, the Bowhead was distinguished as
-the residence of an odd, half-crazy varlet of a tinsmith named William
-Mitchell, who occasionally held forth as a preacher, and every now
-and then astounded the quiet people of Edinburgh with some pamphlet
-full of satirical personalities. He seems to have been altogether a
-strange mixture of fanaticism, humour, and low cunning. In one of his
-publications—a single broadside, dated 1713—he has a squib upon the
-magistrates, in the form of a _leit_, or list, of a new set, whom he
-proposes to introduce in their stead. At the end he sets forward a
-claim on his own behalf, no less than that of representing the city in
-parliament. In another of his prose pieces he gives a curious account
-of a journey which he made into France, where, he affirms, ‘the king’s
-court is six times bigger than the king of Britain’s; his guards have
-all feathers in their hats, and their horse-tails are to their heels;
-and their king [Louis XV.] is one of the best-favoured boys that
-you can look upon—blithe-like, with black hair; and all his people
-are better natured in general than the Scots or English, except the
-priests. Their women seem to be modest, for they have no fardingales.
-The greatest wonder I saw in France, was to see the braw people fall
-down on their knees on the clarty ground when the priest comes by,
-carrying the cross, to give a sick person the sacrament.’
-
-The Tinklarian Doctor, for such was his popular appellation, appears to
-have been fully acquainted with an ingenious expedient, long afterwards
-held in view by publishers of juvenile toy-books. As in certain sage
-little histories of Tommy and Harry, King Pepin, &c., we are sure
-to find that ‘the good boy who loved his lessons’ always bought his
-books from ‘kind, good, old Mr J. Newberry, at the corner of St Paul’s
-Churchyard, where the greatest assortment of nice books for good boys
-and girls is always to be had’—so in the works of Mr Mitchell we find
-some sly encomium upon the Tinklarian Doctor constantly peeping forth;
-and in the pamphlet from which the above extract is made, he is not
-forgetful to impress his professional excellence as a whitesmith.
-‘I have,’ he says, ‘a good pennyworth of pewter spoons, fine, like
-silver—none such made in Edinburgh—and silken pocks for wigs, and
-French white pearl-beads; all to be sold for little or nothing.’ _Vide_
-‘A part of the works of that Eminent Divine and Historian, Dr William
-Mitchell, Professor of Tinklarianism in the University of the BOWHEAD;
-being a Syze of Divinity, Humanity, History, Philosophy, Law, and
-Physick; Composed at Various Occasions for his own Satisfaction and the
-World’s Illumination.’ In his works—all of which were adorned with a
-cut of the Mitchell arms—he does not scruple to make the personages
-whom he introduces speak of himself as a much wiser man than the
-Archbishop of Canterbury, all the clergymen of his native country, and
-even the magistrates of Edinburgh! One of his last productions was
-a pamphlet on the murder of Captain Porteous, which he concludes by
-saying, in the true spirit of a Cameronian martyr: ‘If the king and
-clergy gar hang me for writing this, I’m content, because it is long
-since any man was hanged for religion.’ The learned Tinklarian was
-destined, however, to die in his bed—an event which came to pass in
-the year 1740.
-
-The profession of which the Tinklarian Doctor subscribed himself
-a member has long been predominant in the West Bow. We see from a
-preceding extract that it reckoned dagger-makers among its worthy
-denizens in the reign of James VI. But this trade has long been
-happily extinct everywhere in Scotland; though their less formidable
-brethren the whitesmiths, coppersmiths, and pewterers have continued
-down to our own day to keep almost unrivalled possession of the Bow.
-Till within these few years, there was scarcely a shop in this street
-occupied by other tradesmen; and it might be supposed that the noise
-of so many hammermen, pent up in a narrow thoroughfare, would be
-extremely annoying to the neighbourhood. Yet however disagreeable their
-clattering might seem to strangers, it is generally admitted that the
-people who lived in the West Bow became habituated to the noise, and
-felt no inconvenience whatever from its ceaseless operation upon their
-ears. Nay, they rather experienced inconvenience from its cessation,
-and only felt annoyed when any period of rest arrived and stopped it.
-Sunday morning, instead of favouring repose, made them restless; and
-when they removed to another part of the town, beyond the reach of
-the sound, sleep was unattainable in the morning for some weeks, till
-they got accustomed to the quiescence of their new neighbourhood. An
-old gentleman once told me that, having occasion in his youth to lodge
-for a short time in the West Bow, he found the incessant clanking
-extremely disagreeable, and at last entered into a paction with some
-of the workmen in his immediate neighbourhood, who promised to let him
-have another hour of quiet sleep in the mornings for the consideration
-of some such matter as half-a-crown to drink on Saturday night. The
-next day happening (out of his knowledge) to be some species of Saint
-Monday, his annoyers did not work at all; but such was the force of a
-habit acquired even in a week or little more, that our friend awoke
-precisely at the moment when the hammers used to commence; and he was
-glad to get his bargain cancelled as soon as possible, for fear of
-another morning’s want of disturbance.
-
-
-OLD ASSEMBLY-ROOM.
-
-At the first angle of the Bow, on the west side of the street, is a
-tall picturesque-looking house, which tradition points to as having
-been the first place where the fashionables of Edinburgh held their
-dancing assemblies. Over the door is a well-cut sculpture of the arms
-of the Somerville family, together with the initials P. J. and J.
-W., and the date 1602. These are memorials of the original owner of
-the mansion, a certain Peter Somerville, a wealthy citizen, at one
-time filling a dignified situation in the magistracy, and father of
-Bartholomew Somerville, who was a noted benefactor to the then infant
-university of Edinburgh. The architrave also bears a legend (the title
-of the eleventh psalm):
-
- IN DOMINO CONFIDO.
-
-Ascending by the narrow spiral stair, we come to the second floor, now
-occupied by a dealer in wool, but presenting such appearances as leave
-no doubt that it once consisted of a single lofty wainscoted room, with
-a carved oak ceiling. Here, then, did the fair ladies whom Allan Ramsay
-and William Hamilton celebrate meet for the recreation of dancing with
-their toupeed and deep-skirted beaux. There in that little side-room,
-formed by an _outshot_ from the building, did the merry sons of Euterpe
-retire to _rosin their bows_ during the intervals of the performance.
-Alas! dark are the walls which once glowed with festive light; burdened
-is that floor, not with twinkling feet, but with the most sluggish of
-inanimate substances. And as for the fiddlers-room—enough:
-
- ‘A merry place it was in days of yore,
- But something ails it now—the place is cursed.’[31]
-
-[Illustration: Old Assembly-Room.]
-
-Dancing, although said to be a favourite amusement and exercise of the
-Scottish people, has always been discountenanced, more or less, in the
-superior circles of society, or only indulged after a very abstemious
-and rigid fashion, until a comparatively late age. Everything that
-could be called public or promiscuous amusement was held in abhorrence
-by the Presbyterians, and only struggled through a desultory and
-degraded existence by the favour of the Jacobites, who have always
-been a less strait-laced part of the community. Thus there was nothing
-like a conventional system of dancing in Edinburgh till the year 1710,
-when at length a private association was commenced under the name of
-‘the Assembly;’ and probably its first quarters were in this humble
-domicile. The persecution which it experienced from rigid thinkers and
-the uninstructed populace of that age would appear to have been very
-great. On one occasion, we are told, the company were assaulted by an
-infuriated rabble, and the door of their hall perforated with red-hot
-spits.[32] Allan Ramsay, who was the friend of all amusements, which
-he conceived to tend only to cheer this sublunary scene of care, thus
-alludes to the Assembly:
-
- ‘Sic as against the Assembly speak,
- The rudest sauls betray,
- When matrons noble, wise, and meek,
- Conduct the healthfu’ play;
- Where they appear nae vice daur keek,
- But to what’s guid gies way,
- Like night, sune as the morning creek
- Has ushered in the day.
-
- Dear E’nburgh, shaw thy gratitude,
- And o’ sic friends mak sure,
- Wha strive to mak our minds less rude,
- And help our wants to cure;
- Acting a generous part and guid,
- In bounty to the poor:
- Sic virtues, if right understood,
- Should every heart allure.’
-
-We can easily see from this, and other symptoms, that the Assembly
-had to make many sacrifices to the spirit which sought to abolish it.
-In reality, the dancing was conducted under such severe rules as to
-render the whole affair more like a night at La Trappe than anything
-else. So lately as 1753, when the Assembly had fallen under the control
-of a set of directors, and was much more of a public affair than
-formerly, we find Goldsmith giving the following graphic account of its
-meetings in a letter to a friend in his own country. The author of the
-_Deserted Village_ was now studying the medical profession, it must be
-recollected, at the university of Edinburgh:
-
-‘Let me say something of their balls, which are very frequent here.
-When a stranger enters the dancing-hall, he sees one end of the room
-taken up with the ladies, who sit dismally in a group by themselves;
-on the other end stand their pensive partners that are to be; but no
-more intercourse between the sexes than between two countries at war.
-The ladies, indeed, may ogle, and the gentlemen sigh, but an embargo is
-laid upon any closer commerce. At length, to interrupt hostilities, the
-lady-directress, intendant, or what you will, pitches on a gentleman
-and a lady to walk a minuet, which they perform with a formality
-approaching to despondence. After five or six couple have thus walked
-the gauntlet, all stand up to country-dances, each gentleman furnished
-with a partner from the aforesaid lady-directress. So they dance much,
-and say nothing, and thus concludes our Assembly. I told a Scotch
-gentleman that such a profound silence resembled the ancient procession
-of the Roman matrons in honour of Ceres; and the Scotch gentleman told
-me (and, faith, I believe he was right) that I was a very great pedant
-for my pains.’
-
-In the same letter, however, Goldsmith allows the beauty of the women
-and the good-breeding of the men.
-
-It may add to the curiosity of the whole affair, that when the Assembly
-was reconstituted in February 1746, after several years of cessation,
-the first of a set of regulations hung up in the hall[33] was: ‘_No
-lady to be admitted in a night-gown, and no gentleman in boots_.’ The
-eighth rule was: ‘No misses in skirts and jackets, robe-coats, nor
-stay-bodied gowns, to be allowed to dance in country-dances, but in a
-sett by themselves.’
-
-In all probability it was in this very dingy house that Goldsmith
-beheld the scene he has so well described. At least it appears that the
-improved Assembly Room in Bell’s Wynd (which has latterly served as a
-part of the accommodations of the Commercial Bank) was not built till
-1766.[34] Arnot, in his _History of Edinburgh_, describes the Assembly
-Room in Bell’s Wynd as very inconvenient, which was the occasion of the
-present one being built in George Street in 1784.
-
-
-PAUL ROMIEU.
-
-At this angle of the Bow the original city-wall crossed the line of the
-street, and there was, accordingly, a gate at this spot,[35] of which
-the only existing memorial is one of the hooks for the suspension of
-the hinges, fixed in the front wall of a house, at the height of about
-five feet from the ground. It is from the arch forming this gateway
-that the street takes its name, _bow_ being an old word for an arch.
-The house immediately _without_ this ancient port, on the east side of
-the street, was occupied, about the beginning of the last century, and
-perhaps at an earlier period, by Paul Romieu, an eminent watchmaker,
-supposed to have been one of the French refugees driven over to this
-country in consequence of the revocation of the Edict of Nantes. This
-is the more likely, as he seems, from the workmanship of his watches,
-to have been a contemporary of Tompion, the famous London horologist
-of the reign of Charles II. In the front of the house, upon the third
-story, there is still to be seen the remains of a curious piece of
-mechanism—namely, a gilt ball representing the moon, which was made to
-revolve by means of a clock.[36]
-
-
-‘HE THAT THOLES OVERCOMES.’
-
-Pursuing our way down the steep and devious street, we pass an antique
-wooden-faced house, bearing the odd name of the _Mahogany Land_,
-and just before turning the second corner, pause before a stone one
-of equally antiquated structure,[37] having a wooden-screened outer
-stair. Over the door at the head of this stair is a legend in very old
-lettering—certainly not later than 1530—and hardly to be deciphered.
-With difficulty we make it out to be:
-
- HE YT THOLIS OVERCVMMIS.
-
-_He that tholes_ (that is, bears) _overcomes_; equivalent to what
-Virgil says:
-
- ‘Quidquid erit, superanda omnis fortuna ferendo est.’
-
- _Æneid_, v.
-
-We may safely speculate on this inscription being antecedent in date to
-the Reformation, as after that period merely moral apothegms were held
-in little regard, and none but biblical inscriptions were actually put
-upon the fronts of houses.
-
-[Illustration: Mahogany Land, West Bow.]
-
-On the other side of the street is a small shop (marked No. 69), now
-occupied by a dealer in small miscellaneous wares,[38] and which was,
-a hundred years ago, open for a nearly similar kind of business, under
-the charge of a Mrs Jeffrey. When, on the night of the 7th September
-1736, the rioters hurried their victim Porteous down the West Bow, with
-the design of executing him in the Grassmarket, they called at this
-shop to provide themselves with a rope. The woman asked if it was to
-hang Porteous, and when they answered in the affirmative, she told them
-they were welcome to all she had of that article. They coolly took
-off what they required, and laid a guinea on the counter as payment;
-ostentatious to mark that they ‘did all in honour.’
-
-
-PROVOST STEWART’S HOUSE—DONALDSONS THE BOOKSELLERS.
-
-The upper floors of the house which looks down into the Grassmarket
-formed the mansion of Mr Archibald Stewart, Lord Provost of Edinburgh
-in 1745. This is an abode of singular structure and arrangements,
-having its principal access by a close out of another street, and
-only a postern one into the Bow, and being full of curious little
-wainscoted rooms, concealed closets, and secret stairs. In one
-apartment there is a cabinet, or what appears a cabinet, about three
-feet high: this, when cross-examined, turns out to be the mask of a
-trap-stair. Only a smuggler, one would think, or a gentleman conducting
-treasonable negotiations, could have bethought him of building such a
-house. Whether Provost Stewart, who was a thorough Jacobite, was the
-designer of these contrivances, I cannot tell; but fireside gossip
-used to have a strange story as to his putting his trap-stair to use
-on one important occasion. It was said that, during the occupation of
-Edinburgh by the Highland army in ’45, his lordship was honoured one
-evening with a secret visit from the Prince and some of his principal
-officers. The situation was critical, for close by was the line between
-the Highland guards and the beleaguered environs of the Castle.
-Intelligence of the Prince’s movements being obtained by the governor
-of the fortress, a party was sent to seize him in the provost’s house.
-They made their approach by the usual access from the Castle-hill
-Street; but an alarm preceded them, and before they obtained admission,
-the provost’s visitors had vanished through the mysterious cabinet, and
-made their exit by the back-door. What real foundation there may have
-been for this somewhat wild-looking story I do not pretend to say.
-
-The house was at a subsequent time the residence of Alexander Donaldson
-the bookseller, whose practice of reprinting modern English books in
-Edinburgh, and his consequent litigation with the London booksellers,
-attracted much attention sixty years since. Printing and publishing
-were in a low state in Edinburgh before the time of Donaldson. In
-the frank language of Hugo Arnot: ‘The printing of newspapers and of
-school-books, of the fanatick effusions of Presbyterian clergymen, and
-the law papers of the Court of Session, joined to the patent Bible
-printing, gave a scanty employment to four printing-offices.’ About
-the middle of the century, the English law of copyright not extending
-to Scotland, some of the booksellers began to reprint the productions
-of the English authors of the day; for example, the _Rambler_ was
-regularly reproduced in this manner in Edinburgh, with no change but
-the addition of English translations of the Latin mottoes, which were
-supplied by Mr James Elphinstone. From this and minor causes, it came
-to pass that, in 1779, there were twenty-seven printing-offices in
-Edinburgh. The most active man in this trade was Alexander Donaldson,
-who likewise reprinted in Edinburgh, and sold in London, English books
-of which the author’s fourteen years’ copyright had expired, and which
-were then only protected by a usage of the London trade, rendering it
-dishonourable as between man and man, among themselves, to reprint a
-book which had hitherto been the assigned property of one of their
-number. Disregarding the rule of his fraternity, Donaldson set up a
-shop in the Strand for the sale of his cheap Edinburgh editions of the
-books of expired copyright. They met an immense sale, and proved of
-obvious service to the public, especially to those of limited means;
-though, as Johnson remarked, this made Donaldson ‘no better than Robin
-Hood, who robbed the rich in order to give to the poor.’ In reality,
-the London booksellers had no right beyond one of class sentiment,
-and this was fully found when they wrestled with Mr Donaldson at law.
-Waiving all question on this point, Donaldson may be considered as a
-sort of morning-star of that reformation which has resulted in the
-universal cheapening of literary publications. Major Topham, in 1775,
-speaks of a complete set of the English classics which he was bringing
-out, ‘in a very handsome binding,’ at the rate of one and sixpence a
-volume!
-
-[Donaldson, in 1763, started a twice-a-week newspaper under the name of
-the _Edinburgh Advertiser_, which was for a long course of years the
-prominent journal on the Conservative side, and eminently lucrative,
-chiefly through its multitude of advertisements. All his speculations
-being of a prosperous nature, he acquired considerable wealth, which
-he left to his son, the late Mr James Donaldson, by whom the newspaper
-was conducted for many years. James added largely to his wealth by
-successful speculations in the funds, where he held so large a sum
-that the rise of a per cent. made him a thousand pounds richer than he
-had been the day before. Prompted by the example of Heriot and Watson,
-and partly, perhaps, by that modification of egotism which makes
-us love to be kept in the remembrance of future generations, James
-Donaldson, at his death in 1830, devoted the mass of his fortune—about
-£240,000—for the foundation of a _hospital_ for the maintenance and
-education of poor children of both sexes; and a structure for the
-purpose was erected, on a magnificent plan furnished by Mr Playfair, at
-an expense, it is said, of about £120,000.
-
-The old house in the West Bow—which was possessed by both of these
-remarkable men in succession, and the scene of their entertainments to
-the literary men of the last age, with some of whom Alexander Donaldson
-lived on terms of intimacy—stood unoccupied for several years before
-1824, when it was burnt down. New buildings now occupy its site.]
-
-
-TEMPLARS’ LANDS.
-
-We have now arrived at the _Bow-foot_, about which there is nothing
-remarkable to be told, except that here, and along one side of the
-Grassmarket, are several houses marked by a cross on some conspicuous
-part—either an actual iron cross, or one represented in sculpture.
-This seems a strange circumstance in a country where it was even
-held doubtful, twenty years ago, whether one could be placed as an
-ornament on the top of a church tower. The explanation is that these
-houses were built upon lands originally the property of the Knights
-Templars, and the cross has ever since been kept up upon them, not
-from any veneration for that ancient society, neither upon any kind
-of religious ground; the sole object has been to fix in remembrance
-certain legal titles and privileges which have been transmitted into
-secular hands from that source, and which are to this day productive of
-solid benefits. A hundred years ago, the houses thus marked were held
-as part of the barony of Drem in Haddingtonshire, the baron of which
-used to hold courts in them occasionally; and here were harboured many
-persons not free of the city corporations, to the great annoyance of
-the adherents of local monopoly. At length, the abolition of heritable
-jurisdictions in 1747 extinguished this little barony, but not
-certain other legal rights connected with the _Templar Lands_, which,
-however, it might be more troublesome to explain than advantageous
-to know.
-
-[Illustration: GRASSMARKET
-from west end of Cowgate.
-
-PAGE 50.]
-
-
-THE GALLOWS STONE.
-
-In a central situation at the east end of the Grassmarket, there
-remained till very lately a massive block of sandstone, having a
-quadrangular hole in the middle, being the stone which served as a
-socket for the gallows, when this was the common place of execution.
-Instead of the stone, there is now only a St Andrew’s cross, indicated
-by an arrangement of the paving-stones.
-
-This became the regular scene of executions after the Restoration, and
-so continued till the year 1784. Hence arises the sense of the Duke of
-Rothes’s remark when a Covenanting prisoner proved obdurate: ‘Then e’en
-let him glorify God in the Grassmarket!’—the deaths of that class of
-victims being always signalised by psalm-singing on the scaffold. Most
-of the hundred persons who suffered for that cause in Edinburgh during
-the reigns of Charles II. and James II. breathed their last pious
-aspirations at this spot; but several of the most notable, including
-the Marquis and Earl of Argyll, were executed at the Cross.
-
-As a matter of course, this was the scene of the Porteous riot in 1736,
-and of the subsequent murder of Porteous by the mob. The rioters,
-wishing to despatch him as near to the place of his alleged crime as
-possible, selected for the purpose a dyer’s pole which stood on the
-south side of the street, exactly opposite to the gallows stone.
-
-Some of the Edinburgh executioners have been so far notable men as
-to be the subject of traditionary fame. In the reign of Charles II.,
-Alexander Cockburn, the hangman of Edinburgh, and who must have
-officiated at the exits of many of the ‘martyrs’ in the Grassmarket,
-was found guilty of the murder of a bluegown, or privileged beggar, and
-accordingly suffered that fate which he had so often meted out to other
-men. One Mackenzie, the hangman of Stirling, whom Cockburn had traduced
-and endeavoured to thrust out of office, was the triumphant executioner
-of the sentence.
-
-Another Edinburgh hangman of this period was a reduced gentleman,
-the last of a respectable family who had possessed an estate in the
-neighbourhood of Melrose. He had been a profligate in early life,
-squandered the whole of his patrimony, and at length, for the sake
-of subsistence, was compelled to accept this wretched office, which
-in those days must have been unusually obnoxious to popular odium,
-on account of the frequent executions of innocent and religious men.
-Notwithstanding his extreme degradation, this unhappy reprobate could
-not altogether forget his original station and his former tastes and
-habits. He would occasionally resume the garb of a gentleman, and
-mingle in the parties of citizens who played at golf in the evenings on
-Bruntsfield Links. Being at length recognised, he was chased from the
-ground with shouts of execration and loathing, which affected him so
-much that he retired to the solitude of the King’s Park, and was next
-day found dead at the bottom of a precipice, over which he was supposed
-to have thrown himself in despair. This rock was afterwards called the
-_Hangman’s Craig_.
-
-In the year 1700, when the Scottish people were in a state of great
-excitement on account of the interference of the English government
-against their expedition to Darien, some persons were apprehended for
-a riot in the city of Edinburgh, and sentenced to be whipped and put
-upon the pillory. As these persons had acted under the influence of
-the general feeling, they excited the sympathy of the people in an
-extraordinary degree, and even the hangman was found to have scruples
-about the propriety of punishing them. Upon the pillory they were
-presented with flowers and wine; and when arrayed for flagellation, the
-executioner made a mere mockery of his duty, never once permitting his
-whip to touch their backs. The magistrates were very indignant at the
-conduct of their servant, and sentenced him to be scourged in his turn.
-However, when the Haddington executioner was brought to officiate upon
-his metropolitan brother, he was so much frightened by the threatening
-aspect of the mob that he thought it prudent to make his escape
-through a neighbouring alley. The laugh was thus turned against the
-magistrates, who, it was said, would require to get a third executioner
-to punish the Haddington man. They prudently dropped the whole matter.
-
-At a somewhat later period, the Edinburgh official was a man named John
-Dalgleish. He it was who acted at the execution of Wilson the smuggler
-in 1736, and who is alluded to so frequently in the tale of the _Heart
-of Mid-Lothian_. Dalgleish, I have heard, was esteemed, before his
-taking up this office, as a person in creditable circumstances. He is
-memorable for one pithy saying. Some one asking him how he contrived in
-whipping a criminal to adjust the weight of his arm, on which, it is
-obvious, much must depend: ‘Oh,’ said he, ‘I lay on the lash according
-to my conscience.’ Either Jock, or some later official, was remarked to
-be a regular _hearer_ at the Tolbooth Church. As no other person would
-sit in the same seat, he always had a pew to himself. He regularly
-communicated; but here the exclusiveness of his fellow-creatures also
-marked itself, and the clergyman was obliged to serve a separate table
-for the hangman, after the rest of the congregation had retired from
-the church.
-
-The last Edinburgh executioner of whom any particular notice has been
-taken by the public was John High, commonly called Jock Heich, who
-acceded to the office in the year 1784, and died so lately as 1817.
-High had been originally induced to undertake this degrading duty in
-order to escape the punishment due to a petty offence—that of stealing
-poultry. I remember him living in his official mansion in a lane
-adjoining to the Cowgate—a small wretched-looking house, assigned by
-the magistrates for the residence of this race of officers, and which
-has only been removed within the last few years, to make way for the
-extension of the buildings of the Parliament Square. He had then a
-second wife, whom he used to beat unmercifully. Since Jock’s days, no
-executioner has been so conspicuous as to be known by name. The fame of
-the occupation seems somehow to have departed.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I have now finished my account of the West Bow; a most antiquated
-place, yet not without its virtues even as to matters of the present
-day. Humble as the street appears, many of its shopkeepers and other
-inhabitants are of a very respectable character. Bankruptcies are said
-to be very rare in the Bow. Most of the traders are of old standing,
-and well-to-do in the world; few but what are the proprietors of
-their own shops and dwellings, which, in such a community, indicates
-something like wealth. The smarter and more dashing men of Princes
-Street and the Bridges may smile at their homely externals and darksome
-little places of business, or may not even pay them the compliment
-of thinking of them at all; yet, while they boast not of their
-‘warerooms,’ or their troops of ‘young men,’ or their plate-glass
-windows, they at least feel no apprehension from the approach of
-rent-day, and rarely experience tremulations on the subject of bills.
-Perhaps, if strict investigation were made, the ‘bodies’ of the Bow
-could show more comfortable balances at the New Year than at least a
-half of the sublime men who pay an income by way of rental in George
-Street. Not one of them but is respectfully known by a good sum on the
-creditor side at Sir William Forbes’s; not one but can stand at his
-shop-door, with his hands in his pockets and his hat on, not unwilling,
-it may be, to receive custom, yet not liable to be greatly distressed
-if the customer go by. Such, perhaps, were shopkeepers in the golden
-age![39]
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[17] Fellows.
-
-[18] Busy.
-
-[19] Not improbably this was done in a spirit of literal obedience to
-the injunction (Matthew vi. 6): ‘Thou, when thou prayest, enter into
-thy closet.’ Commentators on this passage mention that every Jewish
-house had a place of secret devotion built over the porch.
-
-[20] When Colonel Gardiner occupied it the house was known as Olive
-Bank. It was later changed to Bankton House by Andrew Macdowall, who,
-when raised to the Bench in 1755, took the title of Lord Bankton.
-
-[21] Bankton House has been burned down and rebuilt since this was
-written.
-
-[22] _History of Edinburgh_, p. 205, note.
-
-[23] Before Major Weir took up house in the West Bow he is said to have
-lodged in the Cowgate, where he had as a fellow-lodger the fanatic
-Mitchell (Ravaillac _redivivus_), who attempted to shoot Archbishop
-Sharpe.
-
-[24] Sir Andrew Ramsay was provost of the city, first from 1654 till
-1657, and then continuously for eleven years, 1662-73. It was he
-who obtained from the king the title of Lord Provost for the chief
-magistrate, and secured precedence for him next to the Lord Mayor of
-London.
-
-[25] The Rev. Mr Frazer, minister of Wardlaw, in his _Divine
-Providences_ (MS. Adv. Lib.), dated 1670.
-
-[26] _Satan’s Invisible World Discovered._
-
-[27] The causeway. A skirmish fought between the Hamiltons and
-Douglases, upon the High Street of Edinburgh, in the year 1515, was
-popularly termed _Cleanse the Causeway_.
-
-[28] Cane.
-
-[29] Hamstringed.
-
-[30] _Memorie of the Somervilles_, vol. ii. p. 271.
-
-[31] This house was demolished in 1836.
-
-[32] Jackson’s _History of the Stage_, p. 418.
-
-[33] See _Notes from the Records of the Assembly Rooms of Edinburgh_.
-Edinburgh: 1842. In the eighteenth century a lady’s ‘night-gown’ was a
-special kind of evening-dress, often of silk brocade, &c., other than
-full dress; and a gentleman’s night-gown was a dressing-gown, not a
-bed-garment.
-
-[34] It was a ball in the room of the Old Assembly Close building
-which Goldsmith describes in the letter quoted, and in which public
-assemblies were revived in 1746. The new rooms in Bell’s Wynd were
-opened in 1756.
-
-[35] Called the ‘Ovir Bow Port.’ It stood about the line of the present
-Victoria Terrace.
-
-[36] This house was demolished in 1835, to make way for a passage
-towards George IV. Bridge.
-
-[37] Taken down in 1839.
-
-[38] Demolished in 1833.
-
-[39] The narrow, crooked West Bow, descending very steeply from the
-Lawnmarket to the Grassmarket, has been almost wholly obliterated by
-Victoria Street, a comparatively wide and gradually sloping street
-which crosses the line of the old West Bow from George IV. Bridge.
-Victoria Street was built in 1835-40; and only a few houses on one side
-of the head of the Bow still stand, and these have been rebuilt.
-
-
-
-
-JAMES’S COURT.
-
- DAVID HUME—JAMES BOSWELL—LORD FOUNTAINHALL.
-
-
-James’s Court, a well-known pile of building of great altitude at
-the head of the Earthen Mound, was erected about 1725-27 by James
-Brownhill,[40] a joiner, as a speculation, and was for some years
-regarded as the _quartier_ of greatest dignity and importance in
-Edinburgh. The inhabitants, who were all persons of consequence in
-society, although each had but a single floor of four or five rooms and
-a kitchen, kept a clerk to record their names and proceedings, had a
-scavenger of their own, clubbed in many public measures, and had balls
-and parties among themselves exclusively. In those days it must have
-been quite a step in life when a man was able to fix his family in one
-of the _flats_ of James’s Court.
-
-Amongst the many notables who have harboured here, only two or three
-can be said to have preserved their notability till our day, the chief
-being David Hume and James Boswell.
-
-[Illustration: Riddel’s Land, Lawnmarket.]
-
-
-DAVID HUME.
-
-The first fixed residence of David Hume in Edinburgh appears to have
-been in _Riddel’s Land_, Lawnmarket, near the head of the West Bow.
-He commenced housekeeping there in 1751, when, according to his own
-account, he ‘removed from the country to the town, the true scene for a
-man of letters.’ It was while in Riddel’s Land that he published his
-_Political Discourses_, and obtained the situation of librarian to the
-Faculty of Advocates. In this place also he commenced the writing of
-his _History of England_. He dates from Riddel’s Land in January 1753,
-but in June we find him removed to _Jack’s Land_,[41] a somewhat airier
-situation in the Canongate, where he remained for nine years. Excepting
-only the small portion composed in the Lawnmarket mansion, the whole
-of the _History of England_ was written in Jack’s Land; a fact which
-will probably raise some interest respecting that locality. It is, in
-reality, a plain, middle-aged fabric, of no particular appearance, and
-without a single circumstance of a curious nature connected with it,
-besides the somewhat odd one that the continuator of the _History_,
-Smollett, lived, some time after, in his sister’s house precisely
-opposite.
-
-[Illustration: Jack’s Land, Canongate.]
-
-Hume removed at Whitsunday 1762 to a house which he purchased in
-James’s Court—the eastern portion of the third floor in the west
-stair (counting from the level of the court). This was such a step
-as a man would take in those days as a consequence of improvement in
-his circumstances. The philosopher had lived in James’s Court but a
-short time, when he was taken to France as secretary to the embassy.
-In his absence, which lasted several years, his house was occupied
-by Dr Blair, who here had a son of the Duke of Northumberland as a
-pupil. It is interesting to find Hume, some time after, writing to his
-friend Dr Ferguson from the midst of the gaieties of Paris: ‘I am
-sensible that I am misplaced, and I wish twice or thrice a day for _my
-easy-chair and my retreat in James’s Court_.’ Then he adds a beautiful
-sentiment: ‘Never think, dear Ferguson, that as long as you are master
-of your own fireside and your own time, you can be unhappy, or that
-any other circumstance can add to your enjoyment.’[42] In one of his
-letters to Blair he speaks minutely of his house: ‘Never put a fire in
-the south room with the red paper. It was so warm of itself that all
-last winter, which was a very severe one, I lay with a single blanket;
-and frequently, upon coming in at midnight starving with cold, have
-sat down and read for an hour, as if I had had a stove in the room.’
-From 1763 till 1766 he lived in high diplomatic situations at Paris;
-and thinking to settle there for life, for the sake of the agreeable
-society, gave orders to sell his house in Edinburgh. He informs us,
-in a letter to the Countess de Boufflers (_General Correspondence_,
-4to, 1820, p. 231), that he was prevented by a singular accident
-from carrying his intention into effect. After writing a letter to
-Edinburgh for the purpose of disposing of his house, and leaving it
-with his Parisian landlord, he set out to pass his Christmas with
-the Countess de Boufflers at L’Isle Adam; but being driven back by a
-snowstorm, which blocked up the roads, he found on his return that the
-letter had not been sent to the post-house. More deliberate thoughts
-then determined him to keep up his Edinburgh mansion, thinking that,
-if any affairs should call him to his native country, ‘it would be
-very inconvenient not to have a house to retire to.’ On his return,
-therefore, in 1766, he re-entered into possession of his _flat_ in
-James’s Court, but was soon again called from it by an invitation
-from Mr Conway to be an under-secretary of state. At length, in 1769,
-he returned permanently to his native city, in possession of what he
-thought opulence—a thousand a year. We find him immediately writing
-from his retreat in James’s Court to his friend Adam Smith, then
-commencing his great work _On the Wealth of Nations_ in the quiet of
-his mother’s house at Kirkcaldy: ‘I am glad to have come within sight
-of you, and to have a view of Kirkcaldy from my windows; but I wish
-also to be within speaking-terms of you,’ &c. To another person he
-writes: ‘I live still, and must for a twelvemonth, in my old house in
-James’s Court, which is very cheerful, and even elegant, but too small
-to display my great talent for cookery, the science to which I intend
-to addict the remaining years of my life!’
-
-Hume now built a superior house for himself in the New Town, which was
-then little beyond its commencement, selecting a site adjoining to St
-Andrew Square. The superintendence of this work was an amusement to
-him. A story is related in more than one way regarding the manner in
-which a denomination was conferred upon the street in which this house
-is situated. Perhaps, if it be premised that a corresponding street at
-the other angle of St Andrew Square is called _St Andrew Street_—a
-natural enough circumstance with reference to the square, whose title
-was determined on in the plan—it will appear likely that the choosing
-of ‘St David Street’ for that in which Hume’s house stood was not
-originally designed as a jest at his expense, though a second thought,
-and the whim of his friends, might quickly give it that application.
-The story, as told by Mr Burton, is as follows: ‘When the house was
-built and inhabited by Hume, but while yet the street of which it was
-the commencement had no name, a witty young lady, daughter of Baron
-Ord, chalked on the wall the words, ST DAVID STREET. The allusion was
-very obvious. Hume’s “lass,” judging that it was not meant in honour or
-reverence, ran into the house much excited, to tell her master how he
-was made game of. “Never mind, lassie,” he said, “many a better man has
-been made a saint of before.”’
-
-That Hume was a native of Edinburgh is well known. One could wish
-to know the spot of his birth; but it is not now perhaps possible
-to ascertain it. The nearest approach made to the fact is from
-intelligence conveyed by a memorandum in his father’s handwriting among
-the family papers, where he speaks of ‘my son David, born in the _Tron
-Church parish_’—a district comprehending a large square clump of town
-between the High Street and Cowgate, east of the site of the church
-itself.
-
-One of Hume’s most intimate friends amongst the other sex was Mrs
-Cockburn, author of one of the beautiful songs called _The Flowers of
-the Forest_. While he was in France in 1764, she writes to him from
-_Baird’s Close,[43] Castle-hill_: ‘The cloven foot for which thou
-art worshipped I despise; yet I remember _thee_ with affection. I
-remember that, in spite of vain philosophy, of dark doubts, of toilsome
-learning, God has stamped his image of benignity so strong upon thy
-_heart_, that not all the labours of thy head could efface it.’ After
-Hume’s return to Edinburgh, he kept up his acquaintance with this
-spirited and amiable woman. The late Mr Alexander Young, W.S., had some
-reminiscences of parties which he attended when a boy at her house, and
-at which the philosopher was present. Hume came in one evening behind
-time for her _petit souper_, when, seeing her bustling to get something
-for him to eat, he called out: ‘Now, no trouble, if you please, about
-quality; for you know I’m only a glutton, not an epicure.’ Mr Young
-attended at a dinner where, besides Hume, there were present Lord
-Monboddo and some other learned personages. Mrs Cockburn was then
-living in the neat first floor of a house at the end of Crighton
-Street, with windows looking along the Potterrow. She had a son of
-eccentric habits, in middle life, or rather elderly, who came in during
-the dinner tipsy, and going into a bedroom, locked himself in, went to
-bed, and fell asleep. The company in time made a move for departure,
-when it was discovered that their hats, cloaks, and greatcoats were all
-locked up in Mr Cockburn’s room. The door was knocked at and shaken,
-but no answer. What was to be done? At length Mrs Cockburn had no
-alternative from sending out to her neighbours to borrow a supply of
-similar integuments, which was soon procured. There was then such fun
-in fitting the various _savants_ with suitable substitutes for their
-own proper gear! Hume, for instance, with a dreadnought riding-coat;
-Monboddo with a shabby old hat, as unlike his own neat chapeau as
-possible! In the highest exaltation of spirits did these two men of
-genius at length proceed homeward along the Potterrow, Horse Wynd,
-Assembly Close, &c., making the old echoes merry with their peals of
-laughter at the strange appearance which they respectively made.[44]
-
-I lately inspected Hume’s _cheerful and elegant_ mansion in James’s
-Court, and found it divided amongst three or four tenants in humble
-life, each possessing little more than a single room. It was amusing
-to observe that what had been the dining-room and drawing-room towards
-the north were _each_ provided with one of those little side oratories
-which have been described elsewhere as peculiar to a period in
-Edinburgh house-building, being designed for private devotion. Hume
-living in a house with two private chapels!
-
-
-JAMES BOSWELL.
-
-It appears that one of the immediately succeeding leaseholders of
-Hume’s house in James’s Court was James Boswell. Mr Burton has made
-this tolerably clear (_Life of Hume_, ii. 137), and he proceeds to
-speculate on the fact of Boswell having there entertained his friend
-Johnson. ‘Would Boswell communicate the fact, or tell what manner
-of man was the landlord of the habitation into which he had, under
-the guise of hospitality, entrapped the arch-intolerant? Who shall
-appreciate the mental conflict which Boswell may have experienced on
-this occasion?’ It appears, however, that by the time when Johnson
-visited Boswell in James’s Court, the latter had removed into a better
-and larger mansion right below and on the level of the court—namely,
-that now (1846) occupied by Messrs Pillans as a printing-office. This
-was an extraordinary house in its day; for it consisted of two floors
-connected by an internal stair. Here it was that the Ursa Major of
-literature stayed for a few days, in August 1773, while preparing to
-set out to the Hebrides, and also for some time after his return. Here
-did he receive the homage of the trembling literati of Edinburgh; here,
-after handling them in his rough manner, did he relax in play with
-little Miss Veronica, whom Boswell promised to consider peculiarly in
-his will for showing a liking to so estimable a man. What makes all
-this evident is a passage in a letter of Samuel himself to Mrs Thrale
-(Edinburgh, August 17), where he says: ‘Boswell has very handsome and
-spacious rooms, level with the ground on one side of the house, and on
-the other four stories high.’ Boswell was only tenant of the mansion.
-It affords a curious idea of the importance which formerly attached to
-some of these Old Town residences, when we learn that this was part of
-the entailed estate of the Macdowalls of Logan, one of whom sold it,
-by permission of an act of parliament, to redeem the land-tax upon his
-country property.
-
-Boswell ceased to be a citizen of Edinburgh in 1785, when he was
-pleased to venture before the English bar. He is little remembered
-amongst the elder inhabitants of our city; but the late Mr William
-Macfarlane, the well-known small-debt judge, told me that there was
-_this_ peculiarity about him—it was impossible to look in his face
-without being moved by the comicality which always reigned upon it. He
-was one of those men whose very look is provocative of mirth. Mr Robert
-Sym, W.S., who died in 1844, at an advanced age, remembered being at
-parties in this house in Boswell’s time.
-
-
-LORD FOUNTAINHALL.
-
-Before James’s Court was built, its site was occupied by certain
-closes, in one of which dwelt Lord Fountainhall, so distinguished as an
-able, liberal, and upright judge, and still more so by his industrious
-habits as a collector of historical memorabilia, and of the decisions
-of the Court of Session. Though it is considerably upwards of a century
-since Lord Fountainhall died,[45] a traditionary anecdote of his
-residence in this place has been handed down till the present time by a
-surprisingly small number of persons. The mother of the late Mr Gilbert
-Innes of Stow was a daughter of his lordship’s son, Sir Andrew Lauder,
-and she used to describe to her children the visits she used to pay to
-her venerable grandfather’s house, situated, as she said, where James’s
-Court now stands. She and her sister, a little girl like herself,
-always went with their maid on the Saturday afternoons, and were shown
-into the room where the aged judge was sitting—a room covered with
-gilt leather,[46] and containing many huge presses and cabinets, one
-of which was ornamented with a death’s-head at the top. After amusing
-themselves for an hour or two with his lordship, they used to get each
-a shilling from him, and retire to the anteroom, where, as Mrs Innes
-well recollected, the waiting-maid invariably pounced upon their money,
-and appropriated it to her own use. It is curious to think that the
-mother of a gentlewoman living in 1839 (for only then did Miss Innes
-of Stow leave this earthly scene) should have been familiar with a
-lawyer who entered at the bar soon after the Restoration (1668), and
-acted as counsel for the unfortunate Earl of Argyll in 1681; a being of
-an age as different in every respect from the present as the wilds of
-North America are different from the long-practised lands of Lothian or
-Devonshire.
-
-The judicial designation of Lord Fountainhall was adopted from a
-place belonging to him in East Lothian, now the property of his
-representative, Sir Thomas Dick Lauder. The original name of the place
-was Woodhead. When the able lawyer came to the bench, and, as usual,
-thought of a new appellative of a territorial kind—‘Woodhead—Lord
-Woodhead,’ thought he; ‘that will never do for a judge!’ So the name of
-the place was changed to Fountainhall, and he became Lord Fountainhall
-accordingly.
-
-[1868.—The western half of James’s Court having been destroyed by
-accidental fire, the reader will now find a new building on the spot.
-The houses rendered interesting by the names of Blair, Boswell,
-Johnson, and Hume are consequently no more.]
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[40] From whom it got its name—James’s Court.
-
-[41] A ‘land’ still standing (1912) as it was when Hume lived there. It
-was also the residence of the Countess of Eglinton when she left the
-Stamp Office Close in the High Street. See p. 192.
-
-[42] Burton’s _Life of Hume_, ii. 173.
-
-[43] Formerly called Blair’s Close (p. 19). The name was altered to
-Baird’s Close when the Gordon property passed into the possession of
-Baird of Newbyth.
-
-[44] Mrs Cockburn, writing to Miss Cumming at Balcarres, describes ‘a
-ball’ she gave in this house. ‘On Wednesday I gave a ball. How do ye
-think I contrived to stretch out this house to hold twenty-two people,
-and had nine couples always dancing? Yet this is true; it is also true
-that we had a table covered with divers eatables all the time, and
-that everybody ate when they were hungry and drank when they were dry,
-but nobody ever sat down.... Our fiddler sat where the cupboard is,
-and they danced in both rooms. The table was stuffed into the window
-and we had plenty of room. It made the bairns all very happy.’—_Mrs
-Cockburn’s Letters_, edited by T. Craig Brown.
-
-[45] His lordship died September 20, 1722 (Brunton and Haig’s
-_Historical Account of the Senators of the College of Justice_).
-
-[46] A stuff brought, I believe, from Spain, and which was at one time
-much in fashion in Scotland.
-
-
-
-
-STORY OF THE COUNTESS OF STAIR.
-
-
-[Illustration: Lady Stair’s House as Restored.]
-
-In a short alley leading between the Lawnmarket and the Earthen Mound,
-and called _Lady Stair’s Close_,[47] there is a substantial old
-mansion, presenting, in a sculptured stone over the doorway, a small
-coat-armorial, with the initials W. G. and G. S., the date 1622, and
-the legend:
-
- FEAR THE LORD, AND DEPART
- FROM EVILL.
-
-The letters refer to Sir William Gray of Pittendrum, the original
-proprietor of the house, and his wife. Within there are marks of good
-style, particularly in the lofty ceiling and an inner stair apart from
-the common one; but all has long been turned to common purposes; while
-it must be left to the imagination to realise the terraced garden which
-formerly descended towards the North Loch.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-This was the last residence of a lady conspicuous in Scottish society
-in the early part of the last century—the widow of the celebrated
-commander and diplomatist, John, Earl of Stair. Lady Eleanor Campbell
-was, by paternal descent, nearly related to one of the greatest
-historical figures of the preceding century, being the granddaughter
-of the Chancellor, Earl of Loudon, whose talents and influence
-on the Covenanting side were at one time believed to have nearly
-procured him the honour of a secret death at the command of Charles
-I. Her ladyship’s first adventure in matrimony led to a series of
-circumstances of a marvellous nature, which I shall set down exactly as
-they used to be related by friends of the lady in the last century. It
-was her lot, at an early age, to be united to James, Viscount Primrose,
-a man of the worst temper and most dissolute manners. Her ladyship, who
-had no small share of the old chancellor in her constitution, could
-have managed most men with ease, by dint of superior intellect and
-force of character; but the cruelty of Lord Primrose was too much for
-her. He treated her so barbarously that she had even reason to fear
-that he would some day put an end to her life. One morning she was
-dressing herself in her chamber, near an open window, when his lordship
-entered the room behind her with a drawn sword in his hand. He had
-opened the door softly, and although his face indicated a resolution of
-the most horrible nature, he still had the presence of mind to approach
-her with caution. Had she not caught a glimpse of his face and figure
-in the glass, he would in all probability have come near enough to
-execute his bloody purpose before she was aware or could have taken
-any measures to save herself. Fortunately, she perceived him in time
-to leap out of the open window into the street. Half-dressed as she
-was, she immediately, by a very laudable exertion of her natural good
-sense, went to the house of Lord Primrose’s mother, where she told her
-story, and demanded protection. That protection was at once extended;
-and it being now thought vain to attempt a reconciliation, they never
-afterwards lived together.
-
-Lord Primrose soon afterwards went abroad. During his absence, a
-foreign conjurer, or fortune-teller, came to Edinburgh, professing,
-among many other wonderful accomplishments, to be able to inform any
-person of the present condition or situation of any other person, at
-whatever distance, in whom the applicant might be interested. Lady
-Primrose was incited by curiosity to go with a female friend to the
-lodgings of the wise man in the Canongate, for the purpose of inquiring
-regarding the motions of her husband, of whom she had not heard for a
-considerable time. It was at night; and the two ladies went, with the
-tartan _screens_ or _plaids_ of their servants drawn over their faces
-by way of disguise. Lady Primrose having described the individual
-in whose fate she was interested, and having expressed a desire to
-know what he was at present doing, the conjurer led her to a large
-mirror, in which she distinctly perceived the appearance of the inside
-of a church, with a marriage-party arranged near the altar. To her
-astonishment, she recognised in the shadowy bridegroom no other than
-her husband. The magical scene was not exactly like a picture; or if
-so, it was rather like the live pictures of the stage than the dead
-and immovable delineations of the pencil. It admitted of additions
-to the persons represented, and of a progress of action. As the lady
-gazed on it, the ceremonial of the marriage seemed to proceed. The
-necessary arrangements had at last been made, the priest seemed to
-have pronounced the preliminary service; he was just on the point of
-bidding the bride and bridegroom join hands, when suddenly a gentleman,
-for whom the rest seemed to have waited a considerable time, and in
-whom Lady Primrose thought she recognised a brother of her own, then
-abroad, entered the church, and advanced hurriedly towards the party.
-The aspect of this person was at first only that of a friend who had
-been invited to attend the ceremony, and who had come too late; but as
-he advanced, the expression of his countenance and figure was altered.
-He stopped short; his face assumed a wrathful expression; he drew
-his sword, and rushed up to the bridegroom, who prepared to defend
-himself. The whole scene then became tumultuous and indistinct, and
-soon after vanished entirely away.[48]
-
-When Lady Primrose reached home she wrote a minute narrative of the
-whole transaction, to which she appended the day of the month on which
-she had seen the mysterious vision. This narrative she sealed up in the
-presence of a witness, and then deposited it in one of her drawers.
-Soon afterwards her brother returned from his travels, and came to
-visit her. She asked if, in the course of his wanderings, he had
-happened to see or hear anything of Lord Primrose. The young man only
-answered by saying that he wished he might never again hear the name of
-that detested personage mentioned. Lady Primrose, however, questioned
-him so closely that he at last confessed having met his lordship, and
-that under very strange circumstances. Having spent some time at one of
-the Dutch cities—it was either Amsterdam or Rotterdam—he had become
-acquainted with a rich merchant, who had a very beautiful daughter,
-his only child, and the heiress of his large fortune. One day his
-friend the merchant informed him that his daughter was about to be
-married to a Scottish gentleman, who had lately come to reside there.
-The nuptials were to take place in the course of a few days; and as he
-was a countryman of the bridegroom, he was invited to the wedding. He
-went accordingly, was a little too late for the commencement of the
-ceremony, but fortunately came in time to prevent the sacrifice of an
-amiable young lady to the greatest monster alive in human shape—his
-own brother-in-law, Lord Primrose!
-
-The story proceeds to say that although Lady Primrose had proved her
-willingness to believe in the magical delineations of the mirror by
-writing down an account of them, yet she was so much surprised by
-discovering them to be the representation of actual fact that she
-almost fainted. Something, however, yet remained to be ascertained.
-Did Lord Primrose’s attempted marriage take place exactly at the same
-time with her visit to the conjurer? She asked her brother on what day
-the circumstance which he related took place. Having been informed,
-she took out her key, and requested him to go to her chamber, to open
-a drawer which she described, and to bring her a sealed packet which
-he would find in that drawer. On the packet being opened, it was
-discovered that Lady Primrose had seen the shadowy representation of
-her husband’s abortive nuptials on the very evening when they were
-transacted in reality.[49]
-
-Lord Primrose died in 1706, leaving a widow who could scarcely be
-expected to mourn for him. She was still a young and beautiful woman,
-and might have procured her choice among twenty better matches. Such,
-however, was the idea she had formed of the marriage state from her
-first husband that she made a resolution never again to become a wife.
-She kept her resolution for many years, and probably would have done
-so till the last but for a singular circumstance. The celebrated Earl
-of Stair, who resided in Edinburgh during the greater part of twenty
-years, which he spent in retirement from all official employments,
-became deeply smitten with her ladyship, and earnestly sued for her
-hand. If she could have relented in favour of any man, it would have
-been for one who had acquired so much public honour, and whose private
-character was also, in general respects, so estimable. But to him also
-she declared her resolution of remaining unmarried. In his desperation,
-he resolved upon an expedient which strongly marks the character of
-the age in respect of delicacy. By dint of bribes to her domestics, he
-got himself insinuated overnight into a small room in her ladyship’s
-house, where she used to say her prayers every morning, and the window
-of which looked out upon the principal street of the city. At this
-window, when the morning was a little advanced, he showed himself, _en
-déshabillé_, to the people passing along the street; an exhibition
-which threatened to have such an effect upon her ladyship’s reputation
-that she saw fit to accept of him for a husband.[50]
-
-She was more happy as Countess of Stair than she had been as Lady
-Primrose. Yet her new husband had one failing, which occasioned her
-no small uneasiness. Like most other gentlemen at that period, he
-sometimes indulged too much in the bottle. When elevated with liquor,
-his temper, contrary to the general case, was by no means improved.
-Thus, on reaching home after a debauch, he generally had a quarrel
-with his wife, and sometimes even treated her with violence. On one
-occasion, when quite transported beyond the bounds of reason, he gave
-her so severe a blow upon the upper part of the face as to occasion the
-effusion of blood. He immediately after fell asleep, unconscious of
-what he had done. Lady Stair was so overwhelmed by a tumult of bitter
-and poignant feeling that she made no attempt to bind up her wound.
-She sat down on a sofa near her torpid husband, and wept and bled
-till morning. When his lordship awoke, and perceived her dishevelled
-and bloody figure, he was surprised to the last degree, and eagerly
-inquired how she came to be in such an unusual condition. She answered
-by detailing to him the whole history of his conduct on the preceding
-evening; which stung him so deeply with regret—for he naturally
-possessed the most generous feelings—that he instantly vowed to his
-wife never afterwards to take any species of drink except what was
-first passed through her hands. This vow he kept most scrupulously till
-the day of his death. He never afterwards sat in any convivial company
-where his lady could not attend to sanction his potations. Whenever he
-gave any entertainment, she always sat next him and filled his wine,
-till it was necessary for her to retire; after which, he drank only
-from a certain quantity which she had first laid aside.
-
-With much that was respectable in her character, we must not be too
-much surprised that Lady Stair was capable of using terms of speech
-which a subsequent age has learned to look on as objectionable, even
-in the humblest class of society. The Earl of Dundonald, it appears,
-had stated to the Duke of Douglas that Lady Stair had expressed
-incredulity regarding the genuineness of the birth of his nephews,
-the children of Lady Jane Douglas, and did not consider Lady Jane as
-entitled to any allowance from the duke on their account. In support
-of what he reported, Dundonald, in a letter to the Lord Justice-Clerk,
-gave the world leave to think him ‘a damned villain’ if he did not
-speak the truth. This seems to have involved Lady Stair unpleasantly
-with her friends of the house of Douglas, and she lost little time in
-making her way to Holyroodhouse, where, before the duke and duchess
-and their attendants, she declared that she had lived to a good old
-age, and never till now had got entangled in any _clatters_—that is,
-scandal. The old dame then thrice stamped the floor with her staff,
-each time calling the Earl of Dundonald ‘a damned villain;’ after which
-she retired in great wrath. Perhaps this scene was characteristic, for
-we learn from letters of Lady M. W. Montagu that Lady Stair was subject
-to hysterical ailments, and would be screaming and fainting in one
-room, while her daughter, Miss Primrose, and Lady Mary were dancing in
-another.
-
-This venerable lady, after being long at the head of society in
-Edinburgh, died in November 1759, having survived her second husband
-twelve years. It was remembered of her that she had been the first
-person in Edinburgh, of her time, to keep a black domestic servant.[51]
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[47] Lady Stair’s Close was originally a _cul de sac_. When the Mound
-was begun a thoroughfare was cut through the garden, making the
-close the principal communication between the Lawnmarket and Hanover
-Street, then the western extremity of the New Town. The name it first
-bore was ‘Lady Gray’s Close,’ after the wife of the builder of the
-house, and that of Lady Stair’s Close was given to it (_The Book of
-the Old Edinburgh Club_, vol. iii.) early in the eighteenth century,
-when the house passed into the possession of the first Lady Stair, a
-granddaughter of Sir William Gray of Pittendrum. Lord Rosebery, who
-represents a branch of the Primroses (other than that to which the
-second viscount, mentioned below, belonged), restored the house and
-presented it to the city in 1907.
-
-[48] ‘Grace, Countess of Aboyne and Moray, in her early youth, had
-the weakness to consult a celebrated fortune-teller, inhabiting an
-obscure close in Edinburgh. The sibyl predicted that she would become
-the wife of two earls, and how many children she was to bear; but
-withal assured her that when she should see a new coach of a certain
-colour driven up to her door as belonging to herself, her hearse must
-speedily follow. Many years afterwards, Lord Moray, who was not aware
-of this prediction, resolved to surprise his wife with the present of
-a new equipage; but when Lady Moray beheld from a window a carriage of
-the ominous colour arrive at the door of Darnaway, and heard that it
-was to be her own property, she sank down, exclaiming that she was a
-dead woman, and actually expired in a short time after, November 17,
-1738.’—_Notes to Law’s Memorials_, p. xcii.
-
-[49] Lady Primrose’s story forms the groundwork of one of Sir Walter
-Scott’s best short stories, _My Aunt Margaret’s Mirror_.
-
-[50] This story loses its point by the discovery made in St Peter’s
-upon Cornhill, London, of the marriage register of the second Earl
-of Stair with Lady Primrose, 27th March 1708. Thus they were married
-persons several years before the presumed date of this story. Miss
-Rosaline Masson announced the discovery in an article in _Chambers’s
-Journal_ for 1912, entitled, ‘The Secret Marriage of Lady Primrose and
-John, Second Earl of Stair.’ She makes this comment: ‘The testimony
-of John Waugh, Parson, has lain buried for over two hundred years in
-the old Register in the city; but the tale, whispered one day, some
-time about the year 1714, in the High Street of Edinburgh, first
-among the strutting gallants and loungers at the Cross at noon, and
-later on, over the delicate tea-cups, in the gossipy gatherings of
-the fair sex—that tale was nowise buried. It has never died. Did not
-Kirkpatrick Sharpe repeat it, sixty years after Lady Stair’s death,
-to young Robert Chambers, at that time collecting material for his
-inimitable book, _Traditions of Edinburgh_?’ The article further tries
-to answer the question why the Earl of Stair and the young widow made
-this clandestine marriage, which gave opportunity for the story.
-
-[51] Negroes in a servile capacity had been long before known in
-Scotland. Dunbar has a droll poem on a female black, whom he calls
-‘My lady with the muckle lips.’ In _Lady Marie Stuart’s Household
-Book_, referring to the early part of the seventeenth century, there
-is mention of ‘ane inventorie of the gudes and geir whilk pertenit to
-Dame Lilias Ruthven, Lady Drummond,’ which includes as an item, ‘the
-black boy and the papingoe [peacock];’ in so humble an association was
-it then thought proper to place a human being who chanced to possess a
-dark skin.
-
-
-
-
-THE OLD BANK CLOSE.
-
- THE REGENT MORTON—THE OLD BANK—SIR THOMAS HOPE—CHIESLY OF
- DAIRY—RICH MERCHANTS OF THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY—SIR WILLIAM
- DICK—THE BIRTH OF LORD BROUGHAM.
-
-
-OLD BANK CLOSE.
-
-Amongst the buildings removed to make way for George IV. Bridge were
-those of a short blind alley in the Lawnmarket, called the Old Bank
-Close. Composed wholly of solid goodly structures, this close had an
-air of dignity that might have almost reconciled a modern gentleman to
-live in it. One of these, crossing and closing the bottom, had been the
-Bank of Scotland—the _Auld Bank_, as it used to be half-affectionately
-called in Edinburgh—previously to the erection of the present handsome
-edifice in Bank Street. From this establishment the close had taken
-its name; but it had previously been called _Hope’s Close_, from its
-being the residence of a son of the celebrated Sir Thomas Hope, King’s
-Advocate in the reign of Charles I.
-
-[Illustration: House of Robert Gourlay.]
-
-The house of oldest date in the close was one on the west side,
-of substantial and even handsome appearance, long and lofty, and
-presenting some peculiarities of structure nearly unique in our city.
-There was first a door for the ground-floor, about which there was
-nothing remarkable. Then there was a door leading by the stair to the
-_first floor_, and bearing this legend and date upon the architrave:
-
- IN THE IS AL MY TRAIST: 1569.
-
-Close beside this door was another, leading by a longer, but distinct
-though adjacent stair to the second floor, and presenting on the
-architrave the initials R. G. From this floor there was an internal
-stair contained in a projecting turret, which connected it with the
-higher floor. Thus, it will be observed, there were three houses in
-this building, each having a distinct access; a nicety of arrangement
-which, together with the excellence of the masonry, was calculated to
-create a more respectful impression regarding the domestic ideas of
-our ancestors in Queen Mary’s time than most persons are prepared for.
-Finally, in the triangular space surmounting an attic window were the
-initials of a married couple, D. G., M. S.
-
-Our surprise is naturally somewhat increased when we learn that the
-builder and first possessor of this house does not appear to have
-been a man of rank, or one likely to own unusual wealth. His name
-was Robert Gourlay, and his profession a humble one connected with
-the law—namely, that of a messenger-at-arms. In the second book of
-Charters in the Canongate council-house, Adam Bothwell, Bishop of
-Orkney, and commendator of Holyrood, gave the office of messenger
-or officer-at-arms to the Abbey to Robert Gourlay, messenger, ‘our
-lovit familiar servitor,’ with a salary of forty pounds, and other
-perquisites. This was the Robert Gourlay who built the noble tenement
-in the Old Bank Close; and through his official functions it came into
-connection with an interesting historical event. In May 1581, when the
-ex-Regent Morton was brought to Edinburgh to suffer death, he was—as
-we learn from the memoirs of Moyses, a contemporary—‘lodged in Robert
-Gourlay’s house, and there keeped by the waged men.’ Gourlay had been
-able to accommodate in his house those whom it was his professional
-duty to take in charge as prisoners. Here, then, must have taken place
-those remarkable conferences between Morton and certain clergymen,
-in which, with the prospect of death before him, he protested his
-innocence of Darnley’s death, while confessing to a foreknowledge
-of it. Morton must have resided in the house from May 29, when he
-arrived in Edinburgh, till June 2, when he fell under the stroke of
-the ‘Maiden.’ In the ensuing year, as we learn from the authority just
-quoted, De la Motte, the French ambassador, was lodged in ‘Gourlay’s
-House.’
-
-David Gourlay—probably the individual whose initials appeared on
-the attic—described as son of John Gourlay, customer, and doubtless
-grandson of the first man Robert—disposed of the house in 1637 to Sir
-Thomas Hope of Craighall in liferent, and to his second son, Sir Thomas
-Hope of Kerse.[52] We may suppose ‘the Advocate’ to have thus provided
-a mansion for one of his children. A grandson in 1696 disposed of the
-upper floor to Hugh Blair, merchant in Edinburgh—the grandfather, I
-presume, of the celebrated Dr Hugh Blair.
-
-This portion of the house was occupied early in the last century by
-Lord Aberuchil, one of King William’s judges, remarkable for the
-large fortune he accumulated. About 1780 his descendant, Sir James
-Campbell of Aberuchil, resided in it while educating his family. It was
-afterwards occupied by Robert Stewart, writer, extensively known in
-Perthshire by the name of _Rob Uncle_, on account of the immense number
-of his nephews and nieces, amongst the former of whom was the late
-worthy General Stewart of Garth, author of the work on the Highland
-regiments.
-
-The building used by the bank was also a substantial one. Over the
-architrave was the legend:
-
- SPES ALTERÆ VITÆ,
-
-with a device emblematising the resurrection—namely, a couple of
-cross-bones with wheat-stalks springing from them, and the date 1588.
-Latterly it was occupied as the University Printing-office, and when
-I visited it in 1824 it contained an old wooden press, which was
-believed to be the identical one which Prince Charles carried with him
-from Glasgow to Bannockburn to print his gazettes, but then used as a
-_proof-press_, like a good hunter reduced to the sand-cart. This house
-was removed in 1834, having been previously sold by the Commissioners
-of Improvements for £150. The purchaser got a larger sum for a leaden
-roof unexpectedly found upon it. When the house was demolished, it was
-discovered that every window-shutter had a communication by wires with
-an intricate piece of machinery in the garret, designed to operate upon
-a bell hung at a corner on the outside, so that not a window could have
-been forced without giving an alarm.
-
-In the Cowgate, little more than fifty yards from the site of this
-building, there is a bulky old mansion, believed to have been the
-residence of the celebrated King’s Advocate Hope, himself, the
-ancestor of all the considerable men of this name now in Scotland. One
-can easily see, amidst all the disgrace into which it has fallen,
-something remarkable in this house, with two entrances from the street,
-and two _porte-cochères_ leading to other accesses in the rear. Over
-one door is the legend:
-
- TECUM HABITA: 1616;[53]
-
-over the other a half-obliterated line, known to have been
-
- AT HOSPES HUMO.
-
-[Illustration: Courtyard, Hope House.]
-
-One often finds significant voices proceeding from the builders of
-these old houses, generally to express humility. Sir Thomas here
-quotes a well-known passage in Persius, as if to tell the beholder to
-confine himself to a criticism of his own house; and then, with more
-certain humility, uses a passage of the Psalms (cxix. 19): ‘I am a
-stranger upon earth,’ the latter being an anagram of his own name, thus
-spelt: THOMAS HOUPE. It is impossible without a passing sensation of
-melancholy to behold this house, and to think how truly the obscurity
-of its history, and the wretchedness into which it has fallen, realise
-the philosophy of the anagram. Verily, the great statesman who once
-lived here in dignity and the respect of men was but as a stranger who
-tarried in the place for a night, and was gone.
-
-The _Diary of Sir Thomas Hope_, printed for the Bannatyne Club (1843),
-is a curious record of the public duties of a great law-officer in
-the age to which it refers, as well as of the mixture of worldly and
-spiritual things in which the venerable dignitary was engaged. He is
-indefatigable in his religious duties and his endeavours to advance
-the interests of his family; at the same time full of kindly feeling
-about his sons’ wives and their little family matters, never failing,
-for one thing, to tell how much the midwife got for her attendance on
-these ladies. There are many passages respecting his prayers, and the
-‘answers’ he obtained to them, especially during the agonies of the
-opening civil war. He prays, for instance, that the Lord would pity
-his people, and then hears the words: ‘I will preserve and saiff my
-people’—‘but quhither be me or some other, I dar not say.’ On another
-occasion, at the time when the Covenanting army was mustering for Dunse
-Law to oppose King Charles, Sir Thomas tells that, praying: ‘Lord,
-pitie thy pure [i.e. poor] kirk, for their is no help in man!’ he heard
-a voice saying: ‘I will pitie it;’ ‘for quhilk I blissit the Lord;’
-immediately after which he goes on: ‘Lent to John my _long carabin of
-rowet wark_ all indentit;’ &c.[54]
-
-The Countess of Mar, daughter of Esme, Duke of Lennox, died of a
-_deadly brash_ in Sir Thomas’s house in the Cowgate, May 11, 1644.
-
-It is worthy of notice that the Hopes are one of several Scottish
-families, possessing high rank and great wealth, which trace their
-descent to merchants in Edinburgh. ‘The Hopes are of French extraction,
-from Picardy. It is said they were originally Houblon, and had their
-name from the plant [hop], and not from esperance [the virtue in the
-mind]. The first that came over was a domestic of Magdalene of France,
-queen of James V.; and of him are descended all the eminent families
-of Hopes. This John Hope set up as a merchant of Edinburgh, and his
-son, by Bessie or Elizabeth Cumming, is marked as a member of our first
-Protestant General Assembly, anno 1560.’[55]
-
-
-CHIESLY OF DALRY.
-
-The head of the Old Bank Close was the scene of the assassination of
-President Lockhart by Chiesly of Dalry,[56] March 1689. The murderer
-had no provocation besides a simple judicial act of the president,
-assigning an aliment or income of £93 out of his estate to his wife
-and children, from whom it may be presumed he had been separated. He
-evidently was a man abandoned to the most violent passions—perhaps
-not quite sane. In London, half a year before the deed, he told Mr
-Stuart, an advocate, that he was resolved to go to Scotland before
-Candlemas and kill the president; when, on Stuart remarking that the
-very imagination of such a thing was a sin before God, he replied: ‘Let
-God and me alone; we have many things to reckon betwixt us, and we will
-reckon this too.’ The judge was informed of the menaces of Chiesly, but
-despised them.
-
-On a Sunday afternoon, the last day of March—the town being then
-under the excitement of the siege of the Castle by the friends of the
-new government—Lockhart was walking home from church to his house in
-this alley, when Chiesly came behind, just as he entered the close,
-and shot him in the back with a pistol. A Dr Hay, coming to visit the
-president’s lady, saw his lordship stagger and fall. The ball had gone
-through the body, and out at the right breast. He was taken into his
-house, laid down upon two chairs, and almost immediately was a dead
-man. Some gentlemen passing seized the murderer, who readily owned he
-had done the deed, which he said was ‘to learn the president to do
-justice.’ When immediately after informed that his victim had expired,
-he said ‘he was not used to do things by halves.’ He boasted of the
-deed as if it had been some grand exploit.
-
-After torture had been inflicted, to discover if he had any
-accomplices, the wretched man was tried by the magistrates of
-Edinburgh, and sentenced to be carried on a hurdle to the Cross,[57]
-and there hanged, with the fatal pistol hung from his neck, after which
-his body was to be suspended in chains at the Gallow Lee, and his right
-hand affixed to the West Port. The body was stolen from the gallows, as
-was supposed, by his friends, and it was never known what had become
-of it till more than a century after, when, in removing the hearthstone
-of a cottage in Dalry Park, near Edinburgh, a human skeleton was found,
-with the remains of a pistol near the situation of the neck. No doubt
-was entertained that these were the remains of Chiesly, huddled into
-this place for concealment, probably in the course of the night in
-which they had been abstracted from the gallows.
-
-
-RICH MERCHANTS OF THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY—SIR WILLIAM DICK.
-
-Several houses in the neighbourhood of the Old Bank Close served to
-give a respectful notion of the wealth and domestic state of certain
-merchants of an early age. Immediately to the westward, in Brodie’s
-Close, was the mansion of William Little of Liberton, bearing date
-1570. This was an eminent merchant, and the founder of a family now
-represented by Mr Little Gilmour of the Inch, in whose possession
-this mansion continued under entail, till purchased and taken down
-by the Commissioners of Improvements in 1836. About 1780 it was the
-residence of the notorious Deacon Brodie, of whom something may be
-said elsewhere. Sir William Gray of Pittendrum, mentioned a few pages
-back as the original owner of the old house in Lady Stair’s Close, was
-another affluent trafficker of that age.
-
-In Riddel’s Close, Lawnmarket, there is an enclosed court, evidently
-intended to be capable of defence. It is the place where John
-Macmoran, a rich merchant of the time of James VI., lived and carried
-on his business. In those days even schoolboys trusted to violence
-for attaining their ends. The youths of the High School,[58] being
-malcontent about their holidays, barred themselves up in the school
-with some provisions, and threatened not to surrender till the
-magistrates should comply with their demands. John Macmoran, who held
-the office of one of the bailies, came with a _posse_ to deal with the
-boys, but, finding them obdurate, ordered the door to be prised open
-with a joist. One within then fired a pistol at the bailie, who fell
-shot through the brain, to the horror of all beholders, including the
-schoolboys themselves, who with difficulty escaped the vengeance of the
-crowd assembled on the spot.
-
-It was ascertained that the immediate author of the bailie’s death was
-William Sinclair, son of the chancellor of Caithness. There was a great
-clamour to have justice done upon him; but this was a point not easily
-attained, where a person of gentle blood was concerned, in the reign
-of James VI. The boy lived to be Sir William Sinclair of Mey, and, as
-such, was the ancestor of those who have, since 1789, borne the title
-of Earls of Caithness.
-
-[Illustration: Bailie Macmoran’s House, Riddel’s Court.]
-
-A visit to the fine old mansion of Bailie Macmoran may be recommended.
-Its masonry is not without elegance. The lower floor of the building
-is now used as ‘The Mechanics’ Library.’[59] Macmoran’s house is in
-the floor above, reached by a stone stair, near the corner of the
-court. This dwelling offers a fine specimen of the better class of
-houses at the end of the sixteenth century. The marble jambs of the
-fireplaces and the carved stucco ceilings are quite entire. The larger
-room (occupied as a warehouse for articles of saddlery) is that in
-which took place two memorable royal banquets in 1598—the first on the
-24th of April to James VI. with his queen, Anne of Denmark, and her
-brother the Duke of Holstein; and the second on the 2nd of May, more
-specially to the Duke of Holstein, but at which their Majesties were
-present. These banquets, held, as Birrel says, with ‘grate solemnitie
-and mirrines,’ were at the expense of the city. It need hardly be said
-that James VI. was fond of this species of entertainment, and the house
-of Macmoran was probably selected for the purpose not only because he
-was treasurer to the corporation and a man of some mark, but because
-his dwelling offered suitable accommodation. The general aspect of the
-enclosed court which affords access to Macmoran’s house has undergone
-little or no alteration since these memorable banquets; and in visiting
-the place, with its quietude and seclusion, one almost feels as if
-stepping back into the sixteenth century. Considering the destruction
-all around from city improvements, it is fortunate that this remarkable
-specimen of an old mansion should have been left so singularly entire.
-One of the higher windows continues to exemplify an economical
-arrangement which prevailed about the time of the Restoration—namely,
-to have the lower half composed of wooden shutters.[60]
-
-The grandest of all these old Edinburgh merchants was William Dick,
-ancestor of the Dicks, baronets of Prestonfield. In his youth, and
-during the lifetime of his father, he had been able to lend £6000 to
-King James, to defray the expense of his journey to Scotland. The
-affairs in which he was engaged would even now be considered important.
-For example, he farmed the customs on wine at £6222, and the crown
-rents of Orkney at £3000. Afterwards he farmed the excise. His fleets
-extended from the Baltic to the Mediterranean. The immense wealth he
-acquired enabled him to purchase large estates. He himself reckoned his
-property as at one time equal to two hundred thousand pounds sterling.
-
-Strange to say, this great merchant came to poverty, and died in a
-prison. The reader of the Waverley novels may remember David Deans
-telling how his father ‘saw them toom the sacks of dollars out o’
-Provost Dick’s window intill the carts that carried them to the army
-at Dunse Law’—‘if ye winna believe his testimony, there is the
-window itsell still standing in the Luckenbooths—I think it’s a
-claith-merchant’s buith the day.’ This refers to large advances which
-Dick made to the Covenanters to enable them to carry on the war against
-the king. The house alluded to is actually now a claith-merchant’s
-booth, having long been in the possession of Messrs John Clapperton &
-Company. Two years after Dunse Law, Dick gave the Covenanters 100,000
-merks in one sum. Subsequently, being after all of royalist tendencies,
-he made still larger advances in favour of the Scottish government
-during the time when Charles II. was connected with it; and thus
-provoking the wrath of the English Commonwealth, his ruin was completed
-by the fines to which he was subjected by that party when triumphant,
-amounting in all to £65,000.
-
-Poor Sir William Dick—for he had been made a baronet by Charles
-I.—went to London to endeavour to recover some part of his lost means.
-When he represented the indigence to which he had been reduced, he was
-told that he was always able to procure pie-crust when other men could
-not get bread. There was, in fact, a prevalent idea that he possessed
-some supernatural means—such as the philosopher’s stone—of acquiring
-money. (Pie-crust came to be called _Sir William Dick’s Necessity_.)
-The contrary was shown when the unfortunate man died soon after in a
-prison in Westminster. There is a picture in Prestonfield House, near
-Edinburgh, the seat of his descendant, representing him in this last
-retreat in a mean dress, surrounded by his numerous hapless family. A
-rare pamphlet, descriptive of his case, presents engravings of three
-such pictures; one exhibiting him on horseback, attended by guards
-as Lord Provost of Edinburgh, superintending the unloading of one of
-his rich ships at Leith; another as a prisoner in the hands of the
-bailiffs; the third as dead in prison. A more memorable example of
-the instability of fortune does not occur in our history. It seems
-completely to realise the picture in Job (chap. xxvii.): ‘The rich man
-shall lie down, but he shall not be gathered: he openeth his eyes, and
-he is not. Terrors take hold on him as waters, a tempest stealeth him
-away in the night. The east wind carrieth him away, and he departeth:
-and as a storm, hurleth him out of his place. For God shall cast upon
-him, and not spare: he would fain flee out of his hand. Men shall clap
-their hands at him, and shall hiss him out of his place.’
-
-The fortunes of the family were restored by Sir William’s grandson,
-Sir James, a remarkably shrewd man, who was likewise a merchant
-in Edinburgh. There is a traditionary story that this gentleman,
-observing the utility of manure, and that the streets of Edinburgh were
-loaded with it, to the detriment of the comfort of the inhabitants,
-offered to relieve the town of this nuisance on condition that he
-should be allowed, for a certain term of years, to carry it away
-gratis. Consent was given, and the Prestonfield estate became, in
-consequence, like a garden. The Duke of York had a great affection for
-Sir James Dick, and used to walk through the Park to visit him at his
-house very frequently. Hence, according to the report of the family,
-the way his Royal Highness took came to be called _The Duke’s Walk_;
-afterwards a famous resort for the fighting of duels. Sir James became
-Catholic, and, while provost in 1681, had his house burned over his
-head by the collegianers; but it was rebuilt at the public expense.
-His grandson, Sir Alexander Dick, is referred to in kindly terms in
-Boswell’s _Tour to the Hebrides_ as a venerable man of studious habits
-and a friend of men of letters. The reader will probably learn with
-some surprise that though Sir William’s descendants never recovered any
-of the money lent by him to the State, a lady of his family, living in
-1844, was in the enjoyment of a pension with express reference to that
-ancient claim.
-
-
-THE BIRTH OF LORD BROUGHAM.
-
-[1868.—It has been remarked elsewhere that, for a great number of
-years after the general desertion of the Old Town by persons of
-condition, there were many denizens of the New who had occasion to
-look back to the Canongate and Cowgate as the place of their birth.
-The nativity of one person who achieved extraordinary greatness and
-distinction, and whose death was an occurrence of yesterday, Henry,
-Lord Brougham, undoubtedly was connected with the lowly place last
-mentioned.
-
-The Edinburgh tradition on the subject was that Henry Brougham,
-younger, of Brougham Hall, in the county of Cumberland, in consequence
-of a disappointment in love, came to Edinburgh for the diversion of his
-mind. Principal Robertson, to whom he bore a letter of introduction,
-recommended the young man to the care of his sister—Mrs Syme, widow
-of the minister of Alloa—who occupied what was then considered as a
-good and spacious house at the head of the Cowgate—strictly the third
-floor of the house now marked No. 8—a house desirable from its having
-an extraordinary space in front. Here, it would appear, Mr Brougham
-speedily consoled himself for his former disappointment by falling in
-love with Eleonora, the daughter of Mrs Syme; and a marriage, probably
-a hurried one, soon united the young pair. They set up for themselves
-(Whitsunday 1778) in an upper floor of a house in the then newly built
-St Andrew Square, where, in the ensuing September, their eldest son,
-charged with so illustrious a destiny, first saw the light.[61]
-
-Mr Brougham conclusively settled in Edinburgh; he subsequently occupied
-a handsome house in George Street. He was never supposed to be a man
-of more than ordinary faculties; but any deficiency in this respect
-was amply made up for by his wife, who is represented by all who
-remember her as a person of uncommon mental gifts. The contrast of the
-pair drew the attention of society, and was the subject of a gently
-satiric sketch in Henry Mackenzie’s _Lounger_, No. 45, published on the
-10th December 1785, which, however, would vainly be looked for in the
-reprinted copies, as it was immediately suppressed.]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[52] Raised to the Bench with the title of Lord Kerse.
-
-[53] The lintel bearing this legend is preserved in a doorway at the
-top of the staircase of the Free Library, George IV. Bridge. The
-Cowgate portion of the Library building (1887-89) occupies the site of
-Sir Thomas Hope’s house.
-
-[54] While King’s Advocate, Sir Thomas Hope had the unique experience
-of pleading at the Bar before two of his sons who were judges—Lord
-Craighall and Lord Kerse. There is a tradition that when addressing the
-Court he remained covered, and that from this circumstance the Lord
-Advocates still have this privilege, although they do not exercise it.
-Probably the custom introduced by Sir Thomas Hope originated in his
-being an officer of state, which entitled him to sit in parliament
-wearing his hat, and he claimed the same privilege when appearing
-before the judges.
-
-[55] See a Memoir by Sir Archibald Steuart Denham in the publications
-of the Maitland Club.
-
-[56] The site of Chiesly’s house is that occupied by the Episcopal
-Church Training College in Orwell Place.
-
-[57] In _The Domestic Annals of Scotland_ the place of his execution is
-given as Drumsheugh, and Sir Walter Scott says he was hanged near his
-own house of Dalry.
-
-[58] This was the first High School, built in 1578 in the grounds
-of the Blackfriars’ Monastery, of which David Malloch, or Mallet,
-was janitor in 1717. The building faced the Canongate. In 1777 it
-was replaced by the building now facing Infirmary Street and used in
-connection with the university. It is this later building that is
-associated with Sir Walter Scott, Lord Brougham, Lord Jeffrey, Lord
-Cockburn, and other eminent men of the last quarter of the eighteenth
-and first quarter of the nineteenth century.
-
-[59] The Mechanics’ Library was discontinued when the Free Library was
-opened. Bailie Macmoran’s house is now used as a university settlement.
-
-[60] After being the residence for a time of Sir John Clerk of Penicuik
-and other notable citizens, it was latterly occupied by the widow (the
-seventh wife) of the Rev. David Williamson—‘Dainty Davie’—minister of
-St Cuthbert’s Church at the time of the Revolution.
-
-[61] The house is marked No. 21. Its back windows enjoy a fine view
-of the Firth of Forth and the Fife hills. The registration of his
-lordship’s birth appears as follows: ‘Wednesday, 30th September 1778,
-Henry Brougham, Esq., parish of St Gilles (_sic_), and Eleonora Syme,
-his spouse, a son born the 19th current, named Henry Peter. Witnesses,
-Mr Archibald Hope, Royal Bank, and Principal Robertson.’ The parts of
-the New Town then built belonged to St Giles’s parish.
-
-
-
-
-THE OLD TOLBOOTH.
-
-
-The genius of Scott has shed a peculiar interest upon this ancient
-structure, whose cant name of the _Heart of Mid-Lothian_ has given a
-title to one of his happiest novels. It stood in a singular situation,
-occupying half the width of the High Street, elbow to elbow, as it
-were, with St Giles’s Church. Antique in form, gloomy and haggard
-in aspect, its black stanchioned windows opening through its dingy
-walls like the apertures of a hearse, it was calculated to impress
-all beholders with a due and deep sense of what was meant in Scottish
-law by the _squalor carceris_. At the west end was a projecting
-ground-floor, formed of shops, but presenting a platform on which
-executions took place. The building itself was composed of two parts,
-one more solid and antique than the other, and much resembling, with
-its turret staircase, one of those tall, narrow fortalices which
-are so numerous in the Border counties. Indeed, the probability is
-that this had been a kind of peel or house of defence, required for
-public purposes by the citizens of Edinburgh when liable to predatory
-invasions. Doubtless the house or some part of it was of great
-antiquity, for it was an old and ruinous building in the reign of Mary,
-and only narrowly saved at that time from destruction. Most likely
-it was the very _pretorium burgi de Edinburgi_ in which a parliament
-assembled in 1438 to deliberate on the measures rendered necessary
-by the assassination of the poet-king, James I. In those simple days
-great and humble things came close together: the house which contained
-parliaments upstairs, presented shops in the lower story, and thus
-drew in a little revenue to the magistrates. Here met the Court of
-Session in its earliest years. Here Mary assembled her parliaments;
-and here—on the Tolbooth door—did citizens affix libels by night,
-charging the Earl of Bothwell with the murder of Darnley. Long, long
-since all greatness had been taken away from the old building, and it
-was condemned to be a jail alone, though still with shops underneath.
-At length, in 1817, the fabric was wholly swept away, in consequence
-of the erection of a better jail on the Calton Hill. The gateway, with
-the door and padlock, was transferred to Abbotsford, and, with strange
-taste on the part of the proprietor, built into a conspicuous part of
-that mansion.
-
-[Illustration: EDINBURGH
-from the Calton Hill.
-
-PAGE 83.]
-
-The principal entrance to the Tolbooth, and the only one used in
-later days, was at the bottom of the turret next the church. The
-gateway was of tolerably good carved stone-work, and occupied by a
-door of ponderous massiness and strength, having, besides the lock, a
-flap-padlock, which, however, was generally kept unlocked during the
-day. In front of the door there always paraded, or rather loitered, a
-private of the town-guard, with his rusty red clothes and Lochaber axe
-or musket. The door adjacent to the principal gateway was, in the final
-days of the Tolbooth, ‘MICHAEL KETTEN’S SHOE-SHOP,’ but had formerly
-been a _thief’s hole_. The next door to that, stepping westward, was
-the residence of the turnkey; a dismal, unlighted den, where the gray
-old man was always to be found, when not engaged in unlocking or
-closing the door. The next door westward was a lock-up house, which
-in later times was never used. On the north side, towards the street,
-there had once been shops, which were let by the magistrates; but
-these were converted, about the year 1787, into a guard-house for the
-city-guard, on their ancient capitol in the High Street being destroyed
-for the levelling of the streets. The ground-floor, thus occupied
-for purposes in general remote from the character of the building,
-was divided lengthwise by a strong partition wall; and communication
-between the rooms above and these apartments below was effectually
-interdicted by the strong arches upon which the superstructure was
-reared.
-
-On passing the outer door—where the rioters of 1736 thundered with
-their sledge-hammers, and finally burnt down all that interposed
-between them and their prey—the keeper instantly involved the entrant
-in darkness by reclosing the gloomy portal. A flight of about twenty
-steps then led to an inner door, which, being duly knocked at, was
-opened by a bottle-nosed personage, denominated Peter, who, like his
-sainted namesake, always carried two or three large keys. You then
-entered _the Hall_, which, being free to all the prisoners except those
-of the _East End_, was usually filled with a crowd of shabby-looking
-but very merry loungers. A small rail here served as an additional
-security, no prisoner being permitted to come within its pale. Here
-also a sentinel of the city-guard was always walking, having a bayonet
-or ramrod in his hand. The _Hall_, being also the chapel of the jail,
-contained an old pulpit of singular fashion—such a pulpit as one
-could imagine John Knox to have preached from; which, indeed, he was
-traditionally said to have actually done. At the right-hand side of
-the pulpit was a door leading up the large turnpike to the apartments
-occupied by the criminals, one of which was of plate-iron. The door
-was always shut, except when food was taken up to the prisoners. On
-the west end of the hall hung a board, on which were inscribed the
-following emphatic lines:
-
- ‘A prison is a house of care,
- A place where none can thrive,
- A touchstone true to try a friend,
- A grave for men alive—
-
- Sometimes a place of right,
- Sometimes a place of wrong,
- Sometimes a place for jades and thieves,
- And honest men among.’[62]
-
-Apart of the hall on the north side was partitioned off into two
-small rooms, one of which was the captain’s pantry, the other his
-counting-room. In the latter hung an old musket or two, a pair of
-obsolete bandoleers, and a sheath of a bayonet, intended, as one might
-suppose, for his defence against a mutiny of the prisoners. Including
-the space thus occupied, the hall was altogether twenty-seven feet
-long by about twenty broad. The height of the room was twelve feet.
-Close to the door, and within the rail, was a large window, thickly
-stanchioned; and at the other end of the hall, within the captain’s
-two rooms, was a double window of a somewhat extraordinary character.
-Tradition, supported by the appearance of the place, pointed out this
-as having formerly been a door by which royalty entered the hall in the
-days when it was the Parliament House. It is said that a kind of bridge
-was thrown between this aperture and a house on the other side of the
-street, and that the sovereign, having prepared himself in that house
-to enter the hall in his state robes, proceeded at the proper time
-along the arch—an arrangement by no means improbable in those days of
-straitened accommodation.
-
-The window on the south side of the hall overlooked the outer gateway.
-It was therefore employed by the inner turnkey as a channel of
-communication with his exterior brother when any visitor was going
-out. He used to cry over this window, in the tone of a military order
-upon parade: ‘_Turn your hand_,’ whereupon the gray-haired man on the
-pavement below opened the door and permitted the visitor, who by this
-time had descended the stair, to walk out.
-
-The floor immediately above the hall was occupied by one room for
-felons, having a bar along part of the floor, to which condemned
-criminals were chained, and a square box of plate-iron in the centre,
-called THE CAGE, which was said to have been constructed for the
-purpose of confining some extraordinary culprit who had broken half the
-jails in the kingdom. Above this room was another of the same size,
-also appropriated to felons.
-
-The larger and western part of the edifice, of coarser and apparently
-more modern construction, contained four floors, all of which were
-appropriated to the use of debtors, except a part of the lowest one,
-where a middle-aged woman kept a tavern for the sale of malt liquors.
-A turnpike stair gave access to the different floors. As it was
-narrow, steep, and dark, the visitor was assisted in his ascent by a
-greasy rope, which, some one was sure to inform him afterwards, had
-been employed in hanging a criminal. In one of the apartments on the
-second floor was a door leading out to the platform whereon criminals
-were executed, and in another, on the floor above, was an ill-plastered
-part of the wall covering the aperture through which the gallows was
-projected. The fourth flat was a kind of barrack, for the use of the
-poorest debtors.
-
-There was something about the Old Tolbooth which would have enabled
-a blindfolded person led into it to say that it was a jail. It was
-not merely odorous from the ordinary causes of imperfect drainage,
-but it had poverty’s own smell—the odour of human misery. And yet it
-did not seem at first a downcast scene. The promenaders in the hall
-were sometimes rather merry, cutting jokes perhaps upon Peter’s nose,
-or chatting with friends on the benches regarding the news of the
-day. Then Mrs Laing drove a good trade in her little tavern; and if
-any messenger were sent out for a bottle of whisky—why, Peter never
-searched pockets. New men were hailed with:
-
- ‘Welcome, welcome, brother debtor,
- To this poor but merry place;
- Here nor bailiff, dun, nor fetter,
- Dare to show his gloomy face.’
-
-They would be abashed at first, and the first visit of wife or
-daughter, coming shawled and veiled, and with timorous glances, into
-the room where the loved object was trying to become at ease with his
-companions, was always a touching affair. But it was surprising how
-soon, in general, all became familiar, easy, and even to appearance
-happy. Each had his story to tell, and sympathy was certain and
-liberal. The whole management was of a good-natured kind, as far as a
-regard to regulations would allow. It did not seem at all an impossible
-thing that a debtor should accommodate some even more desolate friend
-with a share of his lodging for the night, or for many nights, as is
-said to have been done in some noted instances, to which we shall
-presently come.
-
-It was natural for a jail of such old standing to have passed through a
-great number of odd adventures, and have many strange tales connected
-with it. One of the most remarkable traits of its character was a sad
-liability to the failure of its ordinary powers of retention when men
-of figure were in question. The old house had something like that
-faculty attributed by Falstaff to the lion and himself—of knowing
-men who ought not to be too roughly handled. The consequence was
-that almost every criminal of rank confined in it made his escape.
-Lord Burleigh, an insane peer, who, about the time of the Union,
-assassinated a schoolmaster who had married a girl to whom he had paid
-improper addresses, escaped, while under sentence of death, by changing
-clothes with his sister. Several of the rebel gentlemen confined there
-in 1716 were equally fortunate; a fact on which there was lately thrown
-a flood of light, when I found, in a manuscript list of subscriptions
-for the relief of the other rebel gentlemen at Carlisle, the name of
-the Guidman of the Tolbooth—so the chief-keeper was called—down for a
-good sum. I am uncertain to which of all these personages the following
-anecdote, related to me by Sir Walter Scott, refers.
-
-It was contrived that the prisoner should be conveyed out of the
-Tolbooth in a trunk, and carried by a porter to Leith, where some
-sailors were to be ready with a boat to take him aboard a vessel about
-to leave Scotland. The plot succeeded so far as the escape from jail
-was concerned, but was knocked on the head by an unlucky and most
-ridiculous accident. It so happened that the porter, in arranging the
-trunk upon his back, placed the end which corresponded with the feet of
-the prisoner _uppermost_. The head of the unfortunate man was therefore
-pressed against the lower end of the box, and had to sustain the weight
-of the whole body. The posture was the most uneasy imaginable. Yet life
-was preferable to ease. He permitted himself to be taken away. The
-porter trudged along with the trunk, quite unconscious of its contents,
-and soon reached the High Street. On gaining the Netherbow he met an
-acquaintance, who asked him where he was going with that large burden.
-To Leith, was the answer. The other inquired if the job was good enough
-to afford a potation before proceeding farther upon so long a journey.
-This being replied to in the affirmative, and the carrier of the box
-feeling in his throat the philosophy of his friend’s inquiry, it was
-agreed that they should adjourn to a neighbouring tavern. Meanwhile,
-the third party, whose inclinations had not been consulted in this
-arrangement, was wishing that it were at once well over with him in the
-Grassmarket. But his agonies were not destined to be of long duration.
-The porter in depositing him upon the causeway happened to make the
-end of the trunk come down with such precipitation that, unable to
-bear it any longer, the prisoner screamed out, and immediately after
-fainted. The consternation of the porter on hearing a noise from his
-burden was of course excessive; but he soon recovered presence of mind
-enough to conceive the occasion. He proceeded to unloose and to burst
-open the trunk, when the hapless nobleman was discovered in a state of
-insensibility. As a crowd collected immediately, and the city-guard
-were not long in coming forward, there was of course no further chance
-of escape. The prisoner did not recover from his swoon till he had been
-safely deposited in his old quarters; but, if I recollect rightly, he
-eventually escaped in another way.
-
-In two very extraordinary instances an escape from justice has, strange
-as it may appear, been effected by _means_ of the Old Tolbooth. At
-the discovery of the Rye-House Plot, in the reign of Charles II., the
-notorious Robert Fergusson, usually styled ‘The Plotter,’ was searched
-for in Edinburgh, with a view to his being subjected, if possible,
-to the extreme vengeance of the law. It being known almost certainly
-that he was in town, the authorities shut the gates, and calculated
-securely upon having him safe within their toils. The Plotter, however,
-by an expedient worthy of his ingenious character, escaped by taking
-refuge in the Old Tolbooth. A friend of his happened to be confined
-there at the time, and was able to afford protection and concealment to
-Fergusson, who, at his leisure, came abroad, and betook himself to a
-place of safer shelter on the Continent. The same device was practised
-in 1746 by a gentleman who had been concerned in the Rebellion, and for
-whom a hot search had been carried on in the Highlands.
-
-The case of Katherine Nairne, in 1766, excited in no small degree the
-attention of the Scottish public. This lady was allied, both by blood
-and marriage, to some respectable families. Her crime was the double
-one of poisoning her husband and having an intrigue with his brother,
-who was her associate in the murder. On her arrival at Leith in an open
-boat, her whole bearing betrayed so much levity, or was so different
-from what had been expected, that the mob raised a cry of indignation,
-and were on the point of pelting her, when she was with some difficulty
-rescued from their hands by the public authorities. In this case the
-Old Tolbooth found itself, as usual, incapable of retaining a culprit
-of condition. Sentence had been delayed by the judges on account
-of the lady’s pregnancy. The midwife employed at her accouchement
-(who continued to practise in Edinburgh so lately as the year 1805)
-had the address to achieve a jail-delivery also. For three or four
-days previous to that concerted for the escape, she pretended to be
-afflicted with a prodigious toothache, went out and in with her head
-enveloped in shawls and flannels, and groaned as if she had been about
-to give up the ghost. At length, when the Peter of that day had become
-so habituated to her appearance as not very much to heed her exits and
-her entrances, Katherine Nairne one evening came down in her stead,
-with her head wrapped all round with the shawls, uttering the usual
-groans, and holding down her face upon her hands, as with agony, in the
-precise way customary with the midwife. The inner doorkeeper, not quite
-unconscious, it is supposed, of the trick, gave her a hearty thump upon
-the back as she passed out, calling her at the same time a howling
-old Jezebel, and wishing she would never come back to trouble him any
-more. There are two reports of the proceedings of Katherine Nairne
-after leaving the prison. One bears that she immediately left the town
-in a coach, to which she was handed by a friend stationed on purpose.
-The coachman, it is said, had orders from her relations, in the event
-of a pursuit, to drive into the sea, that she might drown herself—a
-fate which was considered preferable to the ignominy of a public
-execution. The other story runs that she went up the Lawnmarket to the
-Castle-hill, where lived Mr ——, a respectable advocate, from whom, as
-he was her cousin, she expected to receive protection. Being ignorant
-of the town, she mistook the proper house, and applied at that of the
-crown agent,[63] who was assuredly the last man in the world that could
-have done her any service. As good luck would have it, she was not
-recognised by the servant, who civilly directed her to her cousin’s
-house, where, it is said, she remained concealed many weeks.[64] Her
-future life, it has been reported, was virtuous and fortunate. She was
-married to a French gentleman, became the mother of a large family, and
-died at a good old age. Meanwhile, Patrick Ogilvie, her associate in
-the dark crime which threw a shade over her younger years, suffered in
-the Grassmarket. He had been a lieutenant in the —— regiment, and was
-so much beloved by his fellow-soldiers, who happened to be stationed at
-that time in Edinburgh Castle, that the public authorities judged it
-necessary to shut them up in a fortress till the execution was over
-lest they might have attempted a rescue.
-
-The Old Tolbooth was the scene of the suicide of Mungo Campbell while
-under sentence of death (1770) for shooting the Earl of Eglintoune.
-In the district where this memorable event took place, it is somewhat
-remarkable that the fate of the murderer was more generally lamented
-than that of the murdered person. Campbell, though what was called ‘a
-graceless man,’ was rather popular in his profession of exciseman, on
-account of his rough, honourable spirit, and his lenity in the matter
-of smuggling. Lord Eglintoune, on the contrary, was not liked, on
-account of his improving mania, which had proved a serious grievance
-to the old-fashioned farmers of Kyle and Cunningham. There was one
-article, called rye-grass, which he brought in amongst them, and
-forced them to cultivate; and black prelacy itself had hardly, a
-century before, been a greater evil. Then, merely to stir them up a
-little, he would cause them to exchange farms with each other; thus
-giving their ancient plenishings, what was doubtless much wanted, an
-airing, but also creating a strong sense that Lord Eglintoune was
-‘far ower fashious.’ His lordship had excited some scandal by his
-private habits, which helped in no small degree to render unpopular
-one who was in reality an amiable and upright gentleman. He was
-likewise somewhat tenacious about matters respecting game—the
-besetting weakness of British gentlemen in all ages. On the other
-hand, Campbell, though an austere and unsocial man, acted according to
-popular ideas both in respect of the game and excise laws. The people
-felt that he was on their side; they esteemed him for his integrity
-in the common affairs of life, and even in some degree for his birth
-and connections, which were far from mean. It was also universally
-believed, though erroneously, that he had only discharged his gun by
-accident, on falling backward, while retreating before his lordship,
-who had determined to take it from him. In reality, Mungo, after his
-fall, rose on his elbow and wilfully shot the poor earl, who had given
-him additional provocation by bursting into a laugh at his awkward
-fall. The Old Tolbooth was supposed by many, at the time, to have had
-her usual failing in Mungo’s case. The interest of the Argyll family
-was said to have been employed in his favour; and the body which was
-found suspended over the door, instead of being his, was thought to
-be that of a dead soldier from the Castle substituted in his place.
-His relations, however, who were very respectable people in Ayrshire,
-all acknowledged that he died by his own hand; and this was the
-general idea of the mob of Edinburgh, who, getting the body into their
-hands, dragged it down the street to the King’s Park, and, inspired
-by different sentiments from those of the Ayrshire people, were not
-satisfied till they got it up to the top of Salisbury Crags, from which
-they precipitated it down the _Cat Nick_.
-
-[Illustration: Deacon Brodie’s Keys and Dark-Lantern.]
-
-One of the most remarkable criminals ever confined in the Old
-Tolbooth was the noted William Brodie. This was a man of respectable
-connections, and who had moved in good society all his life,
-unsuspected of any criminal pursuits. It is said that a habit of
-frequenting cock-pits was the first symptom he exhibited of a decline
-from rectitude. His ingenuity as a mechanic gave him a fatal facility
-in the burglarious pursuits to which he afterwards addicted himself. It
-was then customary for the shopkeepers of Edinburgh to hang their keys
-upon a nail at the back of their doors, or at least to take no pains
-in concealing them during the day. Brodie used to take impressions of
-them in putty or clay, a piece of which he would carry in the palm of
-his hand. He kept a blacksmith in his pay, who forged exact copies of
-the keys he wanted, and with these it was his custom to open the shops
-of his fellow-tradesmen during the night. He thus found opportunities
-of securely stealing whatever he wished to possess. He carried on his
-malpractices for many years, and never was suspected till, having
-committed a daring robbery upon the Excise Office in Chessels’s
-Court, Canongate, some circumstances transpired which induced him
-to disappear from Edinburgh. Suspicion then becoming strong, he was
-pursued to Holland, and taken at Amsterdam, standing upright in a
-press or cupboard. At his trial, Henry Erskine, his counsel, spoke
-very eloquently in his behalf, representing, in particular, to the
-jury how strange and improbable a circumstance it was that a man whom
-they had themselves known from infancy as a person of good repute
-should have been guilty of such practices as those with which he was
-charged. He was, however, found guilty, and sentenced to death, along
-with his accomplice Smith. At the trial he had appeared in a full-dress
-suit of black clothes, the greater part of which was of silk, and his
-deportment throughout the affair was composed and gentlemanlike. He
-continued during the period which intervened between his sentence and
-execution to dress well and keep up his spirits. A gentleman of his
-acquaintance, calling upon him in the condemned room, was surprised
-to find him singing the song from the _Beggars’ Opera_, ‘’Tis woman
-seduces all mankind.’ Having contrived to cut out the figure of a
-draughtboard on the stone floor of his dungeon, he amused himself by
-playing with any one who would join him, and, in default of such,
-with his right hand against his left. This diagram remained in the
-room where it was so strangely out of place till the destruction of
-the jail. His dress and deportment at the gallows (October 1, 1788)
-displayed a mind at ease, and gave some countenance to the popular
-notion that he had made certain mechanical arrangements for saving his
-life. Brodie was the first who proved the excellence of an improvement
-he had formerly made on the apparatus of the gibbet. This was the
-substitution of what is called the _drop_ for the ancient practice
-of the double ladder. He inspected the thing with a professional
-air, and seemed to view the result of his ingenuity with a smile of
-satisfaction. When placed on that insecure pedestal, and while the rope
-was adjusted round his neck by the executioner, his courage did not
-forsake him. On the contrary, even there he exhibited a sort of levity;
-he shuffled about, looked gaily around, and finally went out of the
-world with his hand stuck carelessly into the open front of his vest.
-
-[Illustration: Brodie’s Close.]
-
-As its infirmities increased with old age, the Tolbooth showed itself
-incapable of retaining prisoners of even ordinary rank. Within the
-recollection of people living not long ago, a youth named Hay, the son
-of a stabler in the Grassmarket, and who was under sentence of death
-for burglary, effected his escape in a way highly characteristic of the
-Heart of Mid-Lothian, and of the simple and unprecise system upon which
-all public affairs were managed before the present age.
-
-A few days before that appointed for the execution, the father went
-up to the condemned room, apparently to condole with his unhappy son.
-The irons had been previously got quit of by files. At nightfall, when
-most visitors had left the jail, old Hay invited the inner turnkey, or
-man who kept the hall-door, to come into the room and partake of some
-liquor which he had brought with him. The man took a few glasses, and
-became mellow just about the time when the bottle was exhausted and
-when the time of locking up the jail (ten o’clock at that period) was
-approaching. Hay expressed unwillingness to part at the moment when
-they were just beginning to enjoy their liquor; a sentiment in which
-the turnkey heartily sympathised. Hay took a crown from his pocket,
-and proposed that his friend should go out and purchase a bottle of
-good rum at a neighbouring shop. The man consented, and staggering away
-downstairs, neglected to lock the inner door behind him. Young Hay
-followed close, as had been concerted, and after the man had gone out,
-and the outer turnkey had closed the outer door, stood in the stair
-just within that dread portal, ready to spring into the street. Old Hay
-then put his head to the great window of the hall, and cried: ‘Turn
-your hand!’—the usual drawling cry which brought the outer turnkey to
-open the door. The turnkey came mechanically at the cry, and unclosed
-the outer door, when the young criminal sprang out, and ran as fast as
-he could down Beth’s Wynd, a lane opposite the jail. According to the
-plan which had been previously concerted, he repaired to a particular
-part of the wall of the Greyfriars Churchyard, near the lower gate,
-where it was possible for an agile person to climb up and spring over;
-and so well had every stage of the business been planned that a large
-stone had been thrown down at this place to facilitate the leap.
-
-The youth had been provided with a key which could open Sir George
-Mackenzie’s mausoleum—a place of peculiar horror, as it was supposed
-to be haunted by the spirit of the bloody persecutor; but what will
-not be submitted to for dear life? Having been brought up in Heriot’s
-Hospital, in the immediate neighbourhood of the churchyard, Hay had
-many boyish acquaintances still residing in that establishment. Some
-of these he contrived to inform of his situation, enjoining them to
-be secret, and beseeching them to assist him in his distress. The
-Herioters of those days had a very clannish spirit—insomuch that
-to have neglected the interests or safety of any individual of the
-community, however unworthy he might be of their friendship, would
-have been looked upon by them as a sin of the deepest dye. Hay’s
-confidants, therefore, considered themselves bound to assist him by
-all means in their power. They kept his secret faithfully, spared from
-their own meals as much food as supported him, and ran the risk of
-severe punishment, as well as of seeing eldritch sights, by visiting
-him every night in his dismal abode. About six weeks after his escape
-from jail, when the hue and cry had in a great measure subsided, he
-ventured to leave the tomb, and it was afterwards known that he escaped
-abroad.
-
-[Illustration: Sir George Mackenzie’s Mausoleum.]
-
-So ends our gossip respecting a building which has witnessed and
-contained the meetings of the Scottish parliament in the romantic days
-of the Jameses—which held the first fixed court of law established
-in the country—which was looked to by the citizens in a rude age as
-a fortified place for defence against external danger to their lives
-and goods—which has immured in its gloomy walls persons of all kinds
-liable to law, from the gallant Montrose and the faithful Guthrie
-and Argyll down to the humblest malefactor in the modern style of
-crime—and which, finally, has been embalmed in the imperishable pages
-of the greatest writer of fiction our country has produced.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[62] These verses are to be found in a curious volume, which appeared
-in London in 1618, under the title of _Essayes and Characters of
-a Prison and Prisoners_, by Geffray Mynshul, of Grayes Inn, Gent.
-Reprinted, 1821, by W. & C. Tait, Edinburgh. The lines were applied
-specially to the King’s Bench Prison.
-
-[63] A large white house near the Castle, on the north side of the
-street, and now (1868) no more.
-
-[64] Katherine Nairne was the niece of Sir William Nairne, later a
-judge under the title of Lord Dunsinnane, and it was currently reported
-that her escape from the Tolbooth was effected through his connivance.
-Sir William’s clerk accompanied the lady to Dover, and had great
-difficulty in preventing her recognition and arrest through her levity
-on the journey.
-
-
-
-
-SOME MEMORIES OF THE LUCKENBOOTHS.
-
- LORD COALSTOUN AND HIS WIG—COMMENDATOR BOTHWELL’S HOUSE—LADY
- ANNE BOTHWELL—MAHOGANY LANDS AND FORE-STAIRS—THE
- KRAMES—CREECH’S SHOP.
-
-
-A portion of the High Street facing St Giles’s Church was called the
-_Luckenbooths_, and the appellation was shared with a middle row of
-buildings which once burdened the street at that spot. The name is
-supposed to have been conferred on the shops in that situation as being
-_close shops_, to distinguish them from the open booths which then
-lined our great street on both sides; _lucken_ signifying closed. This
-would seem to imply a certain superiority in the ancient merchants of
-the Luckenbooths; and it is somewhat remarkable that amidst all the
-changes of the Old Town there is still in this limited locality an
-unusual proportion of mercers and clothiers of old standing and reputed
-substantiality.
-
-[Illustration: Tolbooth and Luckenbooths—looking East.]
-
-Previous to 1811, there remained unchanged in this place two tall
-massive houses, about two centuries old, one of which contained the
-town mansion of Sir John Byres of Coates, a gentleman of figure in
-Edinburgh in the reign of James VI., and whose faded tombstone may
-yet be deciphered in the west wall of the Greyfriars Churchyard. The
-Byreses of the Coates died out towards the end of the last century, and
-their estate has since become a site for streets, as our city spread
-westwards. The name alone survives in connection with an alley beneath
-their town mansion—_Byres’s Close_.
-
-
-LORD COALSTOUN AND HIS WIG.
-
-The _fourth floor_, constituting the Byres mansion, after being
-occupied by such persons as Lord Coupar, Lord Lindores, and Sir James
-Johnston of Westerhall, fell into the possession of Mr Brown of
-Coalstoun, a judge under the designation of Lord Coalstoun, and the
-father of the late Countess of Dalhousie. His lordship lived here in
-1757, but then removed to a more spacious mansion on the Castle-hill.
-
-A strange accident one morning befell Lord Coalstoun while residing
-in this house. It was at that time the custom for advocates, and no
-less for judges, to dress themselves in gown, wig, and cravat at their
-own houses, and to walk in a sort of state, thus rigged out, with
-their cocked hats in their hands, to the Parliament House.[65] They
-usually breakfasted early, and when dressed would occasionally lean
-over their parlour windows, for a few minutes before St Giles’s bell
-sounded the starting peal of a quarter to nine, enjoying the morning
-air, such as it was, and perhaps discussing the news of the day, or
-the convivialities of the preceding evening, with a neighbouring
-advocate on the opposite side of the alley. It so happened that one
-morning, while Lord Coalstoun was preparing to enjoy his matutinal
-treat, two girls, who lived in the second floor above, were amusing
-themselves with a kitten, which, in thoughtless sport, they had swung
-over the window by a cord tied round its middle, and hoisted for some
-time up and down, till the creature was getting rather desperate with
-its exertions. In this crisis his lordship popped his head out of
-the window directly below that from which the kitten swung, little
-suspecting, good easy man, what a danger impended, like the sword of
-Damocles, over his head, hung, too, by a single—not _hair_, ’tis true,
-but scarcely more responsible material—_garter_, when down came the
-exasperated animal at full career directly upon his senatorial wig.
-No sooner did the girls perceive what sort of a landing-place their
-kitten had found than, in terror and surprise, they began to draw it
-up; but this measure was now too late, for along with the animal
-up also came the judge’s wig, fixed full in its determined talons.
-His lordship’s surprise on finding his wig lifted off his head was
-much increased when, on looking up, he perceived it dangling its way
-upwards, without any means visible to him by which its motions might
-be accounted for. The astonishment, the dread, the almost _awe_ of the
-senator below—the half mirth, half terror of the girls above—together
-with the fierce and relentless energy of retention on the part of Puss
-between—altogether formed a scene to which language could not easily
-do justice. It was a joke soon explained and pardoned; but assuredly
-the perpetrators of it did afterwards get many lengthened injunctions
-from their parents never again to fish over the window, with such a
-bait, for honest men’s wigs.
-
-
-COMMENDATOR BOTHWELL’S HOUSE.
-
-The eastern of the tenements, which has only been renovated by a
-new front, formerly was the lodging of Adam Bothwell, Commendator
-of Holyrood, who is remarkable for having performed the Protestant
-marriage ceremony for Mary and the Earl of Bothwell. This ecclesiastic,
-who belonged to an old Edinburgh family of note, and was the uncle
-of the inventor of logarithms,[66] is celebrated in his epitaph
-in Holyrood Chapel as a judge, and the son and father of judges.
-His son was raised to the peerage in 1607, under the title of Lord
-Holyroodhouse, the lands of that abbacy, with some others, being
-erected into a temporal lordship in his favour. The title, however,
-sunk in the second generation. The circumstance which now gives most
-interest to the family is one which they themselves would probably have
-regarded as its greatest disgrace. Among the old Scottish songs is one
-which breaks upon the ear with the wail of wronged womanhood, mingled
-with the breathings of its indestructible affections:
-
- ‘Baloo, my boy, lie still and sleep,
- It grieves me sair to see thee weep.
- If thou’lt be silent, I’ll be glad;
- Thy mourning makes my heart full sad....
- Baloo, my boy, weep not for me,
- Whose greatest grief’s for wranging thee,
- Nor pity her deserved smart,
- Who can blame none but her fond heart.
-
- Baloo, my boy, thy father’s fled,
- When he the thriftless son hath played;
- Of vows and oaths forgetful, he
- Preferred the wars to thee and me:
- But now perhaps thy curse and mine
- Makes him eat acorns with the swine.
-
- Nay, curse not him; perhaps now he,
- Stung with remorse, is blessing thee;
- Perhaps at death, for who can tell
- But the great Judge of heaven and hell
- By some proud foe has struck the blow,
- And laid the dear deceiver low,’ &c.
-
-Great doubt has long rested on the history of this piteous ditty; but
-it is now ascertained to have been a contemporary effusion on the sad
-love-tale of Anne Bothwell, a sister of the first Lord Holyroodhouse.
-The only error in the setting down of the song was in calling it
-_Lady_ Anne Bothwell’s Lament, as the heroine had no pretension to a
-term implying noble rank. Her lover was a youth of uncommon elegance
-of person, the Honourable Alexander Erskine, brother of the Earl of
-Mar, of the first Earl of Buchan, and of Lord Cardross. A portrait of
-him, which belonged to his mother (the countess mentioned a few pages
-back), and which is now in the possession of James Erskine, Esq. of
-Cambo, Lady Mar’s descendant, represents him as strikingly handsome,
-with much vivacity of countenance, dark-blue eyes, a peaked beard,
-and moustaches. The lovers were cousins. The song is an evidence of
-the public interest excited by the affair: a fragment of it found its
-way into an English play of the day, Broom’s comedy of _The Northern
-Lass_ (1632). This is somewhat different from any of the stanzas in the
-common versions of the ballad:
-
- ‘Peace, wayward bairn. Oh cease thy moan!
- Thy far more wayward daddy’s gone,
- And never will recallèd be,
- By cries of either thee or me;
- For should we cry,
- Until we die,
- We could not scant his cruelty.
- Baloo, baloo, &c.
-
- He needs might in himself foresee
- What thou successively mightst be;
- And could he then (though me forego)
- His infant leave, ere he did know
- How like the dad
- Would prove the lad,
- In time to make fond maidens glad.
- Baloo, baloo,’ &c.
-
-The fate of the deceiver proved a remarkable echo of some of the verses
-of the ballad. Having carried his military experience and the influence
-of his rank into the party of the Covenanters, he was stationed (1640)
-with his brother-in-law, the Earl of Haddington, at Dunglass Castle,
-on the way to Berwick, actively engaged in bringing up levies for the
-army, then newly advanced across the Tweed; when, by the revenge of
-an offended page, who applied a hot poker to the powder magazine, the
-place was blown up. Erskine, with his brother-in-law and many other
-persons, perished. A branch of the Mar family retained, till no remote
-time, the awe-mingled feeling which had been produced by this event,
-which they had been led to regard as a punishment inflicted for the
-wrongs of Anne Bothwell.
-
-[Illustration: Byres’s Close, Back of Commendator Bothwell’s House.]
-
-At the back of the Commendator’s house there is a projection,[67] on
-the top of which is a bartisan or flat roof, faced with three lettered
-stones. There is a tradition that Oliver Cromwell lived in this
-house,[68] and used to come out and sit here to view his navy on the
-Forth, of which, together with the whole coast, it commands a view. As
-this commander is said to have had his guard-house in the neighbouring
-alley called Dunbar’s Close, there is some reason to give credit to the
-story, though it is in no shape authenticated by historical record. The
-same house was, for certain, the residence of Sir William Dick, the
-hapless son of Crœsus spoken of in a preceding article.
-
-These houses preserved, until their recent renovation, all the
-characteristics of that ancient mode of architecture which has procured
-for the edifices constructed upon it the dignified appellative of
-_Mahogany Lands_. Below were the booths or piazzas, once prevalent
-throughout the whole town, in which the merchants of the laigh shops,
-or cellars, were permitted to exhibit their goods to the passengers.
-The merchant himself took his seat at the head of the stair to attend
-to the wants of passing customers. By the ancient laws of the burgh,
-it was required that each should be provided with ‘lang wappinis, sick
-as a spear or a Jeddart staff,’ with which he was to sally forth and
-assist the magistrates in time of need; for example, when a _tulzie_
-took place between the retainers of rival noblemen meeting in the
-street.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-This house could also boast of that distinguished feature in all
-ancient wooden structures, a _fore-stair_, an antiquated convenience,
-or inconvenience, now almost extinct, consisting of a flight of steps,
-ascending from the pavement to the first floor of the mansion, and
-protruding a considerable way into the street. Nuisances as they still
-are, they were once infinitely worse. What will my readers think when
-they are informed that under these projections our ancestors kept their
-swine? Yes; _outside stairs_ was formerly but a term of outward respect
-for what were as frequently denominated _swine’s cruives_; and the rude
-inhabitants of these narrow mansions were permitted, through the day,
-to stroll about the ‘High Gait,’ seeking what they might devour among
-the heaps of filth which then encumbered the street,[69] as barn-door
-fowls are at the present day suffered to go abroad in country towns;
-and, like them (or like the town-geese of Musselburgh, which to
-this day are privileged to feed upon the race-ground), the sullen
-porkers were regularly called home in the evening by their respective
-proprietors.
-
-These circumstances will be held as sufficient evidence,
-notwithstanding all the enactments for the ‘policy of bigginis’ and
-‘decoring the tounes,’ that the stranger’s constant reproach of the
-Scots for want of cleanliness was not unmerited. Yet, to show that
-our countrymen did not lack a taste for decent appearances, let it be
-recollected that on every occasion of a public procession, entry of
-a sovereign, or other ceremonial, these fore-stairs were hung with
-carpets, tapestry, or arras, and were the principal places for the
-display of rank and fashion; while the windows, like the galleries of
-a theatre compared with the boxes, were chiefly occupied by spectators
-of a lower degree.[70] The strictest proclamations were always issued,
-before any such occasion, ordaining the ‘middinis’ and the ‘swine’ to
-be removed, and the stairs to be decorated in the manner mentioned.
-
-Beneath the stair of the house now under review there abode in later
-times an old man named Bryce, in whose life and circumstances there
-was something characteristic of a pent-up city like Edinburgh, where
-every foot of space was valuable. A stock of small hardwares and
-trinkets was piled up around him, leaving scarcely sufficient room
-for the accommodation of his own person, which completely filled the
-vacant space, as a hermit-crab fills its shell. There was not room
-for the admission of a customer; but he had a _half-door_, over which
-he sold any article that was demanded; and there he sat from morning
-till night, with his face turned to this door, looking up the eternal
-Lawnmarket. The place was so confined that he could not stand upright
-in it; nor could he stretch out his legs. Even while he sat, there
-was an uneasy obliquity of the stair, which compelled him to shrink a
-little aside; and by accustoming himself to this posture for a long
-series of years, he had insensibly acquired a twist in his shoulders,
-nearly approaching to a humpback, and his head swung a little to one
-side. This was _l’air boutiquier_ in a most distressing sense.
-
-In the description of this old tenement given in the title-deeds, it is
-called ‘All and haill that Lodging or Timber Land lying in the burgh
-of Edinburgh, on the north side of the High Street thereof, forgainst
-the place of the Tolbooth, commonly called the Poor Folks’ Purses.’ The
-latter place was a part of the northern wall of the prison, deriving
-its name from a curious circumstance. It was formerly the custom for
-the privileged beggars, called _Blue-gowns_, to assemble in the palace
-yard, where a small donation from the king, consisting of as many
-pennies as he was years old, was conferred on each of them; after which
-they moved in procession up the High Street, till they came to this
-spot, where the magistrates gave each a _leathern purse_ and a small
-sum of money; the ceremony concluding by their proceeding to the High
-Church to hear a sermon from one of the king’s chaplains.[71]
-
-
-THE KRAMES.
-
-The central row of buildings—the _Luckenbooths proper_—was not wholly
-taken away till 1817. The narrow passage left between it and the
-church will ever be memorable to all who knew Edinburgh in those days,
-on account of the strange scene of traffic which it presented—each
-recess, angle, and coign of vantage in the wall of the church being
-occupied by little shops, of the nature of Bryce’s, devoted to the sale
-of gloves, toys, lollipops, &c. These were the _Krames_, so famous at
-Edinburgh firesides. Singular places of business they assuredly were;
-often not presenting more space than a good church-pew, yet supporting
-by their commerce respectable citizenly families, from which would
-occasionally come men of some consequence in society. At the same spot
-the constable (Earl of Errol) was wont to sit upon a chair at the
-ridings of the parliament, when ceremonially receiving the members as
-they alighted.
-
-I am told that one such place, not more than seven feet by three, had
-been occupied by a glover named Kennedy, who with his gentle dame
-stood there retailing their wares for a time sufficient to witness the
-rise and fall of dynasties, never enjoying all that time the comfort
-of a fire, even in the coldest weather! This was a specimen of the
-life led by these patient creatures; many of whom, upon the demolition
-of their lath and plaster tenements, retired from business with
-little competencies. Their rents were from £3 to £6 per annum; and it
-appears that, huddled as the town then was around them, they had no
-inconsiderable custom. At the end of the row, under the angle of the
-church, was a brief stair, called _The Lady’s Steps_, thought to be a
-corruption of _Our Lady’s Steps_, with reference to a statue of the
-Virgin, the niche for which was seen in the east wall of the church
-till the renovation of the building in 1830. Sir George Mackenzie,
-however, in his _Observations on the Statutes_, states that the Lady’s
-Steps were so called from the infamous Lady March (wife of the Earl
-of Arran, James VI.’s profligate chancellor), from whom also the nine
-o’clock evening-bell, being ordered by her to an hour later, came to be
-called _The Lady’s Bell_. When men made bargains at the Cross, it was
-customary for them to go up to the Lady’s Steps, and there consummate
-the negotiation by wetting thumbs or paying _arles_.
-
-
-CREECH’S SHOP.
-
-The building at the east end of the Luckenbooths proper had a front
-facing down the High Street, and commanding not only a view of the busy
-scene there presented, but a prospect of Aberlady Bay, Gosford House,
-and other objects in Haddingtonshire. The shop in the east front was
-that of Mr Creech, a bookseller of facete memory, who had published
-many books by the principal literary men of his day, to all of whom he
-was known as a friend and equal. From this place had issued works by
-Kames, Smith, Hume, Mackenzie, and finally the poems of Burns. It might
-have been called the Lounger’s Observatory, for seldom was the doorway
-free of some group of idlers, engaged in surveying and commenting on
-the crowd in front; Creech himself, with his black silk breeches and
-powdered head, being ever a conspicuous member of the corps. The flat
-above had been the shop of Allan Ramsay, and the place where, in 1725,
-he set up the first example of a circulating library known in Scotland.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[65] Up to the year 1830, when George IV. Bridge gave easy access to
-Parliament House, this quaint custom was followed by Lord Glenlee, who
-walked from his house in Brown Square, down Crombie’s Close, across the
-Cowgate, and up the Back Stairs.
-
-[66] Napier of Merchiston.
-
-[67] This projection is still a notable architectural feature in the
-open space at the back of the tenement referred to. The original
-windows have been built up. One of the lettered stones bearing the
-words, ‘Blessit be God for all his giftis’—a favourite motto with old
-Edinburgh builders—was removed to Easter Coates house, where it may
-still be seen in that now old building adjoining St Mary’s Cathedral.
-
-[68] From this tradition it was known as ‘The Cromwell Bartizan.’
-Dunbar’s Close did not get its name from its supposed association with
-Cromwell’s soldiers, but from a family that lived in it. At an earlier
-period it was known as Ireland’s Close.
-
-[69] Edinburgh was not in this respect worse than other European
-cities. Paris, at least, was equally disgusting. Rigord, who wrote
-in the twelfth century, tells us that the king, standing one day at
-the window of his palace near the Seine, and observing that the dirt
-thrown up by the carriages produced a most offensive stench, resolved
-to remedy this intolerable nuisance by causing the streets to be paved.
-For a long time swine were permitted to wallow in them; till the young
-Philip being killed by a fall from his horse, from a sow running
-between its legs, an order was issued that no swine should in future
-run about the street. The monks of the Abbey of St Anthony remonstrated
-fiercely against this order, alleging that the prevention of the
-saint’s swine from enjoying the liberty of going where they pleased was
-a want of respect to their patron. It was therefore found necessary to
-grant them the privilege of wallowing in the dirt without molestation,
-requiring the monks only to turn them out with bells about their necks.
-
-[70]
-
- ‘To recreat hir hie renoun,
- Of curious things thair wes all sort,
- The stairs and houses of the toun
- With tapestries were spread athort:
- Quhair histories men micht behould,
- With images and anticks auld.
-
- THE DESCRIPTION OF THE QVEEN’S MAIESTIES MAIST
- HONORABLE ENTRY INTO THE TOWN OF EDINBVRGH, VPON THE
- 19. DAY OF MAII, 1590. BY JOHN BVREL.’—_Watson’s
- Collection of Scots Poems_ (1709).
-
-[71] In the early times these privileged beggars were called
-‘Bedesmen,’ from telling their beads as they walked from Holyrood to St
-Giles’. From the erection of the Canongate Church in 1690 the ceremony
-took place there, until it was discontinued in the first years of Queen
-Victoria’s reign. A well-known worthy of this community was reputed in
-1837 to possess property which yielded an annual income of £120.
-
-
-
-
-SOME MEMORANDA OF THE OLD KIRK OF ST GILES.
-
-
-[Illustration: ST GILES, WEST WINDOW.
-
-PAGE 105.]
-
-The central portion or transept of St Giles’s Church, opening from the
-south, formed a distinct place of worship, under the name of the Old
-Church, and this seems to have been the first arranged for Protestant
-worship after the Reformation. It was the scene of the prelections of
-John Knox (who, it will be remembered, was the first minister of the
-city under the reformed religion), until a month before his death, when
-it appears that another portion of the building—styled the Tolbooth
-Kirk—was fitted up for his use.
-
-[Illustration: John Knox’s Pulpit.]
-
-It also happened to be in the Old Kirk that the celebrated riot of the
-23rd of July 1637 took place, when, on the opening of the new Episcopal
-service-book, Jenny Geddes, of worthy memory, threw her cutty-stool at
-the dean who read it—the first weapon, and a formidable one it was,
-employed in the great civil war.[72]
-
-[Illustration: Jenny Geddes’s Stool.]
-
-Jenny Geddes was an herbwoman—_Scottice, a greenwife_—at the Tron
-Church, where, in former as well as in recent times, that class of
-merchants kept their stalls. It seems that, in the midst of the hubbub,
-Jenny, hearing the bishop call upon the dean to read the _collect_ of
-the day, cried out, with unintentional wit: ‘Deil colic the wame o’
-ye!’[73] and threw at the dean’s head the small stool on which she sat;
-‘a ticket of remembrance,’ as a Presbyterian annalist merrily terms it,
-so well aimed that the clergyman only escaped it by jouking;[74] that
-is, by [ducking or] suddenly bending his person.
-
-Jenny, like the originators of many other insurrections, appears to
-have afterwards repented of her exertions on this occasion. We learn
-from the simple diarist, Andrew Nichol, that when Charles II. was
-known, in June 1650, to have arrived in the north of Scotland, amidst
-other rejoicings, ‘the pure [_q.d._ poor] kaill-wyves at the Trone
-[Jenny Geddes, no doubt, among the number] war sae overjoyed, that they
-sacrificed their standis and creellis, yea, the verie _stoollis_ they
-sat on, in ane fyre.’ What will give, however, a still more unequivocal
-proof of the repentance of honest Jenny (after whom, by the way, Burns
-named a favourite mare), is the conduct expressly attributed to herself
-on the occasion of the king’s coronation in 1661 by the _Mercurius
-Caledonius_:
-
-‘But among all our bontados and caprices,’ says that curious register
-of events,[75] ‘that of the immortal Jenet Geddis, Princesse of the
-Trone adventurers, was most pleasant; for she was not only content to
-assemble all her Creels, Basquets, _Creepies_,[76] Furmes, and other
-ingredients that composed the Shope of her Sallets, Radishes, Turnips,
-Carrots, Spinage, Cabbage, with all other sorts of Pot Merchandise
-that belongs to the garden, but even her Leather Chair of State, where
-she used to dispense Justice to the rest of her Langkale Vassals, were
-all very orderly burned; she herself countenancing the action with a
-high-flown flourish and vermilion majesty.’
-
-The Scottish Society of Antiquaries nevertheless exhibit in their
-museum a clasp-stool, for which there is good evidence that it was the
-actual stool thrown by Mrs Geddes at the dean.
-
-In the southern aisle of this church, the Regent Murray, three weeks
-after his assassination at Linlithgow, February 14, 1569-70, was
-interred: ‘his head placed south, contrair the ordour usit; the
-sepulchre laid with hewin wark maist curiously, and on the head ane
-plate of brass.’ John Knox preached a funeral-sermon over the remains
-of his friend, and drew tears from the eyes of all present. In the
-Tolbooth Church, immediately adjoining to the west, sat the convention
-which chose the Earl of Lennox as his successor in the regency.
-Murray’s monument was not inelegant for the time; and its inscription,
-written by Buchanan, is remarkable for emphatic brevity.
-
-[Illustration: Modern Monument to the Marquis of Montrose (see p. 108).]
-
-This part of the church appears to have formerly been an open lounge.
-French Paris, Queen Mary’s servant, in his confession respecting the
-murder of Darnley, mentions that, during the communings which took
-place before that deed was determined on, he one day ‘took his mantle
-and sword, and went to walk (_promener_) in the High Church.’ Probably,
-in consequence of the veneration entertained for the memory of ‘the
-Good Regent,’ or else, perhaps, from some simple motive of conveniency,
-the Earl of Murray’s tomb was a place frequently assigned in bills for
-the payment of the money. It also appears to have been the subject of
-a similar jest to that respecting the tomb of Duke Humphrey. Robert
-Sempill, in his _Banishment of Poverty_, a poem referring to the year
-1680 or 1681, thus expresses himself:
-
- ‘Then I knew no way how to fen’;
- My guts rumbled like a _hurle-barrow_;
- I dined with saints and noblemen,
- Even sweet Saint Giles and Earl of Murray.’
-
-In the immediate neighbourhood of the Earl of Murray’s tomb, to the
-east, is the sepulchre of the Marquis of Montrose, executed in 1650,
-and here interred most sumptuously, June 1661, after the various
-parts of his body had been dispersed for eleven years in different
-directions, according to his sentence.[77]
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[72] We learn from Crawford’s _History of the University_ (MS. Adv.
-Lib.) that the service was read that day in the Old Kirk on account of
-the more dignified place of worship towards the east being then under
-the process of alteration for the erection of the altar, ‘and other
-pendicles of that idolatrous worship.’
-
-[73] _Notes upon the Phœnix edition of the Pastoral Letter_, by S.
-Johnson, 1694.
-
-[74] Wodrow, in his _Diary_, makes a statement apparently at issue with
-that in the text, both in respect of locality and person:
-
-‘It is the constantly believed tradition that it was Mrs Mean, wife to
-John Mean, merchant in Edinburgh, who threw the first stool when the
-service-book was read in the New Kirk, Edinburgh, 1637, and that many
-of the lasses that carried on the fray were preachers in disguise, for
-they threw stools to a great length.’
-
-[75] A newspaper commenced after the Restoration, and continued through
-eleven numbers.
-
-[76] Small stools.
-
-[77] See _St Giles’, Edinburgh: Church, College, and Cathedral_, by the
-Rev. Sir J. Cameron Lees, D.D.; also _Historical Sketch of St Giles’
-Cathedral_, by William Chambers, by whom the cathedral was restored in
-1872-83. Regarding the reinterment of Montrose, there is a narrative,
-with some fresh light on the subject, in the paper, ‘The Embalming of
-Montrose,’ in the first volume of _The Book of the Old Edinburgh Club_.
-The monuments to Knox, the Earl of Murray, and the Marquises of Argyll
-and Montrose are quite modern.
-
-
-
-
-THE PARLIAMENT CLOSE.
-
- ANCIENT CHURCHYARD—BOOTHS ATTACHED TO THE HIGH
- CHURCH—GOLDSMITHS—GEORGE HERIOT—THE DEID-CHACK.
-
-
-Previous to the seventeenth century, the ground now occupied by the
-Parliament House, and the buildings adjacent to the south and west,
-was the churchyard of St Giles’s, from the south side of which edifice
-it extended down a steep declivity to the Cowgate. This might formerly
-be considered the metropolitan cemetery of Scotland; as, together with
-the internal space of the church, it contained the ashes of many noble
-and remarkable personages, John Knox amongst the number. After the
-Reformation, when Queen Mary conferred the gardens of the Greyfriars
-upon the town, the churchyard of St Giles’s ceased to be much used as
-a burying-ground; and that extensive and more appropriate place of
-sepulture succeeded to this in being made _the Westminster Abbey of
-Scotland_.
-
-The west side of the cemetery of St Giles’s was bounded by the house
-of the provost of the church, who, in 1469, granted part of the same
-to the citizens for the augmentation of the burying-ground. From the
-charter accompanying the grant, it appears that the provost’s house
-then also contained the public school of Edinburgh.
-
-In the lower part of the churchyard[78] there was a small place of
-worship denominated the _Chapel of Holyrood_. Walter Chapman, the first
-printer in Edinburgh, in 1528 endowed an altar in this chapel with his
-tenement in the Cowgate; and, by the tenor of the charter, I am enabled
-to point out very nearly the residence of this interesting person, who,
-besides being a printer, was a respectable merchant in Edinburgh, and,
-it would appear, a very pious man. The tenement is thus described: ‘All
-and haill this tenement of land, back and foir, with houses, biggings,
-yards, and well[79] thereof, lying in the Cowgate of Edinburgh, on the
-south side thereof, near the said chapel, betwixt the lands of James
-Lamb on the east, and the lands of John Aber on the west, the arable
-lands called Wairam’s Croft on the south, and the said street on the
-north part.’
-
-
-BOOTHS.
-
-The precincts of St Giles’s being now secularised, the church itself
-was, in 1628, degraded by numerous wooden booths being stuck up around
-it. Yet, to show that some reverence was still paid to the sanctity
-of the place, the Town-council decreed that no tradesmen should be
-admitted to these shops except bookbinders, mortmakers (watchmakers),
-jewellers, and goldsmiths. _Bookbinders_ must here be meant to signify
-booksellers, the latter term not being then known in Scotland. Of
-mortmakers there could not be many, for watches were imported from
-Germany till about the conclusion of the seventeenth century. The
-goldsmiths were a much more numerous tribe than either of their
-companions; for at that time there prevailed in Scotland, amongst the
-aristocracy, a sort of rude magnificence and taste for show extremely
-favourable to these tradesmen.
-
-[Illustration: Old St Giles’s.]
-
-In 1632, the present great hall of the Parliament House was founded
-upon the site of the houses formerly occupied by the ministers of St
-Giles’s. It was finished in 1639, at an expense of £11,630 sterling,
-and devoted to the use of parliament.
-
-It does not appear to have been till after the Restoration that the
-Parliament Close was formed, by the erection of a line of private
-buildings, forming a square with the church. These houses, standing
-on a declivity, were higher on one side than the other; one is said
-to have been fifteen stories altogether in height. All, however,
-were burned down in a great fire which happened in 1700, after which
-buildings of twelve stories in height were substituted.[80]
-
-Among the noble inhabitants of the Parliament Close at an early period,
-the noble family of Wemyss were not the least considerable. At the time
-of Porteous’s affair, when Francis, the fifth earl, was a boy, his
-sisters persuaded him to act the part of Captain Porteous in a sort of
-drama which they got up in imitation of that strange scene. The foolish
-romps actually went the length of tucking up their brother, the heir of
-the family, by the neck, over a door; and their sports had well-nigh
-ended in a real tragedy, for the helpless representative of Porteous
-was black in the face before they saw the necessity of cutting him
-down.[81]
-
-The small booths around St Giles’s continued, till 1817, to deform the
-outward appearance of the church. Long before their destruction, the
-booksellers at least had found the space of six or seven feet too small
-for the accommodation of their fast-increasing wares, and removed to
-larger shops in the elegant tenements of the square. One of the largest
-of the booths, adjacent to the south side of the New or High Church,
-and having a second story, was occupied, during a great part of the
-last century, by Messrs Kerr and Dempster, goldsmiths. The first of
-these gentlemen had been member of parliament for the city, and was the
-last citizen who ever held that office [in the Scottish parliament].
-Such was the humility of people’s wishes in those days respecting their
-houses, that this respectable person actually lived, and had a great
-number of children, in the small space of the flat over the shop and
-the cellar under it, which was lighted by a grating in the pavement of
-the square. The subterraneous part of his house was chiefly devoted
-to the purposes of a nursery, and proved so insalubrious that all his
-children died successively at a particular age, with the exception of
-his son Robert, who, being born much more weakly than the rest, had the
-good luck to be sent to the country to be nursed, and afterwards grew
-up to be the author of a work entitled _The Life of Robert Bruce_, and
-the editor of a large collection of voyages and travels.
-
-
-GOLDSMITHS.
-
-The goldsmiths of those days were considered a superior class of
-tradesmen; they appeared in public with scarlet cloak, cocked hat,
-and cane, as men of some consideration. Yet in their shops every one
-of them would have been found working with his own hands at some
-light labour, in a little recess near the window, generally in a very
-plain dress, but ready to come forth at a moment’s notice to serve a
-customer. Perhaps, down to 1780, there was not a goldsmith in Edinburgh
-who did not condescend to manual labour.
-
-As the whole trade was collected in the Parliament Close, this was of
-course the place to which country couples resorted, during the last
-century, in order to make the purchase of silver tea-spoons, which
-always preceded their nuptials. It was then as customary a thing in the
-country for the intending bridegroom to take a journey, a few weeks
-before his marriage, to the Parliament Close, in order to buy the
-_silver spoons_, as it was for the bride to have all her clothes and
-stock of bed-furniture inspected by a committee of matrons upon the
-wedding eve. And this important transaction occasioned two journeys:
-one, in order to select the spoons, and prescribe the initials which
-were to be marked upon them; the other, to receive and pay for them. It
-must be understood that the goldsmiths of Edinburgh then kept scarcely
-any goods on hand in their shops, and that the smallest article had
-to be bespoken from them some time before it was wanted. A goldsmith,
-who entered as an apprentice about the beginning of the reign of
-George III., informed me that they were beginning only at that time to
-keep a few trifling articles on hand. Previously another old custom
-had been abolished. It had been usual, upon both the occasions above
-mentioned, for the goldsmith to adjourn with his customer to John’s
-Coffee-house,[82] or to the Baijen-hole,[83] and to receive the order
-or the payment, in a comfortable manner, over a dram and a _caup_ of
-small ale; which were upon the first occasion paid for by the customer,
-and upon the second by the trader; and the goldsmith then was perhaps
-let into the whole secret counsels of the rustic, including a history
-of his courtship—in return for which he would take pains to amuse his
-customer with a sketch of the city news. In time, as the views and
-capitals of the Parliament Close goldsmiths became extended, all these
-pleasant customs were abandoned.[84]
-
-
-GEORGE HERIOT.
-
-[Illustration: HERIOT’S HOSPITAL
-from Greyfriars’ Churchyard.
-
-PAGE 113.]
-
-The shop and workshop of George Heriot existed in this neighbourhood
-till 1809, when the extension of the Advocates’ Library occasioned the
-destruction of some interesting old _closes_ to the west of St Giles’s
-Kirk, and altered all the features of this part of the town. There was
-a line of three small shops, with wooden superstructures above them,
-extending between the door of the Old Tolbooth and that of the _Laigh
-Council-house_, which occupied the site of the present lobby of the
-Signet Library. A narrow passage led between these shops and the west
-end of St Giles’s; and George Heriot’s shop, being in the centre of the
-three, was situated exactly opposite to the south window of the Little
-Kirk. The back windows looked into an alley behind, called Beith’s or
-Bess Wynd. In confirmation of this tradition, George Heriot’s name
-was discovered upon the architrave of the door, being carved in the
-stone, and apparently having served as his _sign_. Besides this curious
-memorial, the booth was also found to contain his forge and bellows,
-with a hollow stone, fitted with a stone cover or lid, which had been
-used as a receptacle for and a means of extinguishing the living embers
-of the furnace, upon closing the shop at night. All these curiosities
-were bought by the late Mr E. Robertson of the Commercial Bank, who
-had been educated in Heriot’s Hospital, and by him presented to the
-governors, who ordered them to be carefully deposited and preserved
-in the house, where they now remain. George Heriot’s shop was only
-about seven feet square! Yet his master, King James, is said to have
-sometimes visited him and been treated by him here. There is a story
-that one day, when the goldsmith visited His Majesty at Holyrood, he
-found him sitting beside a fire, which, being composed of perfumed
-wood, cast an agreeable smell through the room. Upon George Heriot
-remarking its pleasantness, the king told him that it was quite as
-costly as it was fine. Heriot said that if His Majesty would come and
-pay him a visit at his shop, he would show him a still more costly fire.
-
-‘Indeed!’ said the king; ‘and I will.’ He accordingly paid the
-goldsmith a visit, but was surprised to find only an ordinary fire. ‘Is
-this, then, your fine fire?’ said he.
-
-‘Wait a little,’ said George, ‘till I get my fuel.’ So saying, he took
-from his bureau a bond for two thousand pounds which he had lent to the
-king, and laying it in the fire, added: ‘Now, whether is your Majesty’s
-fire or mine most expensive?’
-
-‘Yours most certainly, Master Heriot,’ said the king.
-
-Adjacent to George Heriot’s shop, and contiguous to the Laigh
-Council-house, there was a tavern, in which a great deal of small legal
-business used to be transacted in bygone times. Peter Williamson, an
-original and singular person, who had long been in North America, and
-therefore designated himself ‘from the other world,’ kept this house
-for many years.[85] It served also as a sort of vestry to the Tolbooth
-Church, and was the place where the magistrates took what was called
-the _Deid-chack_—that is, a refreshment or dinner, of which those
-dignitaries always partook after having attended an execution. The
-_Deid-chack_ is now abjured, like many other of those fashions which
-formerly rendered the office of a magistrate so much more comfortable
-than it now is.[86]
-
-The various kirks which compose St Giles’s had all different characters
-in former times. The High Kirk had a sort of dignified aristocratic
-character, approaching somewhat to prelacy, and was frequented only by
-sound church-and-state men, who did not care so much for the sermon as
-for the gratification of sitting in the same place with His Majesty’s
-Lords of Council and Session and the magistrates of Edinburgh, and
-who desired to be thought men of sufficient liberality and taste to
-appreciate the prelections of Blair. The Old Kirk, in the centre of the
-whole, was frequented by people who wished to have a sermon of good
-divinity, about three-quarters of an hour long, and who did not care
-for the darkness and dreariness of their temple. The Tolbooth Kirk was
-the peculiar resort of a set of rigid Calvinists from the Lawnmarket
-and the head of the Bow, termed the _Towbuith-Whigs_, who loved nothing
-but _extempore_ evangelical sermons, and would have considered it
-sufficient to bring the house down about their ears if the precentor
-had ceased, for one verse, the old hillside fashion of reciting the
-lines of the psalm before singing them. Dr Webster, of convivial
-memory, was long one of the clergymen of this church, and deservedly
-admired as a pulpit orator; though his social habits often ran nigh to
-scandalise his devout and self-denying congregation.
-
-The inhabitants and shopkeepers of the Parliament Square were in former
-times very sociable and friendly as neighbours, and formed themselves
-into a sort of society, which was long known by the name of _The
-Parliament-Close Council_. Of this association there were from fifty to
-a hundred members, who met once or twice a year at a dinner, when they
-usually spent the evening, as the newspaper phrase goes, ‘in the utmost
-harmony.’ The whim of this club consisted in each person assuming a
-titular dignity at the dinner, and being so called all the year after
-by his fellow-members. One was Lord Provost of Edinburgh, another
-was Dean of Guild, some were bailies, others deacons, and a great
-proportion state-officers. Sir William Forbes, who, with the kindness
-of heart which characterised him, condescended to hold a place in this
-assemblage of mummers, was for a long time _Member for the City_.
-
-Previous to the institution of the police-court, a bailie of Edinburgh
-used to sit, every Monday, at that part of the Outer Parliament House
-where the statue of Lord Melville now stands, to hear and decide upon
-small causes—such as prosecutions for scandals and defamation, or
-cases of quarrels among the vulgar and the infamous. This judicature,
-commonly called the _Dirt Court_, was chiefly resorted to by
-washerwomen from Canonmills and the drunken ale-wives of the Canongate.
-A list of Dirt-Court processes used always to be hung up on a board
-every Monday morning at one of the pillars in the piazza at the outside
-of the Parliament Square; and that part of the piazza, being the lounge
-of two or three low pettifoggers who managed such pleas, was popularly
-called the _Scoundrels’ Walk_. Early on Monday, it was usual to see one
-or two threadbare personages, with prodigiously clean linen, bustling
-about with an air of importance, and occasionally accosted by viragoes
-with long-eared caps flying behind their heads. These were the agents
-of the Dirt Court, undergoing conference with their clients.
-
-There was something lofty and august about the Parliament Close, which
-we shall scarcely ever see revived in any modern part of the town; so
-dark and majestic were the buildings all round, and so finely did the
-whole harmonise with the ancient cathedral which formed one of its
-sides! Even the echoes of the Parliament Square had something grand in
-them. Such, perhaps, were the feelings of William Julius Mickle when he
-wrote a poem on passing through the Parliament Close of Edinburgh at
-midnight,[87] of which the following is one of the best passages:
-
- ‘In the pale air sublime,
- St Giles’s column rears its ancient head,
- Whose builders many a century ago
- Were mouldered into dust. Now, O my soul,
- Be filled with sacred awe—I tread
- Above our brave forgotten ancestors. Here lie
- Those who in ancient days the kingdom ruled,
- The counsellors and favourites of kings,
- High lords and courtly dames, and valiant chiefs,
- Mingling their dust with those of lowest rank
- And basest deeds, and now unknown as they.’
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[78] St Giles’ churchyard was divided into two terraces by the old city
-wall (1450), which was built half-way down the sloping ground on the
-south side of the High Street. A part of this wall was exposed in 1832
-when excavations were made for additional buildings at the Advocates’
-Library.
-
-[79] Previous to 1681 the inhabitants of Edinburgh were supplied with
-water from pump-wells in the south side of the Cowgate.
-
-[80] Which also were destroyed in the fires of 1824.
-
-[81] The Wemysses’ footman was one of the few arrested on suspicion of
-being a ringleader in the Porteous riot.
-
-[82] John’s Coffee-house was then situated in the north-east corner of
-Parliament Close.
-
-[83] Baijen-hole, see note, p. 155.
-
-[84] In the early times above referred to, £100 was accounted a
-sufficient capital for a young goldsmith—being just so much as
-purchased his furnace, tools, &c., served to fit up his shop, and
-enabled him to enter the Incorporation, which alone required £40 out
-of the £100. The stock with which George Heriot commenced business
-at a much earlier period (1580)—said to have been about £200—must
-therefore be considered a proof of the wealth of that celebrated
-person’s family.
-
-[85] Peter had, in early life, been kidnapped and sold to the
-plantations. After spending some time among the North American Indians,
-he came back to Scotland, and began business in Edinburgh as a vintner.
-Robert Fergusson, in his poem entitled _The Rising of the Session_,
-thus alludes to a little tavern he kept within the Parliament House:
-
- ‘This vacance is a heavy doom
- On Indian Peter’s coffee-room,
- For a’ his china pigs are toom;
- Nor do we see
- In wine the soukar biskets soom
- As light’s a flee.’
-
-Peter afterwards established a penny-post in Edinburgh, which became
-so profitable in his hands that the General Post-office gave him a
-handsome compensation for it. He was also the first to print a street
-directory in Edinburgh. He died January 19, 1799.
-
-[86] Provost Creech was the first who had the good taste to abandon the
-practice.
-
-[87] See _Collection of Original Poems by Scotch Gentlemen_, vol. ii.
-137 (1762).
-
-
-
-
-MEMORIALS OF THE NOR’ LOCH.
-
-
-[Illustration: A SUGGESTION OF THE NORTH LOCH AND ST CUTHBERT’S
-from Allan Ramsay’s Garden.
-
-PAGE 117.]
-
-He who now sees the wide hollow space between the Old and New Towns,
-occupied by beautiful gardens, having their continuity only somewhat
-curiously broken up by a transverse earthen mound and a line of
-railway, must be at a loss to realise the idea of the same space
-presenting in former times a lake, which was regarded as a portion of
-the physical defences of the city. Yet many, in common with myself,
-must remember the by no means distant time when the remains of this
-sheet of water, consisting of a few pools, served as excellent sliding
-and skating ground in winter, while their neglected grass-green
-precincts too frequently formed an arena whereon the high and mighty
-quarrels of Old and New Town _cowlies_[88] [etymology of the word
-unknown] were brought to a lapidarian arbitration.
-
-The lake, it after all appears, was artificial, being fed by
-springs under the Castle Rock, and retained by a dam at the foot of
-Halkerston’s Wynd;[89] which dam was a passable way from the city to
-the fields on the north. Bower, the continuator of Fordun, speaks of
-a tournament held on the ground, _ubi nunc est lacus_, in 1396, by
-order of the queen [of Robert III.], at which her eldest son, Prince
-David, then in his twentieth year, presided. At the beginning of the
-sixteenth century a ford upon the North Loch is mentioned. Archbishop
-Beatoun escaped across that ford in 1517, when flying from the unlucky
-street-skirmish called _Cleanse the Causeway_. In those early times
-the town corporation kept ducks and swans upon the loch for ornament’s
-sake, and various acts occur in their register for preserving those
-birds. An act, passed in council between the years 1589 and 1594,
-ordained ‘a boll of oats to be bought for feeding the swans in the
-North Loch;’ and a person was unlawed at the same time for shooting a
-swan in the said loch, and obliged to find another in its place. The
-lake seems to have been a favourite scene for boating. Various houses
-in the neighbourhood had servitudes of the use of a boat upon it; and
-these, in later times, used to be employed to no little purpose in
-smuggling whisky into the town.
-
-The North Loch was the place in which our pious ancestors used to dip
-and drown offenders against morality, especially of the female sex.
-The Reformers, therefore, conceived that they had not only done a very
-proper, but also a very witty thing, when they threw into this lake, in
-1558, the statue of St Giles, which formerly adorned their High Church,
-and which they had contrived to abstract.
-
-It was also the frequent scene of suicide, and on this point one or
-two droll anecdotes are related. A man was deliberately proceeding
-to drown himself in the North Loch, when a crowd of the townspeople
-rushed down to the water-side, venting cries of horror and alarm at the
-spectacle, yet without actually venturing into the water to prevent him
-from accomplishing the rash act. Hearing the tumult, the father of the
-late Lord Henderland threw up his window in James’s Court, and leaning
-out, cried down the brae to the people: ‘What’s all the noise about?
-Can’t ye e’en let the honest man gang to the de’il his ain gate?’
-Whereupon the honest man quietly walked out of the loch, to the no
-small amusement of his lately appalled neighbours. It is also said that
-a poor woman, having resolved to put an end to her existence, waded a
-considerable way into the water, designing to take the fatal plunge
-when she should reach a place where the lake was sufficiently deep.
-Before she could satisfy herself on that point, her hoop caught the
-water, and lifted her off her feet. At the same time the wind caught
-her figure, and blew her, whether she would or not, into the centre
-of the pool, as if she had been sailing upon an inverted tub. She now
-became _alarmed_, screamed for help, and waved her arms distractedly;
-all of which signs brought a crowd to the shore she had just left, who
-were unable, however, to render her any assistance, before she had
-landed on the other side—fairly cured, it appeared, of all desire of
-quitting the uneasy coil of mortal life.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[88] An Edinburgh term applied to a class of rogues. Probably a corrupt
-pronunciation of the English word _cully_—to fool, to cheat.
-
-[89] Where the North Bridge now stands.
-
-
-
-
-THE PARLIAMENT HOUSE.
-
- OLD ARRANGEMENTS OF THE HOUSE—JUSTICE IN BYGONE TIMES—COURT
- OF SESSION GARLAND—PARLIAMENT HOUSE WORTHIES.
-
-
-The Parliament House, a spacious hall with an oaken arched roof,
-finished in 1639 for the meetings of the Estates or native parliament,
-and used for that purpose till the Union, has since then, as is
-well known, served exclusively as a material portion of the suite
-of buildings required for the supreme civil judicatory—the Court
-of Session. This hall, usually styled the _Outer House_, is now a
-nearly empty space, but it was in a very different state within the
-recollection of aged practitioners. So lately as 1779, it retained
-the divisions, furnishings, and other features which it had borne in
-the days when we had a national legislature—excepting only that the
-portraits of sovereigns which then adorned the walls had been removed
-by the Earl of Mar, to whom Queen Anne had given them as a present when
-the Union was accomplished.
-
-The divisions and furniture, it may be remarked, were understood to
-be precisely those which had been used for the Court of Session from
-an early time; but it appears that such changes were made when the
-parliament was to sit as left the room one free vacant space. The
-southern portion, separated from the rest by a screen, accommodated
-the Court of Session. The northern portion, comprising a sub-section
-used for the Sheriff-court, was chiefly a kind of lobby of irregular
-form, surrounded by little booths, which were occupied as taverns,
-booksellers’ shops, and toy-shops, all of very flimsy materials.[90]
-These _krames_, or boxes, seem to have been established at an early
-period, the idea being no doubt taken from the former condition of
-Westminster Hall. John Spottiswoode of Spottiswoode, who, in 1718,
-published the _Forms of Process before the Court of Session_, mentions
-that there were ‘two keepers of the session-house, who had small
-salaries to do all the menial offices in the house, and that no small
-part of their annual perquisites came from the _kramers_ in the outer
-hall.’
-
-
-JUSTICE IN BYGONE TIMES.
-
-The memories which have been preserved of the administration of justice
-by the Court of Session in its earlier days are not such as to increase
-our love for past times.[91] This court is described by Buchanan as
-extremely arbitrary, and by a nearly contemporary historian (Johnston)
-as infamous for its dishonesty. An advocate or barrister is spoken of
-by the latter writer as taking money from his clients, and dividing it
-among the judges for their votes. At this time we find the chancellor
-(Lord Fyvie) superintending the lawsuits of a friend, and writing to
-him the way and manner in which he proposed they should be conducted.
-But the strongest evidence of the corruption of ‘the lords’ is afforded
-by an act of 1579, prohibiting them ‘be thame selffis or be their
-wiffis or servandes, to tak in ony time cuming, _buddis_, _bribes_,
-_gudes_, _or geir_, fra quhatever persone or persons presentlie havand,
-or that heirefter sall happyne to have, _any actionis or caussis
-pursewit befoir thame_, aither fra the persewer or defender,’ under
-pain of confiscation. Had not bribery been common amongst the judges,
-such an act as this could never have been passed.
-
-In the curious history of the family of Somerville there is a very
-remarkable anecdote illustrative of the course of justice at that
-period. Lord Somerville and his kinsman, Somerville of Cambusnethan,
-had long carried on a litigation. The former was at length advised to
-use certain means for the advancement of his cause with the Regent
-Morton, it being then customary for the sovereign to preside in the
-court. Accordingly, having one evening caused his agents to prepare
-all the required papers, he went next morning to the palace, and being
-admitted to the regent, informed him of the cause, and entreated him
-to order it to be called that forenoon. He then took out his purse,
-as if to give a few pieces to the pages or servants, and slipping it
-down upon the table, hurriedly left the presence-chamber. The earl
-cried several times after him: ‘My lord, you have left your purse;’
-but he had no wish to stop. At length, when he was at the outer
-porch, a servant overtook him with a request that he would go back to
-breakfast with the regent. He did so, was kindly treated, and soon
-after was taken by Morton in his coach to the court-room in the city.
-‘Cambusnethan, by accident, as the coach passed, was standing at
-Niddry’s Wynd head, and having inquired who was in it with the regent,
-he was answered: “None but Lord Somerville and Lord Boyd;” upon which
-he struck his breast, and said: “This day my cause is lost!” and indeed
-it proved so.’ By twelve o’clock that day, Lord Somerville had gained a
-cause which had been hanging in suspense for years.
-
-In those days both civil and criminal procedure was conducted in
-much the same spirit as a suit at war. When a great noble was to be
-tried for some monstrous murder or treason, he appeared at the bar
-with as many of his retainers, and as many of his friends and their
-retainers, as he could muster, and justice only had its course if
-the government chanced to be the strongest, which often was not the
-case. It was considered dishonourable not to countenance a friend in
-troubles of this kind, however black might be his moral guilt. The
-trial of Bothwell for the assassination of Darnley is a noted example
-of a criminal outbraving his judges and jury. Relationship, friendly
-connection, solicitation of friends, and direct bribes were admitted
-and recognised influences to which the civil judge was expected to
-give way. If a difficulty were found in inducing a judge to vote
-against his conscience, he might at least perhaps be induced by some
-of those considerations to absent himself, so as to allow the case to
-go in the desired way. The story of the abduction of Gibson of Durie
-by Christie’s Will, and his immurement in a Border tower for some
-weeks, that his voice might be absent in the decision of a case—as
-given in the _Border Minstrelsy_ by Scott—is only incorrect in some
-particulars. (As the real case is reported in Pitcairn’s _Criminal
-Trials_, it appears that, in September 1601, Gibson was carried off
-from the neighbourhood of St Andrews by George Meldrum, younger of
-Dumbreck, and hastily transported to the castle of Harbottle in
-Northumberland, and kept there for eight days.) But, after all,
-Scotland was not singular among European nations in these respects. In
-Molière’s _Misanthrope_, produced in 1666, we find the good-natured
-Philinte coolly remonstrating with Alceste on his unreasonable
-resolution to let his lawsuit depend only on right and equity.
-
-‘Qui voulez-vous donc, qui pour vous sollicite?’ says Philinte. ‘Aucun
-juge par vous ne sera visité?’
-
-‘Je ne remuerai point,’ returns the misanthrope.
-
-_Philinte._ Votre partie est forte, et peut par sa cabale entrainer....
-
-_Alceste._ Il n’importe....
-
-_Philinte._ Quel homme!... On se riroit de vous, Alceste, si on vous
-entendoit parler de la façon. (_People would laugh at you if they heard
-you talk in this manner._)
-
-It is a general tradition in Scotland that the English judges whom
-Cromwell sent down to administer the law in Scotland, for the first
-time made the people acquainted with impartiality of judgment. It is
-added that, after the Restoration, when native lords were again put
-upon the bench, some one, in presence of the President Gilmour, lauding
-the late English judges for the equity of their proceedings, his
-lordship angrily remarked: ‘De’il thank them; a wheen kinless loons!’
-That is, no thanks to them; a set of fellows without relations in the
-country, and who, consequently, had no one to please by their decisions.
-
-After the Restoration there was no longer direct bribing, but other
-abuses still flourished. The judges were tampered with by private
-solicitation. Decisions went in favour of the man of most personal or
-family influence. The following anecdote of the reign of Charles II.
-rests on excellent authority: ‘A Scotch gentleman having entreated
-the Earl of Rochester to speak to the Duke of Lauderdale upon the
-account of a business that seemed to be supported by a clear and
-undoubted right, his lordship very obligingly promised to do his utmost
-endeavours to engage the duke to stand his friend in a concern so just
-and reasonable as his was; and accordingly, having conferred with his
-grace about the matter, the duke made him this very odd return, that
-though he questioned not the right of the gentleman he recommended to
-him, yet he could not promise him a helping hand, and far less success
-in business, if he knew not first the man, whom perhaps his lordship
-had some reason to conceal; “because,” said he to the earl, “if your
-lordship were as well acquainted with the customs of Scotland as I am,
-you had undoubtedly known this among others—_Show me the man, and I’ll
-show you the law_;” giving him to understand that the law in Scotland
-could protect no man if either his purse were empty or his adversaries
-great men, or supported by great ones.’[92]
-
-One peculiar means of favouring a particular party was then in the
-power of the presiding judge: he could call a cause when he pleased.
-Thus he would watch till one or more judges who took the opposite
-view to his own were out of the way—either in attendance on other
-duties or from illness—and then calling the cause, would decide it
-according to his predilection. Even the first President Dalrymple,
-afterwards Viscount Stair, one of the most eminent men whom the
-Scottish law-courts have ever produced, condescended to favour a party
-in this way. An act enjoining the calling of causes according to their
-place in a regular roll was passed in the reign of Charles II.; but
-the practice was not enforced till the days of President Forbes, sixty
-years later. We have a remarkable illustration of the partiality of
-the bench in a circumstance which took place about the time of the
-Revolution. During the pleadings in a case between Mr Pitilloch, an
-advocate, and Mr Aytoun of Inchdairnie, the former applied the term
-_briber_ to Lord Harcarse, a judge seated at the moment on the bench,
-and who was father-in-law to the opposite party. The man was imprisoned
-for contempt; but this is not the point. Not long after, in this same
-cause, Lord Harcarse went down to the bar in his gown, and pleaded for
-his son-in-law Aytoun!
-
-About that period a curious indirect means of influencing the judges
-began to be notorious. Each lord had a dependant or favourite,
-generally some young relative, practising in the court, through whom
-it was understood that he could be prepossessed with a favourable
-view of any cause. This functionary was called a _Peat_ or _Pate_,
-from a circumstance thus related in Wilkes’s _North Briton_: ‘One of
-the former judges of the Court of Session, of the first character,
-knowledge, and application to business, had a son at the bar whose
-name was Patrick; and when the suitors came about, soliciting his
-favour, his question was: “Have you consulted _Pat_?” If the answer
-was affirmative, the usual reply of his lordship was: “I’ll inquire of
-_Pat_ about it; I’ll take care of your cause; go home and mind your
-business.” The judge in that case was even as good as his word, for
-while his brother-judges were robing, he would tell them what pains
-his son had taken, and what trouble he had put himself to, by his
-directions, in order to find out the real circumstances of the dispute;
-and as no one on the bench would be so unmannerly as to question the
-veracity of the son or the judgment of the father, the decree always
-went according to the information of _Pat_. At the present era, in case
-a judge has no son at the bar, his nearest relation (and he is sure
-to have one there) officiates in that station. But, as it frequently
-happens, if there are _Pats_ employed on each side, the judges differ,
-and the greatest interest—that is, the longest purse—is sure to carry
-it.’
-
-I bring the subject to a conclusion by a quotation from the _Court
-of Session Garland_: ‘Even so far down as 1737 traces of the ancient
-evil may be found. Thus, in some very curious letters which passed
-between William Foulis, Esq. of Woodhall, and his agent, Thomas Gibson
-of Durie, there is evidence that private influence could even then be
-resorted to. The agent writes to his client, in reference to a pending
-lawsuit (23rd November 1735): “I have spoken to Strachan and several
-of the lords, who are all surprised Sir F[rancis Kinloch] should
-stand that plea. By Lord St Clair’s advice, Mrs Kinloch is to wait on
-Lady Cairnie to-morrow, to cause her ask the favour of Lady St Clair
-to solicit Lady Betty Elphingston and Lady Dun. My lord promises to
-back his lady, and to ply both their lords, also Leven and his cousin
-Murkle.[93] He is your good friend, and wishes success; he is jealous
-Mrs Mackie will side with her cousin Beatie. St Clair says _Leven[94]
-has only once gone wrong upon his hand since he was a Lord of Session_.
-Mrs Kinloch has been with Miss Pringle, Newhall. Young Dr Pringle is _a
-good agent there_, and discourses Lord Newhall[95] _strongly on the law
-of nature_,” &c.
-
-‘Again, upon the 23rd of January 1737, he writes: “I can assure you
-that when Lord Primrose left this town, he stayed all that day with
-Lord J[ustice] C[lerk],[96] and went to Andrew Broomfield at night,
-and went off post next morning; and what made him despair of getting
-anything done was, that it has been so long delayed, after promising so
-frankly, when he knew the one could cause the other trot to him like
-a penny-dog when he pleased. But there’s another hindrance: I suspect
-much Penty[97] has not been in town as yet, and I fancy it’s by him the
-other must be managed. The Ld. J[ustice] C[lerk] is frank enough, but
-the other two are —— clippies. I met with Bavelaw and Mr William on
-Tuesday last. I could not persuade the last to go to a wine-house, so
-away we went to an aquavity-house, where I told Mr Wm. what had passed,
-as I had done before that to Bavelaw. They seemed to agree nothing
-could be done just now, but to know why Lord Drummore[98] dissuaded
-bringing in the plea last winter. _I have desired Lord Haining to
-speak_, but only expect his answer against Tuesday or Wednesday.”
-
-‘It is not our intention to pursue these remarks further, although we
-believe that judicial corruption continued long after the Union. We
-might adduce Lord President Forbes as a witness on this point, who, one
-of the most upright lawyers himself, did not take any pains to conceal
-his contempt for many of his brethren. A favourite toast of his is
-said to have been: “Here’s to such of the judges as don’t deserve the
-gallows.” Latterly, the complaint against the judges was not so much
-for corrupt dealing, with the view of enriching themselves or their
-“pet” lawyer, but for weak prejudices and feelings, which but ill
-accorded with the high office they filled.
-
-‘These abuses, the recapitulation of which may amuse and instruct, are
-now only matter of history—the spots that once sullied the garments of
-justice are effaced, and the old compend, “Show me the man, and I’ll
-show you the law,” is out of date.’
-
-
-COURT OF SESSION GARLAND.
-
-A curious characteristic view of the Scottish bench about the year
-1771 is presented in a doggerel ballad, supposed to have been a joint
-composition of James Boswell and John Maclaurin,[99] advocates, and
-professedly the history of a process regarding a bill containing a
-clause of penalty in case of failure. This _Court of Session Garland_,
-as it is called, is here subjoined, with such notes on persons and
-things as the reader may be supposed to require or care for.
-
-
-PART FIRST.
-
- The bill charged on was payable at sight,
- And decree was craved by Alexander Wight;[100]
- But because it bore a penalty in case of failzie,
- It therefore was null, contended Willie Baillie.[101]
-
- The Ordinary, not choosing to judge it at random,
- Did with the minutes make _avisandum_;
- And as the pleadings were vague and windy,
- His lordship ordered memorials _hinc inde_.
-
- We, setting a stout heart to a stay brae,
- Took into the cause Mr David Rae.[102]
- Lord Auchinleck,[103] however, repelled our defence,
- And, over and above, decerned for expense.
-
- However, of our cause not being ashamed,
- Unto the whole lords we straightway reclaimed;
- And our Petition was appointed to be seen,
- Because it was drawn by Robbie Macqueen.[104]
-
- The Answer by Lockhart[105] himself it was wrote,
- And in it no argument nor fact was forgot.
- He is the lawyer that from no cause will flinch,
- And on this occasion divided the bench.
-
- Alemore[106] the judgment as illegal blames;
- ‘’Tis equity, you bitch,’ replies my Lord Kames.[107]
- ‘This cause,’ cries Hailes,[108] ‘to judge I can’t pretend,
- For _justice_, I perceive, wants an _e_ at the end.’
-
- Lord Coalstoun[109] expressed his doubts and his fears;
- And Strichen[110] threw in his _weel-weels_ and _oh dears_.
- ‘This cause much resembles the case of Mac-Harg,
- And should go the same way,’ says Lordie Barjarg.[111]
-
- ‘Let me tell you, my lords, this cause is no joke!’
- Says, with a horse-laugh, my Lord Elliock.[112]
- ‘To have read all the papers I pretend not to brag!’
- Says my Lord Gardenstone[113] with a snuff and a wag.
-
- Up rose the President,[114] and an angry man was he—
- ‘To alter the judgment I can never agree!’
- The east wing cried ‘YES,’ and the west wing cried ‘NOT;’
- And it was carried ‘ADHERE’[115] by my lord’s casting vote.
-
- The cause being somewhat knotty and perplext,
- Their lordships did not know how they’d determine next;
- And as the session was to rise so soon,
- They superseded extract till the 12th of June.[116]
-
-
-PART SECOND.
-
- Having lost it so nigh, we prepare for the summer,
- And on the 12th of June presented a reclaimer;
- But dreading a refuse, we gave Dundas[117] a fee,
- And though it run nigh, it was carried ‘TO SEE.’[118]
-
- In order to bring aid from usage bygone,
- The Answers were drawn by _quondam_ Mess John.[119]
- He united with such art our law with the civil,
- That the counsel on both sides wished him to the devil.
-
- The cause being called, my Lord Justice-clerk,[120]
- With all due respect, began a loud bark:
- He appealed to his conscience, his heart, and from thence
- Concluded—‘TO ALTER,’ but to give no expense.
-
- Lord Stonefield,[121] unwilling his judgment to pother,
- Or to be _anticipate_, agreed with his brother:
- But Monboddo[122] was clear the bill to enforce
- Because, he observed, it was the price of a horse.
-
- Says Pitfour,[123] with a wink, and his hat all a-jee,
- ‘I remember a case in the year twenty-three—
- The Magistrates of Banff _contra_ Robert Carr;
- I remember weel—I was then at the bar.
-
- Likewise, my lords, in the case of Peter Caw,
- _Superflua non nocent_ was found to be law.’
- Lord Kennet[124] also quoted the case of one Lithgow,
- Where a penalty in a bill was held _pro non scripto_.
-
- The Lord President brought his chair to the plumb,
- Laid hold of the bench, and brought forward his bum;
- ‘In these Answers, my lords, some freedoms are used,
- Which I could point out, provided I choosed.
-
- I was for the interlocutor, my lords, I admit,
- But am open to conviction as long’s I here do sit.
- To oppose your precedents, I quote a few cases;’
- And Tait[125] _à priori_, hurried up the causes.
-
- He proved it as clear as the sun in the sky,
- That their maxims of law could not here apply;
- That the writing in question was neither bill nor band,
- But something unknown in the law of the land.
-
- The question—‘Adhere,’ or ‘Alter,’ being put,
- It was carried—‘To Alter,’ by a casting vote;
- Baillie then moved—‘In the bill there’s a raze;’
- But by this time their lordships had called a new cause.
-
-A few additions to the notes, in a more liberal space, will complete
-what I have to set down regarding the lawyers of the last age.
-
-[Illustration: THE PARLIAMENT HOUSE.
-
-PAGE 128.]
-
-
-LOCKHART OF COVINGTON.[126]
-
-Lockhart used to be spoken of by all old men about the Court of Session
-as a paragon. He had been at the bar from 1722, and had attained the
-highest eminence long before going upon the bench, which he did at
-an unusually late period of life; yet so different were those times
-from the present that, according to the report of Sir William Macleod
-Bannatyne to myself in 1833, Lockhart realised only about a thousand a
-year by his exertions, then thought a magnificent income. The first man
-at the Scottish bar in our day is believed to gain at least six times
-this sum annually. Lockhart had an isolated house behind the Parliament
-Close, which was afterwards used as the Post-office.[127] It was
-removed some years ago to make way for the extension of the buildings
-connected with the court; leaving only its coach-house surviving, now
-occupied as a broker’s shop in the Cowgate.
-
-Mr Lockhart and Mr Fergusson (afterwards Lord Pitfour) were rival
-barristers—agreeing, however, in their politics, which were of a
-Jacobite complexion. While the trials of the poor _forty-five_ men were
-going on at Carlisle, these Scottish lawyers heard with indignation
-of the unscrupulous measures adopted to procure convictions. They
-immediately set off for Carlisle, arranging with each other that
-Lockhart should examine evidence, while Fergusson pleaded and addressed
-the jury; and offering their services, they were gladly accepted as
-counsel by the unfortunates whose trials were yet to take place. Each
-exerted his abilities, in his respective duties, with the greatest
-solicitude, but with very little effect. The jurors of Carlisle had
-been so frightened by the Highland army that they thought everything
-in the shape or hue of tartan a damning proof of guilt; and, in truth,
-there seemed to be no discrimination whatever exerted in inquiring
-into the merits of any particular criminal; and it might have been
-just as fair, and much more convenient, to try them by wholesale or
-in companies. At length one of our barristers fell upon an ingenious
-expedient, which had a better effect than all the eloquence he had
-expended. He directed his man-servant to dress himself in some tartan
-habiliments, to skulk about for a short time in the neighbourhood of
-the town, and then permit himself to be taken. The man did so, and was
-soon brought into court, and accused of the crime of high treason,
-and would have been condemned to death had not his master stood up,
-claimed him as his servant, and proved beyond dispute that the supposed
-criminal had been in immediate attendance upon his person during the
-whole time of the Rebellion. This staggered the jury, and, with the
-aid of a little amplification from the mouth of the young advocate,
-served to make them more cautious afterwards in the delivery of their
-important fiat.
-
-To show the estimation in which Lockhart of Covington was held as an
-advocate, the late Lord Newton, when at the bar, wore his gown till it
-was in tatters, and at last had a new one made, with a fragment of the
-neck of the original sewed into it, whereby he could still make it his
-boast that he wore ‘Covington’s gown.’
-
-
-LORD KAMES.
-
-This able judge and philosopher in advance of his time—for such he
-was—is described by his biographer, Lord Woodhouselee, as indulging
-in a certain humorous playfulness, which, to those who knew him
-intimately, detracted nothing from the feeling of respect due to his
-eminent talents and virtues. To strangers, his lordship admits, it
-might convey ‘the idea of lightness.’ The simple fact here shadowed
-forth is that Lord Kames had a roughly playful manner, and used
-phrases of an ultra-eccentric character. Among these was a word only
-legitimately applicable to the female of the canine species. The writer
-of the _Garland_ introduces this characteristic phrase. When his
-lordship found his end approaching very near, he took a public farewell
-of his brethren. I was informed by an ear-and-eye witness, who is
-certain that he could not be mistaken, that, after addressing them in
-a solemn speech and shaking their hands all round, in going out at the
-door of the court-room he turned about, and casting them a last look,
-cried in his usual familiar tone: ‘Fare ye a’ weel, ye bitches!’ He
-died eight days after.
-
-It was remarked that a person called _Sinkum the Cawdy_, who had a
-short and a long leg and was excessively addicted to swearing, used to
-lie in wait for Lord Kames almost every morning, and walk alongside
-of him up the street to the Parliament House. The mystery of Sterne’s
-little, flattering Frenchman, who begged so successfully from the
-ladies, was scarcely more wonderful than this intimacy, which arose
-entirely from Lord Kames’s love of the gossip which Sinkum made it his
-business to cater for him.
-
-These are not follies of the wise. They are only the tribute which
-great genius pays to simple nature. The serenity which marked the
-close of the existence of Kames was most creditable to him, though
-it appeared, perhaps, in somewhat whimsical forms to his immediate
-friends. For three or four days before his death, he was in a state of
-great debility. Some one coming in, and finding him, notwithstanding
-his weakness, engaged in dictating to an amanuensis, expressed
-surprise. ‘How, man,’ said the declining philosopher, ‘would you ha’e
-me stay wi’ my tongue in my cheek till death comes to fetch me?’
-
-
-LORD HAILES.
-
-When Lord Hailes died, it was a long time before any will could be
-found. The heir-male was about to take possession of his estates, to
-the exclusion of his eldest daughter. Some months after his lordship’s
-death, when it was thought that all further search was vain, Miss
-Dalrymple prepared to retire from New Hailes, and also from the
-mansion-house in New Street, having lost all hope of a will being
-discovered in her favour. Some of her domestics, however, were sent to
-lock up the house in New Street, and in closing the window-shutters,
-Lord Hailes’s will dropped out upon the floor from behind a panel, and
-was found to secure her in the possession of his estates, which she
-enjoyed for upwards of forty years.
-
-The literary habits of Lord Hailes were hardly those which would
-have been expected from his extreme nicety of phrase. The late Miss
-Dalrymple once did me the honour to show me the place where he wrote
-the most of his works—not the fine room which contained, and still
-contains, his books—no secluded boudoir, or den, where he could
-shut out the world, but the parlour fireside, where sat his wife and
-children.
-
-[1868.—Now that the grave has for thirty years closed over Miss
-Dalrymple, it may be allowable to tell that she was of dwarfish and
-deformed figure, while amiable and judicious above the average of her
-sex. Taking into view her beautiful place of residence and her large
-wealth, she remarked to a friend one day: ‘I can say, for the honour of
-man, that I never got an offer in my life.’]
-
-
-LORD GARDENSTONE.
-
-This judge had a predilection for pigs. One, in its juvenile years,
-took a particular fancy for his lordship, and followed him wherever
-he went, like a dog, reposing in the same bed. When it attained the
-mature years and size of swinehood, this of course was inconvenient.
-However, his lordship, unwilling to part with his friend, continued
-to let it sleep at least in the same room, and, when he undressed,
-laid his clothes upon the floor as a bed to it. He said that he liked
-it, for it kept his clothes warm till the morning. In his mode of
-living he was full of strange, eccentric fancies, which he seemed to
-adopt chiefly with a view to his health, which was always that of a
-valetudinarian.[128]
-
-
-LORD PRESIDENT DUNDAS.
-
-This distinguished judge was, in his latter years, extremely subject to
-gout, and used to fall backwards and forwards in his chair—whence the
-ungracious expression in the _Garland_. He used to characterise his six
-clerks thus: ‘Two of them cannot _read_, two of them cannot _write_,
-and the other two can neither _read_ nor _write_!’ The eccentric Sir
-James Colquhoun was one of those who could not _read_. In former times
-it was the practice of the Lord President to have a sand-glass before
-him on the bench, with which he used to measure out the utmost time
-that could be allowed to a judge for the delivery of his opinion. Lord
-President Dundas would never allow a single moment after the expiration
-of the sand, and he has often been seen to shake his old-fashioned
-chronometer ominously in the faces of his brethren when their ‘ideas
-upon the subject’ began, in the words of the _Garland_, to get vague
-and windy.
-
-
-LORD MONBODDO.
-
-Lord Monboddo’s motion for the enforcement of the bill, on account of
-its representing the value of a horse, is partly an allusion to his
-Gulliverlike admiration of that animal, but more particularly to his
-having once embroiled himself in an action respecting a horse which
-belonged to himself. His lordship had committed the animal, when sick,
-to the charge of a farrier, with directions for the administration of
-a certain medicine. The farrier gave the medicine, but went beyond
-his commission, in as far as he mixed it in a liberal _menstruum_ of
-treacle in order to make it palatable. The horse dying next morning,
-Lord Monboddo raised a prosecution for its value, and actually pleaded
-his own cause at the bar. He lost the case, however; and is said to
-have been so enraged in consequence at his brethren that he never
-afterwards sat with them upon the bench, but underneath amongst the
-clerks. The report of this action is exceedingly amusing, on account of
-the great quantity of Roman law quoted by the judges, and the strange
-circumstances under which the case appeared before them.
-
-Lord Monboddo, with all his oddities, and though generally hated or
-despised by his brethren, was by far the most learned and not the
-least upright judge of his time. His attainments in classical learning
-and in the study of the ancient philosophers were singular in his
-time in Scotland, and might have qualified him to shine anywhere. He
-was the earliest patron of one of the best scholars of his age, the
-late Professor John Hunter of St Andrews, who was for many years his
-secretary, and who chiefly wrote the first and best volume of his
-lordship’s _Treatise on the Origin of Languages_.
-
-The manners of Lord Monboddo were not more odd than his personal
-appearance. He looked rather like an old stuffed monkey dressed in a
-judge’s robes than anything else. His face, however, ‘sicklied o’er’
-with the pale cast of thought, bore traces of high intellect. So
-convinced is he said to have been of the truth of his fantastic theory
-of human tails, that whenever a child happened to be born in his house,
-he would watch at the chamber-door in order to see it in its first
-state, having a notion that the midwives pinched off the infant tails.
-
-There is a tradition that Lord Monboddo attended and witnessed the
-catastrophe of Captain Porteous in 1736. He had just that day returned
-from completing his law education at Leyden, and taken lodgings near
-the foot of the West Bow, where at that time many of the greatest
-lawyers resided. When the rioters came down the Bow with their hapless
-victim, Mr Burnet was roused from bed by the noise, came down in his
-night-gown with a candle in his hand, and stood in a sort of stupor,
-looking on, till the tragedy was concluded.
-
-
-PARLIAMENT HOUSE WORTHIES.
-
-Scott has sketched in _Peter Peebles_ the type of a class of crazy
-and half-crazy litigants who at all times haunt the Parliament House.
-Usually they are rustic men possessing small properties, such as
-a house and garden, which they are constantly talking of as their
-‘subject.’ Sometimes a faded shawl and bonnet is associated with the
-case—objects to be dreaded by every good-natured member of the bar.
-But most frequently it is simple countrymen who become pests of this
-kind. That is to say, simple men of difficult and captious tempers,
-cursed with an overstrong sense of right or an overstrong sense of
-wrong, under which they would, by many degrees, prefer utter ruin to
-making the slightest concession to a neighbour. Ruined these men often
-are; and yet it seems ruin well bought, since they have all along had
-the pleasure of seeing themselves and their little affairs the subject
-of consideration amongst men so much above themselves in rank.
-
-Peebles was, as we are assured by the novelist himself, a real person,
-who frequented the Edinburgh courts of justice about the year 1792,
-and ‘whose voluminous course of litigation served as a sort of essay
-piece to most young men who were called to the bar.’[129] Many persons
-recollect him as a tall, thin, slouching man, of homely outworn attire,
-understood to be a native of Linlithgow. Having got into law about a
-small house, he became deranged by the cause going against him, and
-then peace was no more for him on earth. He used to tell his friends
-that he had at present thirteen causes in hand, but was only going to
-‘move in’ seven of them this session. When anxious for a consultation
-on any of his affairs, he would set out from his native burgh at the
-time when other people were going to bed, and reaching Edinburgh at
-four in the morning, would go about the town ringing the bells of the
-principal advocates, in the vain hope of getting one to rise and listen
-to him, to the infinite annoyance of many a poor serving-girl, and no
-less of the Town-guard, into whose hands he generally fell.
-
-Another specimen of the class was Campbell of Laguine, who had perhaps
-been longer at law than any man of modern times. He was a store-farmer
-in Caithness, and had immense tracts of land under lease. When he sold
-his wool, he put the price in his pocket (no petty sum), and came down
-to waste it in the Court of Session. His custom—an amusing example of
-method in madness—was to pay every meal which he made at the inns on
-the road _double_, that he might have a _gratis_ meal on his return,
-knowing he would not bring a cross away in his pocket from the courts
-of justice. Laguine’s figure was very extraordinary. His legs were
-like two circumflexes, both curving outward in the same direction; so
-that, relative to his body, they took the direction of the blade of a
-reaping-hook, supposing the trunk of his person to be the handle. These
-extraordinary legs were always attired in Highland trews, as his body
-was generally in a gray or tartan jacket, with a bonnet on his head;
-and duly appeared he at the door of the Parliament House, bearing a
-tin case, fully as big as himself, containing a plan of his farms. He
-paid his lawyers highly, but took up a great deal of their time. One
-gentleman, afterwards high in official situation, observed him coming
-up to ring his bell, and not wishing that he himself should throw
-away his time or Laguine his fee, directed that he should be denied.
-Laguine, however, made his way to the lady of the learned counsel, and
-sitting down in the drawing-room, went at great length into the merits
-of his cause, and exhibited his plans; and when he had expatiated for
-a couple of hours, he departed, but not without leaving a handsome
-fee, observing that he had as much satisfaction as if he had seen the
-learned counsel himself. He once told a legal friend of the writer
-that his laird and he were nearly agreed now—there was only about
-_ten miles of country_ contested betwixt them! When finally this great
-cause was adjusted, his agent said: ‘Well, Laguine, what will ye do
-now?’ rashly judging that one who had, in a manner, lived upon law for
-a series of years would be at a loss how to dispose of himself now. ‘No
-difficulty there,’ answered Laguine; ‘I’ll dispute your account, and
-go to law with _you_!’ Possessed as he was by a demon of litigation,
-Campbell is said to have been, apart from his disputes, a shrewd and
-sensible, and, moreover, an honourable and worthy man. He was one of
-the first who introduced sheep-farming into Ross-shire and Caithness,
-where he had farms as large as some whole Lowland or English counties;
-and but for litigation, he had the opportunity of making much money.
-
-A person usually called, from his trade, the Heckler was another
-Parliament House worthy. He used to work the whole night at his
-trade; then put on a black suit, curled his hair behind and powdered
-it, so as to resemble a clergyman, and came forth to attend to the
-great business of the day at the Parliament House. He imagined that
-he was deputed by Divine Providence as a sort of controller of the
-Court of Session; but as if that had not been sufficient, he thought
-the charge of the General Assembly was also committed to him; and he
-used to complain that that venerable body was ‘much worse to keep in
-good order’ than the lawyers. He was a little, smart, well-brushed,
-neat-looking man, and used to talk to himself, smile, and nod with much
-vivacity. Part of his lunacy was to believe himself a clergyman; and it
-was chiefly the Teind Court which he haunted, his object there being to
-obtain an augmentation of his stipend. The appearance and conversation
-of the man were so plausible that he once succeeded in imposing himself
-upon Dr Blair as a preacher, and obtained permission to hold forth in
-the High Church on the ensuing Sunday. He was fortunately recognised
-when about to mount the pulpit. Some idle boys about the Parliament
-House, where he was a constant attendant, persuaded him that, as he
-held two such dignified offices as his imagination shaped out, there
-must be some salary attached to them, payable, like others upon the
-Establishment, in the Exchequer. This very nearly brought about a
-serious catastrophe; for the poor madman, finding his applications
-slighted at the Exchequer, came there one day with a pistol heavily
-loaded to shoot Mr Baird, a very worthy man, an officer of that court.
-This occasioned the Heckler being confined in durance vile for a long
-time; though, I think, he was at length emancipated.
-
-Other insane fishers in the troubled waters of the law were the
-following:
-
-Macduff of Ballenloan, who had two cases before the court at once.
-His success in the one depended upon his showing that he had capacity
-to manage his own affairs; and in the other, upon his proving himself
-incapable of doing so. He used to complain, with some apparent reason,
-that he lost them both!
-
-Andrew Nicol, who was at law thirty years about a _midden-stead_—_Anglicé_,
-the situation of a dunghill. This person was a native of Kinross, a
-sensible-looking countryman, with a large, flat, blue bonnet, in which
-guise Kay has a very good portrait of him, displaying, with chuckling
-pride, a plan of his precious midden-stead. He used to frequent the
-Register House as well as the courts of law, and was encouraged in his
-foolish pursuits by the roguish clerks of that establishment, by whom
-he was denominated _Muck Andrew_, in allusion to the object of his
-litigation. This wretched being, after losing property and credit and
-his own senses in following a valueless phantom, died at last (1817) in
-Cupar jail, where he was placed by one of his legal creditors.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[90] A full description of the old Parliament Hall, with a plan showing
-the divisions and the arrangements of the ‘booths,’ is given in
-_Reekiana_; _or, Minor Antiquities of Edinburgh_. It is not now called
-the Outer House.
-
-[91] Several of the illustrations in the present section are
-immediately derived from a curious volume, full of entertainment for
-a denizen of the Parliament House—_The Court of Session Garland_.
-Edinburgh: Thomas Stevenson. 1839.
-
-[92] _A Moral Discourse on the Power of Interest._ By David Abercromby,
-M.D. London, 1691. P. 60.
-
-[93] John Sinclair of Murkle, appointed a Lord of Session in 1733.
-
-[94] Alexander Leslie, advocate, succeeded his nephew as fifth Earl of
-Leven, and fourth Earl of Melville, in 1729. He was named a Lord of
-Session, and took his seat on the bench on the 11th of July 1734. He
-died 2nd February 1754.
-
-[95] Sir Walter Pringle of Newhall, raised to the bench in 1718.
-
-[96] Andrew Fletcher of Milton was appointed, on the resignation of
-James Erskine of Grange, Lord Justice-clerk, and took his seat on the
-bench 21st June 1735.
-
-[97] Probably Gibson of Pentland.
-
-[98] Hew Dalrymple of Drummore, appointed a Lord of Session in 1726.
-
-[99] Afterwards Lord Dreghorn.
-
-[100] Author of a Treatise on Election Laws, and Solicitor-general
-during the Coalition Ministry in 1783.
-
-[101] Afterwards Lord Polkemmet.
-
-[102] Afterwards Lord Eskgrove and Lord Justice-clerk.
-
-[103] Alexander Boswell, Esq., of Auchinleck, the author’s
-father—appointed to the bench in 1754; died 1782. This gentleman was
-a precise old Presbyterian, and therefore the most opposite creature
-in the world to his son, who was a cavalier in politics and an
-Episcopalian.
-
-[104] Afterwards Lord Braxfield—appointed 1776; died 1800, while
-holding the office of Lord Justice-clerk. Lord Braxfield is the
-prototype of Stevenson’s _Weir of Hermiston_.
-
-[105] Alexander Lockhart, Esq., decidedly the greatest lawyer at the
-Scottish bar in his day—appointed to the bench in 1774; died in 1782.
-
-[106] Andrew Pringle, Esq.—appointed a judge in 1759; died 1776. This
-gentleman was remarkable for his fine oratory, which was praised highly
-by Sheridan the lecturer (father of R. B. Sheridan) in his _Discourses
-on English Oratory_.
-
-[107] Henry Home, Esq.—raised to the bench 1752; died 1783. This
-great man, so remarkable for his metaphysical subtlety and literary
-abilities, was strangely addicted to the use of the coarse word in the
-text.
-
-[108] Sir David Dalrymple—appointed a judge in 1766; died 1792. A
-story is told of Lord Hailes once making a serious objection to a
-law-paper, and, in consequence, to the whole suit to which it belonged,
-on account of the word _justice_ being spelt in the manner mentioned in
-the text. Perhaps no author ever affected so much critical accuracy as
-Lord Hailes, and yet there never was a book published with so large an
-array of _corrigenda et addenda_ as the first edition of the _Annals of
-Scotland_.
-
-[109] George Brown, Esq., of Coalstoun—appointed 1756; died 1776.
-
-[110] Alexander Fraser of Strichen—appointed 1730; died 1774.
-
-[111] James Erskine, Esq., subsequently titled Lord Alva—appointed
-1761; died 1796. He was of exceedingly small stature, and upon that
-account denominated ‘Lordie.’
-
-[112] James Veitch, Esq.—appointed 1761; died 1793.
-
-[113] Francis Garden, Esq.—appointed 1764; died 1793—author of
-several respectable literary productions.
-
-[114] Robert Dundas, Esq., of Arniston—appointed 1760; died 1787.
-
-[115] The bench being semicircular, and the President sitting in the
-centre, the seven judges on his right hand formed the _east_ wing,
-those on his left formed the _west_. The decisions were generally
-announced by the words ‘Adhere’ and ‘Alter’—the former meaning an
-affirmance, the latter a reversal, of the judgment of the Lord Ordinary.
-
-[116] The term of the summer session was then from the 12th of June to
-the 12th of August.
-
-[117] Henry, first Viscount Melville, then coming forward as an
-advocate at the Scottish bar. When this great man passed advocate, he
-was so low in cash that, after going through the necessary forms, he
-had only one guinea left in his pocket. Upon coming home, he gave this
-to his sister (who lived with him), in order that she might purchase
-him a gown; after which he had not a penny. However, his talents soon
-filled his coffers. The gown is yet preserved by the family.
-
-[118] ‘To See’ is to appoint the petition against the judgment
-pronounced to be answered.
-
-[119] John Erskine of Carnock, author of the _Institute of the Law of
-Scotland_.
-
-[120] Thomas Miller, Esq., of Glenlee—appointed to this office in
-1766, upon the death of Lord Minto. He filled this situation till
-the death of Robert Dundas, in 1787, when (January 1788) he was made
-President of the Court of Session, and created a baronet, in requital
-for his long service as a judge. Being then far advanced in life, he
-did not live long to enjoy his new accession of honours, but died in
-September 1789.
-
-[121] John Campbell, Esq., of Stonefield.
-
-[122] James Burnet, Esq.—appointed 1767; died 1799.
-
-[123] James Fergusson, Esq.—appointed 1761; died 1777. He always wore
-his hat on the bench, on account of sore eyes.
-
-[124] Robert Bruce, Esq.—appointed 1764; died 1785.
-
-[125] Alexander Tait, Clerk of Session.
-
-[126] He was the grandson of Lord President Lockhart, who was shot by
-Chiesly of Dalry (see p. 75).
-
-[127] Within the memory of an old citizen, who was living in 1833, the
-Post-office was in the first floor of a house near the Cross, above
-an alley which still bears the name of the Post-office Close. Thence
-it was removed to a floor in the south side of the Parliament Square,
-which was fitted up like a shop, and the letters were dealt across an
-ordinary counter, like other goods. At this time all the out-of-door
-business of delivery was managed by one letter-carrier. About 1745
-the London bag brought on one occasion no more than a single letter,
-addressed to the British Linen Company. From the Parliament Square the
-office was removed to Lord Covington’s house, above described; thence,
-after some years, to a house in North Bridge Street; thence to Waterloo
-Place; and finally, to a new and handsome structure on the North Bridge.
-
-[128] Lord Gardenstone erected the building (in the form of a Grecian
-temple) which encloses St Bernard’s Well, on the Water of Leith,
-between the Dean Bridge and Stockbridge. He also founded the town of
-Laurencekirk in Kincardineshire, which he hoped to make a manufacturing
-centre.
-
-[129] Notes to _Redgauntlet_.
-
-
-
-
-CONVIVIALIA.
-
- ‘Auld Reekie! wale o’ ilka toon
- That Scotland kens beneath the moon;
- Where coothy chields at e’enin’ meet,
- Their bizzin’ craigs and mous to weet,
- And blithely gar auld care gae by,
- Wi’ blinkin’ and wi’ bleerin’ eye.’
-
- ROBERT FERGUSSON.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Tavern dissipation, now so rare amongst the respectable classes of the
-community, formerly prevailed in Edinburgh to an incredible extent, and
-engrossed the leisure hours of all professional men, scarcely excepting
-even the most stern and dignified. No rank, class, or profession,
-indeed, formed an exception to this rule. Nothing was so common in
-the morning as to meet men of high rank and official dignity reeling
-home from a close in the High Street, where they had spent the night
-in drinking. Nor was it unusual to find two or three of His Majesty’s
-most honourable Lords of Council and Session mounting the bench in the
-forenoon in a crapulous state. A gentleman one night stepping into
-Johnnie Dowie’s, opened a side-door, and looking into the room, saw a
-sort of _agger_ or heap of snoring lads upon the floor, illumined by
-the gleams of an expiring candle. ‘Wha may thae be, Mr Dowie?’ inquired
-the visitor. ‘Oh,’ quoth John in his usual quiet way, ‘just twa-three
-o’ Sir Willie’s drucken clerks!’—meaning the young gentlemen employed
-in Sir William Forbes’s banking-house, whom of all earthly mortals one
-would have expected to be observers of the decencies.
-
-[Illustration: Johnnie Dowie.]
-
-To this testimony may be added that of all published works descriptive
-of Edinburgh during the last century. Even in the preceding century, if
-we are to believe Taylor the Water-poet, there was no superabundance
-of sobriety in the town. ‘The worst thing,’ says that sly humorist in
-his _Journey_ (1623), ‘was, that wine and ale were so scarce, and the
-people such misers of it, that every night, before I went to bed, if
-any man had asked me a civil question, all the wit in my head could not
-have made him a sober answer.’
-
-The _diurnal_ of a Scottish judge[130] of the beginning of the last
-century, which I have perused, presents a striking picture of the
-habits of men of business in that age. Hardly a night passes without
-some expense being incurred at taverns, not always of very good fame,
-where his lordship’s associates on the bench were his boon-companions
-in the debauch. One is at a loss to understand how men who drugged
-their understandings so habitually could possess any share of vital
-faculty for the consideration or transaction of business, or how they
-contrived to make a decent appearance in the hours of duty. But,
-however difficult to be accounted for, there seems no room to doubt
-that deep drinking was compatible in many instances with good business
-talents, and even application. Many living men connected with the
-Court of Session can yet look back to a juvenile period of their lives
-when some of the ablest advocates and most esteemed judges were noted
-for their convivial habits. For example, a famous counsel named Hay,
-who became a judge under the designation of Lord Newton, was equally
-remarkable as a bacchanal and as a lawyer.[131] He considered himself
-as only the better fitted for business that he had previously imbibed
-six bottles of claret; and one of his clerks afterwards declared that
-the best paper he ever knew his lordship dictate was done after a
-debauch where that amount of liquor had fallen to his share. It was
-of him that the famous story is told of a client calling for him one
-day at four o’clock, and being surprised to find him at dinner; when,
-on the client saying to the servant that he had understood five to
-be Mr Hay’s dinner-hour—‘Oh, but, sir,’ said the man, ‘it is his
-_yesterday’s dinner_!’ M. Simond, who, in 1811, published a _Tour
-in Scotland_, mentions his surprise, on stepping one morning into
-the Parliament House, to find in the dignified capacity of a judge,
-and displaying all the gravity suitable to the character, the very
-gentleman with whom he had spent most of the preceding night in a
-fierce debauch. This judge was Lord Newton.
-
-Contemporary with this learned lord was another of marvellous powers
-of drollery, of whom it is told, as a fact too notorious at the time
-to be concealed, that he was one Sunday morning, not long before
-church-time, found asleep among the paraphernalia of the sweeps, in
-a shed appropriated to the keeping of these articles at the end of
-the Town Guard-house in the High Street. His lordship, in staggering
-homeward alone from a tavern during the night, had tumbled into this
-place, where consciousness did not revisit him till next day. Of
-another group of clever but over-convivial lawyers of that age, it is
-related that, having set to wine and cards on a Saturday evening, they
-were so cheated out of all sense of time that the night passed before
-they thought of separating. Unless they are greatly belied, the people
-passing along Picardy Place next forenoon, on their way to church, were
-perplexed by seeing a door open, and three gentlemen issue forth, in
-all the disorder to be expected after a night of drunken vigils, while
-a fourth, in his dressing-gown, held the door in one hand and a lighted
-candle in the other, by way of showing them out![132]
-
-The _High Jinks_ of Counsellor Pleydell, in _Guy Mannering_, must have
-prepared many for these curious traits of a bypast age; and Scott has
-further illustrated the subject by telling, in his notes to that novel,
-an anecdote, which he appears to have had upon excellent authority,
-respecting the elder President Dundas of Arniston, father of Lord
-Melville. ‘It had been thought very desirable, while that distinguished
-lawyer was king’s counsel, that his assistance should be obtained in
-drawing up an appeal case, which, as occasion for such writings then
-rarely occurred, was held to be a matter of great nicety. The solicitor
-employed for the appellant, attended by my informant, acting as his
-clerk, went to the Lord Advocate’s chambers in the Fishmarket Close,
-as I think. It was Saturday at noon, the court was just dismissed, the
-Lord Advocate had changed his dress and booted himself, and his servant
-and horses were at the foot of the close to carry him to Arniston.
-It was scarcely possible to get him to listen to a word respecting
-business. The wily agent, however, on pretence of asking one or two
-questions, which would not detain him half-an-hour, drew his lordship,
-who was no less an eminent _bon-vivant_ than a lawyer of unequalled
-talent, to take a whet at a celebrated tavern, when the learned counsel
-became gradually involved in a spirited discussion of the law points of
-the case. At length it occurred to him that he might as well ride to
-Arniston in the cool of the evening. The horses were directed to be put
-into the stable, but not to be unsaddled. Dinner was ordered, the law
-was laid aside for a time, and the bottle circulated very freely. At
-nine o’clock at night, after he had been honouring Bacchus for so many
-hours, the Lord Advocate ordered his horses to be unsaddled—paper,
-pen, and ink were brought—he began to dictate the appeal case, and
-continued at his task till four o’clock the next morning. By next day’s
-post the solicitor sent the case to London—a _chef-d’œuvre_ of its
-kind; and in which, my informant assured me, it was not necessary, on
-revisal, to correct five words.’
-
-It was not always that business and pleasure were so successfully
-united. It is related that an eminent lawyer, who was confined to
-his room by indisposition, having occasion for the attendance of his
-clerk at a late hour, in order to draw up a paper required on an
-emergency next morning, sent for and found him at his usual tavern.
-The man, though remarkable for the preservation of his faculties under
-severe application to the bottle, was on this night further gone than
-usual. He was able, however, to proceed to his master’s bedroom, and
-there take his seat at the desk with the appearance of a sufficiently
-collected mind, so that the learned counsel, imagining nothing more
-wrong than usual, began to dictate from his couch. This went on for two
-or three hours, till, the business being finished, the barrister drew
-his curtain—to behold _Jamie_ lost in a profound sleep upon the table,
-with the paper still in virgin whiteness before him!
-
-One of the most notable jolly fellows of the last age was James
-Balfour, an accountant, usually called _Singing Jamie Balfour_, on
-account of his fascinating qualities as a vocalist. There used to be
-a portrait of him in the Leith Golf-house, representing him in the
-act of commencing the favourite song of _When I ha’e a saxpence under
-my thoom_, with the suitable attitude and a merriness of countenance
-justifying the traditionary account of the man. Of Jacobite leanings,
-he is said to have sung _The wee German lairdie_, _Awa, Whigs, awa_,
-and _The sow’s tail to Geordie_ with a degree of zest which there was
-no resisting.
-
-Report speaks of this person as an amiable, upright, and able man; so
-clever in business matters that he could do as much in one hour as
-another man in three; always eager to quench and arrest litigation
-rather than to promote it; and consequently so much esteemed
-professionally that he could get business whenever he chose to
-undertake it, which, however, he only did when he felt himself in need
-of money. Nature had given him a robust constitution, which enabled him
-to see out three sets of boon-companions, but, after all, gave way
-before he reached sixty. His custom, when anxious to repair the effects
-of intemperance, was to wash his head and hands in cold water; this, it
-is said, made him quite cool and collected almost immediately. Pleasure
-being so predominant an object in his life, it was thought surprising
-that at his death he was found in possession of some little money.
-
-The powers of Balfour as a singer of the Scotch songs of all kinds,
-tender and humorous, are declared to have been marvellous; and he had
-a happy gift of suiting them to occasions. Being a great peacemaker,
-he would often accomplish his purpose by introducing some ditty pat
-to the purpose, and thus dissolving all rancour in a hearty laugh.
-Like too many of our countrymen, he had a contempt for foreign music.
-One evening, in a company where an Italian vocalist of eminence was
-present, he professed to give a song in the manner of that country.
-Forth came a ridiculous cantata to the tune of _Aiken Drum_, beginning:
-‘There was a wife in Peebles,’ which the wag executed with all the
-proper graces, shakes, and appoggiaturas, making his friends almost
-expire with suppressed laughter at the contrast between the style of
-singing and the ideas conveyed in the song. At the conclusion, their
-mirth was doubled by the foreigner saying very simply: ‘De music be
-very fine, but I no understand de words.’ A lady, who lived in the
-Parliament Close, told a friend of mine that she was wakened from her
-sleep one summer morning by a noise as of singing, when, going to the
-window to learn what was the matter, guess her surprise at seeing
-Jamie Balfour and some of his boon-companions (evidently fresh from
-their wonted orgies), singing _The king shall enjoy his own again_, on
-their knees, around King Charles’s statue! One of Balfour’s favourite
-haunts was a humble kind of tavern called _Jenny Ha’s_, opposite to
-Queensberry House, where, it is said, Gay had boosed during his short
-stay in Edinburgh, and to which it was customary for gentlemen to
-adjourn from dinner-parties, in order to indulge in claret from the
-butt, free from the usual domestic restraints. Jamie’s potations here
-were principally of what was called _cappie ale_—that is, ale in
-little wooden bowls—with wee thochts of brandy in it. But, indeed,
-no one could be less exclusive than he as to liquors. When he heard a
-bottle drawn in any house he happened to be in, and observed the cork
-to give an unusually smart report, he would call out: ‘Lassie, gi’e me
-a glass o’ _that_;’ as knowing that, whatever it was, it must be good
-of its kind.
-
-Sir Walter Scott says, in one of his droll little missives to his
-printer Ballantyne: ‘When the press does not follow me, I get on slowly
-and ill, and put myself in mind of Jamie Balfour, who could run, when
-he could not stand still.’ He here alludes to a matter of fact, which
-the following anecdote will illustrate: Jamie, in going home late from
-a debauch, happened to tumble into the pit formed for the foundation of
-a house in James’s Square. A gentleman passing heard his complaint, and
-going up to the spot, was entreated by our hero to help him out. ‘What
-would be the use of helping you out,’ said the passer-by, ‘when you
-could not stand though you _were_ out?’ ‘Very true, perhaps; yet if you
-help me up, I’ll _run_ you to the Tron Kirk for a bottle of claret.’
-Pleased with his humour, the gentleman placed him upon his feet, when
-instantly he set off for the Tron Church at a pace distancing all
-ordinary competition; and accordingly he won the race, though, at
-the conclusion, he had to sit down on the steps of the church, being
-quite unable to stand. After taking a minute or two to recover his
-breath—‘Well, another race to Fortune’s for another bottle of claret!’
-Off he went to the tavern in question, in the Stamp-office Close, and
-this bet he gained also. The claret, probably with continuations, was
-discussed in Fortune’s; and the end of the story is, Balfour sent his
-new friend home in a chair, utterly done up, at an early hour in the
-morning.
-
-[Illustration: Stamp-office Close.]
-
-It is hardly surprising that habits carried to such an extravagance
-amongst gentlemen should have in some small degree affected the fairer
-and purer part of creation also. It is an old story in Edinburgh that
-three ladies had one night a merry-meeting in a tavern near the Cross,
-where they sat till a very late hour. Ascending at length to the
-street, they scarcely remembered where they were; but as it was good
-moonlight, they found little difficulty in walking along till they came
-to the Tron Church. Here, however, an obstacle occurred. The moon,
-shining high in the south, threw the shadow of the steeple directly
-across the street from the one side to the other; and the ladies,
-being no more clear-sighted than they were clear-headed, mistook this
-for a broad and rapid river, which they would require to cross before
-making further way. In this delusion, they sat down upon the brink of
-the imaginary stream, deliberately took off their shoes and stockings,
-_kilted_ their lower garments, and proceeded to wade through to the
-opposite side; after which, resuming their shoes and stockings, they
-went on their way rejoicing, as before! Another anecdote (from an aged
-nobleman) exhibits the bacchanalian powers of our ancestresses in a
-different light. During the rising of 1715, the officers of the crown
-in Edinburgh, having procured some important intelligence respecting
-the motions and intentions of the Jacobites, resolved upon despatching
-the same to London by a faithful courier. Of this the party whose
-interests would have been so materially affected got notice; and that
-evening, as the messenger (a man of rank) was going down the High
-Street, with the intention of mounting his horse in the Canongate and
-immediately setting off, he met two tall, handsome ladies, in full
-dress, and wearing black velvet masks, who accosted him with a very
-easy demeanour and a winning sweetness of voice. Without hesitating as
-to the quality of these damsels, he instantly proposed to treat them
-with a pint of claret at a neighbouring tavern; but they said that,
-instead of accepting his kindness, they were quite willing to treat
-_him_ to his heart’s content. They then adjourned to the tavern, and
-sitting down, the whole three drank plenteously, merrily, and long, so
-that the courier seemed at last to forget entirely the mission upon
-which he was sent, and the danger of the papers which he had about his
-person. After a pertinacious debauch of several hours, the luckless
-messenger was at length fairly drunk under the table; and it is
-needless to add that the fair nymphs then proceeded to strip him of his
-papers, decamped, and were no more heard of; though it is but justice
-to the Scottish ladies of that period to say that the robbers were
-generally believed at the time to be young men disguised in women’s
-clothes.[133]
-
-The custom which prevailed among ladies, as well as gentlemen, of
-resorting to what were called _oyster-cellars_, is in itself a striking
-indication of the state of manners during the last century. In winter,
-when the evening had set in, a party of the most fashionable people
-in town, collected by appointment, would adjourn in carriages to one
-of those abysses of darkness and comfort, called in Edinburgh _laigh
-shops_, where they proceeded to regale themselves with raw oysters and
-porter, arranged in huge dishes upon a coarse table, in a dingy room,
-lighted by tallow candles. The rudeness of the feast, and the vulgarity
-of the circumstances under which it took place, seem to have given
-a zest to its enjoyment, with which more refined banquets could not
-have been accompanied. One of the chief features of an oyster-cellar
-entertainment was that full scope was given to the conversational
-powers of the company. Both ladies and gentlemen indulged, without
-restraint, in sallies the merriest and the wittiest; and a thousand
-remarks and jokes, which elsewhere would have been suppressed as
-improper, were here sanctified by the oddity of the scene, and
-appreciated by the most dignified and refined. After the table was
-cleared of the oysters and porter, it was customary to introduce brandy
-or rum-punch—according to the pleasure of the ladies—after which
-dancing took place; and when the female part of the assemblage thought
-proper to retire, the gentlemen again sat down, or adjourned to another
-tavern to crown the pleasures of the evening with unlimited debauch. It
-is not (1824) more than thirty years since the late Lord Melville, the
-Duchess of Gordon, and some other persons of distinction, who happened
-to meet in town after many years of absence, made up an oyster-cellar
-party, by way of a frolic, and devoted one winter evening to the
-revival of this almost forgotten entertainment of their youth.[134]
-
-It seems difficult to reconcile all these things with the staid and
-somewhat square-toed character which our country has obtained amongst
-her neighbours. The fact seems to be that a kind of Laodicean principle
-is observable in Scotland, and we oscillate between a rigour of manners
-on the one hand, and a laxity on the other, which alternately acquire
-an apparent paramouncy. In the early part of the last century, rigour
-was in the ascendant; but not to the prevention of a respectable
-minority of the free-and-easy, who kept alive the flame of conviviality
-with no small degree of success. In the latter half of the century—a
-dissolute era all over civilised Europe—the minority became the
-majority, and the characteristic sobriety of the nation’s manners was
-only traceable in certain portions of society. Now we are in a sober,
-perhaps tending to a rigorous stage once more. In Edinburgh, seventy
-years ago (1847), intemperance was the rule to such an degree that
-exception could hardly be said to exist. Men appeared little in the
-drawing-room in those days; when they did, not infrequently their
-company had better have been dispensed with. When a gentleman gave an
-entertainment, it was thought necessary that he should press the bottle
-as far as it could be made to go. A particularly good fellow would lock
-his outer door to prevent any guest of dyspeptic tendencies or sober
-inclinations from escaping. Some were so considerate as to provide
-shake-down beds for a general bivouac in a neighbouring apartment.
-When gentlemen were obliged to appear at assemblies where decency was
-enforced, they of course wore their best attire. This it was customary
-to change for something less liable to receive damage, ere going, as
-they usually did, to conclude the evening by a scene of conviviality.
-Drinking entered into everything. As Sir Alexander Boswell has observed:
-
- ‘O’er draughts of wine the beau would moan his love,
- O’er draughts of wine the cit his bargain drove,
- O’er draughts of wine the writer penned the will,
- And legal wisdom counselled o’er a gill.’
-
-Then was the time when men, despising and neglecting the company of
-women, always so civilising in its influence, would yet half-kill
-themselves with bumpers in order, as the phrase went, to _save
-them_. Drinking to save the ladies is said to have originated with a
-catch-club, which issued tickets for gratuitous concerts. Many tickets
-with the names of ladies being prepared, one was taken up and the name
-announced. Any member present was at liberty to toast the health of
-this lady in a bumper, and this ensured her ticket being reserved for
-her use. If no one came forward to honour her name in this manner,
-the lady was said to be damned, and her ticket was thrown under the
-table. Whether from this origin or not, the practice is said to have
-ultimately had the following form. One gentleman would give out the
-name of some lady as the most beautiful object in creation, and, by
-way of attesting what he said, drink one bumper. Another champion
-would then enter the field, and offer to prove that a certain other
-lady, whom he named, was a great deal more beautiful than she just
-mentioned—supporting his assertion by drinking two bumpers. Then the
-other would rise up, declare this to be false, and in proof of his
-original statement, as well as by way of turning the scale upon his
-opponent, drink four bumpers. Not deterred or repressed by this, the
-second man would reiterate, and conclude by drinking as much as the
-challenger, who would again start up and drink eight bumpers; and so
-on, in geometrical progression, till one or other of the heroes fell
-under the table; when of course the fair Delia of the survivor was
-declared the queen supreme of beauty by all present. I have seen a
-sonnet addressed on the morning after such a scene of contention to the
-lady concerned by the unsuccessful hero, whose brains appear to have
-been woefully muddled by the claret he had drunk in her behalf.
-
-It was not merely in the evenings that taverns were then resorted to.
-There was a petty treat, called a ‘meridian,’ which no man of that day
-thought himself able to dispense with; and this was generally indulged
-in at a tavern. ‘A cauld cock and a feather’ was the metaphorical mode
-of calling for a glass of brandy and a bunch of raisins, which was
-the favourite regale of many. Others took a glass of whisky, some few
-a lunch. Scott very amusingly describes, from his own observation,
-the manner in which the affair of the meridian was gone about by
-the writers and clerks belonging to the Parliament House. ‘If their
-proceedings were watched, they might be seen to turn fidgety about the
-hour of noon, and exchange looks with each other from their separate
-desks, till at length some one of formal and dignified presence
-assumed the honour of leading the band; when away they went, threading
-the crowd like a string of wild-fowl, crossed the square or close,
-and following each other into the [John’s] coffee-house, drank the
-meridian, which was placed ready at the bar. This they did day by day;
-and though they did not speak to each other, they seemed to attach a
-certain degree of sociability to performing the ceremony in company.’
-
-It was in the evening, of course, that the tavern debaucheries assumed
-their proper character of unpalliated fierceness and destructive
-duration. In the words of Robert Fergusson:
-
- ‘Now night, that’s cunzied chief for fun,
- Is with her usual rites begun.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Some to porter, some to punch,
- Retire; while noisy ten-hours’ drum
- Gars a’ the trades gang danderin’ hame.
- Now, mony a club, jocose and free,
- Gi’e a’ to merriment and glee;
- Wi’ sang and glass they fley the power
- O’ care, that wad harass the hour.
-
- * * * * *
-
- Chief, O CAPE! we crave thy aid,
- To get our cares and poortith laid.
- Sincerity and genius true,
- O’ knights have ever been the due.
- Mirth, music, porter deepest-dyed,
- Are never here to worth denied.’
-
-All the shops in the town were then shut at eight o’clock; and from
-that hour till ten—when the drum of the Town-guard announced at once
-a sort of license for the deluging of the streets with nuisances,[135]
-and a warning of the inhabitants home to their beds—unrestrained scope
-was given to the delights of the table. No tradesman thought of going
-home to his family till after he had spent an hour or two at his club.
-This was universal and unfailing. So lately as 1824, I knew something
-of an old-fashioned tradesman who nightly shut his shop at eight
-o’clock, and then adjourned with two old friends, who called upon him
-at that hour, to a quiet old public-house on the opposite side of the
-way, where they each drank precisely one bottle of Edinburgh ale, ate
-precisely one halfpenny roll, and got upon their legs precisely at the
-first stroke of ten o’clock.
-
-The CAPE CLUB alluded to by Fergusson aspired to a refined and
-classical character, comprising amongst its numerous members many
-men of talents, as well as of private worth. Fergusson himself was
-a member; as were Mr Thomas Sommers, his friend and biographer; Mr
-Woods, a player of eminence on the humble boards of Edinburgh, and
-an intimate companion of the poet; and Mr Runciman the painter. The
-name of the club had its foundation in one of those weak jokes such
-as ‘gentle dullness ever loves.’ A person who lived in the Calton was
-in the custom of spending an hour or two every evening with one or
-two city friends, and being sometimes detained till after the regular
-period when the Netherbow Port was shut, it occasionally happened
-that he had either to remain in the city all night, or was under the
-necessity of bribing the porter who attended the gate. This difficult
-_pass_—partly on account of the rectangular corner which he turned
-immediately on getting out of the Port, as he went homewards down Leith
-Wynd—the Calton burgher facetiously called _doubling the Cape_; and as
-it was customary with his friends every evening when they assembled to
-inquire ‘how he turned the Cape last night,’ and indeed to make that
-circumstance and that phrase, night after night, the subject of their
-conversation and amusement, ‘the Cape’ in time became so assimilated
-with their very existence that they adopted it as a title; and it
-was retained as such by the organised club into which shortly after
-they thought proper to form themselves. The Cape Club owned a regular
-institution from 1763. It will scarcely be credited in the present day
-that a jest of the above nature could keep an assemblage of rational
-citizens, and, we may add, professed wits, merry after a thousand
-repetitions. Yet it really is true that the patron-jests of many a
-numerous and enlightened association were no better than this, and the
-greater part of them worse. As instance the following:
-
-There was the ANTEMANUM CLUB, of which the members used to boast of the
-state of their hands, _before-hand_, in playing at ‘Brag.’ The members
-were all men of respectability, some of them gentlemen of fortune.
-They met every Saturday and dined. It was at first a purely convivial
-club; but latterly, the Whig party gaining a sort of preponderance, it
-degenerated into a political association.
-
-The PIOUS CLUB was composed of decent, orderly citizens, who met every
-night, Sundays not excepted, in a _pie-house_, and whose joke was the
-_équivoque_ of these expressions—similar in sound, but different in
-signification. The agreeable uncertainty as to whether their name
-arose from their _piety_, or the circumstance of their eating _pies_,
-kept the club hearty for many years. At their Sunday meetings the
-conversation usually took a serious turn—perhaps upon the sermons
-which they had respectively heard during the day: this they considered
-as rendering their title of _Pious_ not altogether undeserved.
-Moreover, they were all, as the saying was, _ten o’clock men_, and of
-good character. Fifteen persons were considered as constituting a full
-night. The whole allowable debauch was a gill of toddy to each person,
-which was drunk, like wine, out of a common decanter. One of the
-members of the Pious Club was a Mr Lind, a man of at least twenty-five
-stone weight, immoderately fond of good eating and drinking. It was
-generally believed of him that were all the oxen he had devoured ranged
-in a line, they would reach from the Watergate to the Castle-hill,
-and that the wine he had drunk would swim a seventy-four. His most
-favourite viand was a very strange one—salmon skins. When dining
-anywhere, with salmon on the table, he made no scruple of raking all
-the skins off the plates of the rest of the guests. He had only one
-toast, from which he never varied: ‘Merry days to honest fellows.’ A Mr
-Drummond was esteemed poet-laureate to this club. He was a facetious,
-clever man. Of his poetical talents, take a specimen in the following
-lines on Lind:
-
- ‘In going to dinner, he ne’er lost his way,
- Though often, when done, he was carted away.’
-
-He made the following impromptu on an associate of small figure and
-equally small understanding, who had been successful in the world:
-
- ‘O thou of genius slow,
- Weak by nature;
- A rich fellow,
- But a poor creature.’
-
-[Illustration: The Watergate.]
-
-The SPENDTHRIFT CLUB took its name from the extravagance of the members
-in spending no less a sum than fourpence halfpenny each night! It
-consisted of respectable citizens of the middle class, and continued in
-1824 to exist in a modified state. Its meetings, originally nightly,
-were then reduced to four a week. The men used to play at whist for a
-halfpenny—one, two, three—no rubbers; but latterly they had, with
-their characteristic extravagance, doubled the stake! Supper originally
-cost no less than twopence; and half a bottle of strong ale, with a
-dram, stood every member twopence halfpenny; to all which sumptuous
-profusion might be added still another halfpenny, which was given
-to the maid-servant—in all, fivepence! Latterly the dram had been
-disused; but such had been the general increase, either in the cost
-or the quantity of the indulgences, that the usual nightly expense
-was ultimately from a shilling to one and fourpence. The winnings at
-whist were always thrown into the reckoning. A large two-quart bottle
-or tappit-hen was introduced by the landlady, with a small measure,
-out of which the company helped themselves; and the members made up
-their own bill with chalk upon the table. In 1824, in the recollection
-of the senior members, some of whom were of fifty years’ standing,
-the house was kept by the widow of a Lieutenant Hamilton of the army,
-who recollected having attended the theatre in the Tennis Court at
-Holyroodhouse, when the play was the _Spanish Friar_, and when many of
-the members of the _Union Parliament_ were present in the house.
-
-[Illustration: Tappit-hen.]
-
-The BOAR CLUB was an association of a different sort, consisting
-chiefly of wild, fashionable young men; and the place of meeting was
-not in any of the snug profundities of the Old Town, but in a modern
-tavern in Shakspeare Square, kept by one Daniel Hogg. The _joke_ of
-this club consisted in the supposition that all the members were
-_boars_, that their room was a _sty_, that their talk was _grunting_,
-and in the _double-entendre_ of the small piece of stone-ware which
-served as a repository of all the fines being a _pig_. Upon this they
-lived twenty years. I have, at some expense of eyesight and with no
-small exertion of patience, perused the soiled and blotted records of
-the club, which in 1824 were preserved by an old vintner, whose house
-was their last place of meeting; and the result has been the following
-memorabilia. The Boar Club commenced its meetings in 1787, and the
-original members were J. G. C. Schetky, a German musician; David Shaw;
-Archibald Crawfuird; Patrick Robertson; Robert Aldridge, a famed
-pantomimist and dancing-master; James Neilson; and Luke Cross. Some of
-these were remarkable men, in particular Mr Schetky. He had come to
-Edinburgh about the beginning of the reign of George III. He used to
-tell that on alighting at Ramsay’s inn, opposite the Cowgate Port, his
-first impression of the city was so unfavourable that he was on the
-point of leaving it again without further acquaintance, and was only
-prevented from doing so by the solicitations of his fellow-traveller,
-who was not so much alarmed at the dingy and squalid appearance of
-this part of Auld Reekie.[136] He was first employed at St Cecilia’s
-Hall, where the concerts were attended by all the ‘rank, beauty, and
-fashion’ of which Edinburgh could then boast, and where, besides the
-professional performers, many amateurs of great musical skill and
-enthusiasm, such as Mr Tytler of Woodhouselee,[137] were pleased to
-exhibit themselves for the entertainment of their friends, who alone
-were admitted by tickets. Mr Schetky composed the march of a body of
-volunteers called the Edinburgh Defensive Band, which was raised out
-of the citizens of Edinburgh at the time of the American war, and was
-commanded by the eminent advocate Crosbie. One of the verses to which
-the march was set may be given as an admirable specimen of _militia
-poetry_:
-
- ‘Colonel Crosbie takes the field;
- To France and Spain he will not yield;
- But still maintains his high command
- At the head of the noble Defensive Band.’[138]
-
-[Illustration: ‘AULD REEKIE’
-from Largo.
-
-PAGE 152.]
-
-Mr Schetky was primarily concerned in the founding of the Boar Club.
-He was in the habit of meeting every night with Mr Aldridge and one
-or two other professional men, or gentlemen who affected the society
-of such persons, in Hogg’s tavern; and it was the host’s name that
-suggested the idea of calling their society the ‘_Boar_ Club.’ Their
-laws were first written down in proper form in 1790. They were to
-meet every evening at seven o’clock; each _boar_, on his entry, to
-contribute a halfpenny to the _pig_. Mr Aldridge was to be perpetual
-_Grand-boar_, with Mr Schetky for his deputy; and there were other
-officers, entitled Secretary, Treasurer, and Procurator-fiscal. A fine
-of one halfpenny was imposed upon every person who called one of his
-brother-boars by his proper out-of-club name—the term ‘sir’ being only
-allowed. The entry-moneys, fines, and other pecuniary acquisitions were
-hoarded for a grand annual dinner. The laws were revised in 1799, when
-some new officials were constituted, such as Poet-laureate, Champion,
-Archbishop, and Chief-grunter. The fines were then rendered exceedingly
-severe, and in their exaction no one met with any mercy, as it was the
-interest of all the rest that the _pig_ should bring forth as plenteous
-a _farrow_ as possible at the grand dinner-day. This practice at length
-occasioning a violent insurrection in the _sty_, the whole fraternity
-was broken up, and never again returned to ‘wallow in the mire.’
-
-The HELL-FIRE CLUB, a terrible and infamous association of wild young
-men about the beginning of the last century, met in various profound
-places throughout Edinburgh, where they practised orgies not more fit
-for seeing the light than the Eleusinian Mysteries. I have conversed
-with old people who had seen the last worn-out members of the Hell-fire
-Club, which in the country is to this day believed to have been an
-association in compact with the Prince of Darkness.
-
-Many years afterwards, a set of persons associated for the purpose of
-purchasing goods condemned by the Court of Exchequer. For what reason
-I cannot tell, they called themselves the Hell-fire Club, and their
-president was named the Devil. My old friend, Henry Mackenzie, whose
-profession was that of an attorney before the Court of Exchequer,
-wrote me a note on this subject, in which he says very naïvely: ‘In my
-youngest days, I knew the Devil.’
-
-The SWEATING CLUB flourished about the middle of the last century. They
-resembled the Mohocks mentioned in the _Spectator_. After intoxicating
-themselves, it was their custom to sally forth at midnight, and attack
-whomsoever they met upon the streets. Any luckless wight who happened
-to fall into their hands was chased, jostled, pinched, and pulled
-about, till he not only perspired, but was ready to drop down and die
-with exhaustion. Even so late as the early years of this century, it
-was unsafe to walk the streets of Edinburgh at night on account of the
-numerous drunken parties of young men who then reeled about, bent on
-mischief, at all hours, and from whom the Town-guard were unable to
-protect the sober citizen.
-
-A club called the INDUSTRIOUS COMPANY may serve to show how far the
-system of drinking was carried by our fathers. It was a sort of
-joint-stock company, formed by a numerous set of porter-drinkers,
-who thought fit to club towards the formation of a stock of that
-liquor, which they might partly profit by retailing, and partly by
-the opportunity thus afforded them of drinking their own particular
-tipple at the wholesale price. Their cellars were in the Royal Bank
-Close, where they met every night at eight o’clock. Each member paid at
-his entry £5, and took his turn monthly of the duty of superintending
-the general business of the company. But the curse of joint-stock
-companies—negligence on the part of the managers—ultimately
-occasioned the ruin of the Industrious Company.
-
-About 1790, a club of first-rate citizens used to meet each Saturday
-afternoon for a _country dinner_, in a tavern which still exists in the
-village of Canonmills, a place now involved within the limits of the
-New Town. To quote a brief memoir on the subject, handed to me many
-years ago by a veteran friend, who was a good deal of the _laudator
-temporis acti_: ‘The club was pointedly attended; it was too good a
-thing to miss being present at. They kept their own claret, and managed
-all matters as to living perfectly well.’ Originally the fraternity
-were contented with a very humble room; but in time they got an
-addition built to the house for their accommodation, comprehending one
-good-sized room with two windows, in one of which is a pane containing
-an olive-dove; in the other, one containing a wheat-sheaf, both
-engraved with a diamond. ‘This,’ continues Mr Johnston, ‘was the doing
-of William Ramsay [banker], then residing at Warriston—the tongue of
-the trump to the club. Here he took great delight to drink claret on
-the Saturdays, though he had such a paradise near at hand to retire to;
-but then there were Jamie Torry, Jamie Dickson, Gilbert Laurie, and
-other good old council friends with whom to crack [that is, chat]; and
-the said cracks were of more value in this dark, unseemly place than
-the enjoyments of home. I never pass these two engraved panes of glass
-but I venerate them, and wonder that, in the course of fifty years,
-they have not been destroyed, either from drunkenness within or from
-misrule without.’[139]
-
-Edinburgh boasted of many other associations of the like nature, which
-it were perhaps best merely to enumerate in a tabular form, with the
-appropriate joke opposite each, as
-
-THE DIRTY CLUB No gentleman to appear in clean linen.
-THE BLACK WIGS Members wore black wigs.
-THE ODD FELLOWS Members wrote their names upside down.
-THE BONNET LAIRDS Members wore blue bonnets.
-THE DOCTORS OF FACULTY CLUB { Members regarded as Physicians, and so
- { styled; wearing, moreover, gowns and
- { wigs.
-
-And so forth. There were the CALEDONIAN CLUB and the UNION CLUB, of
-whose foundation history speaketh not. There was the WIG CLUB, the
-president of which wore a wig of extraordinary materials, which had
-belonged to the Moray family for three generations, and each new
-_entrant_ of which drank to the fraternity in a quart of claret without
-pulling bit. The Wigs usually drank twopenny ale, on which it was
-possible to get satisfactorily drunk for a groat; and with this they
-ate souters’ clods,[140] a coarse, lumpish kind of loaf.[141] There
-was also the BROWNONIAN SYSTEM CLUB, which, oddly enough, bore no
-reference to the license which that system had given for a phlogistic
-regimen—for it was a douce citizenly fraternity, venerating ten
-o’clock as a sacred principle—but in honour of the founder of that
-system, who had been a constituent member.
-
-The LAWNMARKET CLUB was composed chiefly of the woollen-traders of
-that street, a set of whom met every morning about seven o’clock, and
-walked down to the Post-office, where they made themselves acquainted
-with the news of the morning. After a plentiful discussion of the
-news, they adjourned to a public-house and got a dram of brandy. As
-a sort of ironical and self-inflicted satire upon the strength of
-their potations, they sometimes called themselves the _Whey Club_.
-They were always the first persons in the town to have a thorough
-knowledge of the foreign news; and on Wednesday mornings, when there
-was no post from London, it was their wont to meet as usual, and, in
-the absence of real news, amuse themselves by the invention of what
-was imaginary; and this they made it their business to circulate among
-their uninitiated acquaintances in the course of the forenoon. Any such
-unfounded articles of intelligence, on being suspected or discovered,
-were usually called _Lawnmarket Gazettes_, in allusion to their roguish
-originators.
-
-In the year 1705, when the Duke of Argyll was commissioner in the
-Scottish parliament, a singular kind of fashionable club, or coterie of
-ladies and gentlemen, was instituted, chiefly by the exertions of the
-Earl of Selkirk, who was the distinguished beau of that age. This was
-called the HORN ORDER, a name which, as usual, had its origin in the
-whim of a moment. A horn-spoon having been used at some merry-meeting,
-it occurred to the club, which was then in embryo, that this homely
-implement would be a good badge for the projected society; and this
-being proposed, it was instantly agreed by all the party that the
-‘Order of the Horn’ would be a good caricature of the more ancient and
-better-sanctioned honorary dignities. The phrase was adopted; and the
-members of the _Horn Order_ met and caroused for many a day under this
-strange designation, which, however, the common people believed to mean
-more than met the ear. Indeed, if all accounts of it be true, it must
-have been a species of masquerade, in which the sexes were mixed and
-all ranks confounded.[142]
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[130] Lord Grange, whose _Diary of a Senator of the College of Justice_
-was published in 1833.
-
-[131] Lord Newton was known as ‘The Mighty.’ Lord Cockburn says it
-was not uncommon for judges on the bench to provide themselves with a
-bottle of port, which they consumed while listening to the case being
-tried before them.
-
-[132] This story is told of John Clerk, who afterwards sat on the bench
-as Lord Eldin.
-
-[133] It was very common for Scotch ladies of rank, even till the
-middle of the last century, to wear black masks in walking abroad
-or airing in a carriage; and for some gentlemen, too, who were vain
-of their complexion. They were kept close to the face by means of a
-string, having a button of glass or precious stone at the end, which
-the lady held in her mouth. This practice, I understand, did not in the
-least interrupt the flow of tittle-tattle and scandal among the fair
-wearers.
-
-We are told, in a curious paper in the _Edinburgh Magazine_ for August
-1817, that at the period above mentioned, ‘though it was a disgrace for
-ladies to be seen drunk, yet it was none to be a little intoxicated in
-good company.’
-
-[134] The principal oyster-parties, in old times, took place in Lucky
-Middlemass’s tavern in the Cowgate (where the south pier of the
-[South] bridge now stands), which was the resort of Fergusson and his
-fellow-wits—as witness his own verse:
-
- ‘When big as burns the gutters rin,
- If ye ha’e catched a droukit skin,
- To Luckie Middlemist’s loup in,
- And sit fu’ snug,
- Owre oysters and a dram o’ gin,
- Or haddock lug.’
-
-At these fashionable parties, the ladies would sometimes have the
-oyster-women to dance in the ball-room, though they were known to be of
-the worst character. This went under the convenient name of _frolic_.
-
-[135] The cry of ‘Gardy loo!’ at this hour was supposed to warn
-pedestrians; but, as Sir Walter Scott says, ‘it was sometimes like the
-shriek of the water-kelpie, rather the elegy than the warning of the
-overwhelmed passenger.’
-
-[136] This highly appropriate popular _sobriquet_ cannot be traced
-beyond the reign of Charles II. Tradition assigns the following as the
-origin of the phrase: An old gentleman in Fife, designated Durham of
-Largo, was in the habit, at the period mentioned, of regulating the
-time of evening worship by the appearance of the smoke of Edinburgh,
-which he could easily see, through the clear summer twilight, from
-his own door. When he observed the smoke increase in density, in
-consequence of the good folk of the city preparing their supper, he
-would call all the family into the house, saying: ‘It’s time now,
-bairns, to tak’ the beuks, and gang to our beds, for yonder’s Auld
-Reekie, I see, putting on her nicht-cap!’
-
-[137] This gentleman, the ‘revered defender of beauteous Stuart,’ and
-the surviving friend of Allan Ramsay, had an unaccountable aversion
-to cheese, and not only forbade the appearance of that article upon
-his table, but also its introduction into his house. His family, who
-did not partake in this antipathy, sometimes smuggled a small quantity
-of cheese into the house, and ate it in secret; but he almost always
-discovered it by the _smell_, which was the sense it chiefly offended.
-Upon scenting the object of his disgust, he would start up and run
-distractedly through the house in search of it, and not compose himself
-again to his studies till it was thrown out of doors. Some of his
-ingenious children, by way of a joke, once got into their possession
-the coat with which he usually went to the court, and ripping up the
-sutures of one of its wide, old-fashioned skirts, sewed up therein a
-considerable slice of double Gloster. Mr Tytler was next day surprised
-when, sitting near the bar, he perceived the smell of cheese rising
-around him. ‘Cheese here too!’ cried the querulous old gentleman;
-‘nay, then, the whole world must be conspiring against me!’ So saying,
-he rose, and ran home to tell his piteous case to Mrs Tytler and the
-children, who became convinced from this that he really possessed the
-singular delicacy and fastidiousness in respect of the effluvia arising
-from cheese which they formerly thought to be fanciful.
-
-[138] The dress of the Edinburgh Defensive Band was as follows: a
-cocked hat, black stock, hair tied and highly powdered; dark-blue
-long-tailed coat, with orange facings in honour of the Revolution,
-and full lapels sloped away to show the white dimity vest; nankeen
-small-clothes; white thread stockings, ribbed or plain; and short
-nankeen spatterdashes. Kay has some ingenious caricatures, in
-miniature, of these redoubted Bruntsfield Links and Heriot’s Green
-warriors. The last two survivors were Mr John M’Niven, stationer, and
-Robert Stevenson, painter, who died in 1832.
-
-[139] One of the panes is now (1847) destroyed, the other cracked. [The
-tavern is now out of existence.]
-
-[140] Souters’ clods and other forms of bread fascinating to
-youngsters, as well as penny pies of high reputation, were to be had
-at a shop which all old Edinburgh people speak of with extreme regard
-and affection—the _Baijen Hole_—situated immediately to the east of
-Forrester’s Wynd and opposite to the Old Tolbooth. The name—a mystery
-to later generations—seems to bear reference to the Baijens or Baijen
-Class, a term bestowed in former days upon the junior students in the
-college. _Bajan_ or _bejan_ is the French _bejaune_, ‘_bec jaune_,’
-‘greenbill,’ ‘greenhorn,’ ‘freshman.’
-
-[141] The fullest account yet published of this extraordinary coterie
-is that of Mr H. A. Cockburn in _The Book of the Old Edinburgh Club_,
-vol. iii. Creech refers to it in ironical terms as ‘the virtuous, the
-venerable and dignified Wig who so much to their own honour and kind
-attention always inform the public of their meetings.’ The reputation
-of the club was very different.
-
-[142] The following were other eighteenth century Edinburgh clubs:
-
-THE POKER CLUB originated in a combination of gentlemen favourable to
-the establishment of militia in Scotland, and its name, happily hit
-on by Professor Adam Ferguson, was selected to avoid giving offence
-to the Government. A history of the club is given in Dugald Stewart’s
-Life, and also in Carlyle’s _Autobiography_, where he says: ‘Dinner was
-on the table soon after two o’clock, at one shilling a head, the wine
-to be confined to sherry and claret, and the reckoning called at six
-o’clock.’ The minutes of this interesting club are preserved in the
-University Library.
-
-THE MIRROR CLUB, formed by the contributors to the periodical of that
-name. It had really existed before under the name of ‘The Tabernacle.’
-‘The Tabernacle,’ or ‘The Feast of Tabernacles,’ as Ramsay of
-Ochtertyre calls it, was a company of friends and admirers of Henry
-Dundas, first Viscount Melville.
-
-THE EASY CLUB, founded by Allan Ramsay the poet, consisted of twelve
-members, each of whom was required to assume the name of some Scottish
-poet. Ramsay took that of Gawin Douglas.
-
-THE CAPILLAIRE CLUB was ‘composed of all who were inclined to be witty
-and joyous.’
-
-THE FACER CLUB, which met in Lucky Wood’s tavern in the Canongate, was
-perhaps not of a high order. If a member did not drain his measure of
-liquor, he had to throw it at his own face.
-
-THE GRISKIN CLUB also met in the Canongate. Dr Carlyle and those
-who took part with him in the production of Home’s _Douglas_ at the
-Canongate playhouse formed this club, and gave it its name from the
-pork griskins which was their favourite supper dish.
-
-THE RUFFIAN CLUB, ‘composed of men whose hearts were milder than their
-manners, and their principles more correct than their habits of life.’
-
-THE WAGERING CLUB, instituted in 1775, still meets annually. An account
-of this club is given in _The Book of the Old Edinburgh Club_, vol. ii.
-
-Others may be mentioned by name only: THE DIVERSORIUM, THE HAVERAL, THE
-WHIN BUSH, THE SKULL, THE SIX FOOT, THE ASSEMBLY OF BIRDS, THE CARD,
-THE BORACHED, THE HUMDRUM, THE APICIAN, THE BLAST AND QUAFF, THE OCEAN,
-THE PIPE, THE KNIGHTS OF THE CAP AND FEATHER, THE REVOLUTIONARY, THE
-STOIC, and THE CLUB, referred to in Lockhart’s _Life of Scott_.
-
-Of a later period than those mentioned above were THE GOWKS CLUB; THE
-RIGHT AND WRONG, of which James Hogg gives a short account; and THE
-FRIDAY CLUB, instituted by Lord Cockburn, who also wrote an interesting
-history of it, recently printed by Mr H. A. Cockburn, in vol. iii. of
-_The Book of the Old Edinburgh Club_.
-
-
-
-
-TAVERNS OF OLD TIMES.
-
-
-When the worship of Bacchus held such sway in our city, his peculiar
-temples—the taverns—must, one would suppose, have been places of
-some importance. And so they were, comparatively speaking; and yet,
-absolutely, an Edinburgh tavern of the last century was no very fine
-or inviting place. Usually these receptacles were situated in obscure
-places—in courts or closes, away from the public thoroughfares; and
-often they presented such narrow and stifling accommodations as might
-have been expected to repel rather than attract visitors. The truth
-was, however, that a coarse and darksome snugness was courted by the
-worshippers. Large, well-lighted rooms, with a look-out to a street,
-would not have suited them. But allow them to dive through some Erebean
-alley, into a cavern-like house, and there settle themselves in a
-cell unvisited of Phœbus, with some dingy flamen of either sex to act
-as minister, and their views as to circumstances and properties were
-fulfilled.
-
-The city traditions do not go far back into the eighteenth century
-with respect to taverns; but we obtain some notion of the principal
-houses in Queen Anne’s time from the Latin lyrics of Dr Pitcairn, which
-Ruddiman published, in order to prove that the Italian muse had not
-become extinct in our land since the days of Buchanan. In an address
-_To Strangers_, the wit tells those who would acquire some notion of
-our national manners to avoid the triple church of St Giles’s:
-
- ‘Tres ubi Cyclopes fanda nefanda boant’—
-
-where three horrible monsters bellow forth sacred and profane
-discourse—and seek the requisite knowledge in the sanctuaries of the
-rosy god, whose worship is conducted by night and by day. ‘At one
-time,’ says he, ‘you may be delighted with the bowls of Steil of the
-_Cross Keys_; then other heroes, at the _Ship_, will show you the huge
-cups which belonged to mighty bibbers of yore. Or you may seek out the
-sweet-spoken Katy at _Buchanan’s_, or _Tennant’s_ commodious house,
-where scalloped oysters will be brought in with your wine. But _Hay_
-calls us, than whom no woman of milder disposition or better-stored
-cellar can be named in the whole town. Now it will gratify you to
-make your way into the Avernian grottoes and caves never seen of
-the sun; but remember to make friends with the dog which guards the
-threshold. Straightway Mistress Anne will bring the native liquor.
-Seek the innermost rooms and the snug seats: these know the sun, at
-least, when Anne enters. What souls joying in the Lethæan flood you
-may there see! what frolics, God willing, you may partake of! Mindless
-of all that goes on in the outer world, joys not to be told to mortal
-do they there imbibe. But perhaps you may wish by-and-by to get back
-into the world—which is indeed no easy matter. I recommend you, when
-about to descend, to take with you a trusty Achates [a caddy]: say
-to Anne, “Be sure you give him no drink.” By such means it was that
-Castor and Pollux were able to issue forth from Pluto’s domain into
-the heavenly spaces. Here you may be both merry and wise; but beware
-how you toast kings and their French retreats,’ &c. The sites of
-these merry places of yore are not handed down to us; but respecting
-another, which Pitcairn shadows forth under the mysterious appellation
-of _Greppa_, it chances that we possess some knowledge. It was a suite
-of dark underground apartments in the Parliament Close, opening by
-a descending stair opposite the oriel of St Giles’s, in a mass of
-building called the Pillars. By the wits who frequented it, it was
-called the _Greping-office_, because one could only make way through
-its dark passages by groping. It is curious to see how Pitcairn works
-this homely Scottish idea into his Sapphics, talking, for example, by
-way of a good case of bane and antidote, of
-
- ‘Fraudes Egidii, venena Greppæ.’
-
-A venerable person has given me an anecdote of this singular mixture
-of learning, wit, and professional skill in connection with the
-Greping-office. Here, it seems, according to a custom which lasted
-even in London till a later day, the clever physician used to receive
-visits from his patients. On one occasion a woman from the country
-called to consult him respecting the health of her daughter, when he
-gave a shrewd hygienic advice in a pithy metaphor not be mentioned
-to ears polite. When, in consequence of following the prescription,
-the young woman had recovered her health, the mother came back
-to the Greping-office to thank Dr Pitcairn and give him a small
-present. Seeing him in precisely the same place and circumstances,
-and surrounded by the same companions as on the former occasion, she
-lingered with an expression of surprise. On interrogation, she said she
-had only one thing to speer at him (ask after), and she hoped he would
-not be angry.
-
-‘Oh no, my good woman.’
-
-‘Well, sir, have you been sitting here ever since I saw you last?’
-
-According to the same authority, small claret was then sold at
-twentypence the Scottish pint, equivalent to tenpence a bottle.
-Pitcairn once or twice sent his servant for a regale of this liquor
-on the Sunday forenoon, and suffered the disappointment of having it
-intercepted by the _seizers_, whose duty it was to make capture of all
-persons found abroad in time of service, and appropriate whatever they
-were engaged in carrying that smelled of the common enjoyments of life.
-To secure his claret for the future from this interference, the wit
-caused the wine on one occasion to be drugged in such a manner as to
-produce consequences more ludicrous than dangerous to those drinking
-it. The triumph he thus attained over a power which there was no
-reaching by any appeal to common-sense or justice must have been deeply
-relished in the Greping-office.
-
-Pitcairn was professedly an Episcopalian, but he allowed himself a
-latitude in wit which his contemporaries found some difficulty in
-reconciling with any form of religion. Among the popular charges
-against him was that he did not believe in the existence of such a
-place as hell; a point of heterodoxy likely to be sadly disrelished
-in Scotland. Being at a book-sale, where a copy of Philostratus sold
-at a good price and a copy of the Bible was not bidden for, Pitcairn
-said to some one who remarked the circumstance: ‘Not at all wonderful;
-for is it not written, “_Verbum Dei manet in eternum_”?’ For this,
-one of the _Cyclopes_, a famous Mr Webster, called him publicly an
-atheist. The story goes on to state that Pitcairn prosecuted Webster
-for defamation in consequence, but failed in the action from the
-following circumstance: The defender, much puzzled what to do in the
-case, consulted a shrewd-witted friend of his, a Mr Pettigrew, minister
-of Govan, near Glasgow. Pettigrew came to Edinburgh to endeavour to get
-him out of the scrape. ‘Strange,’ he said, ‘since he has caught so much
-at your mouth, if we can catch nothing at his.’ Having laid his plan,
-he came bustling up to the physician at the Cross, and tapping him on
-the shoulder, said: ‘Are you Dr Pitcairn the atheist?’
-
-The doctor, in his haste, overlooking the latter part of the query,
-answered: ‘Yes.’
-
-‘Very good,’ said Pettigrew; ‘I take you all to witness that he has
-confessed it himself.’
-
-Pitcairn, seeing how he had been outwitted, said bitterly to the
-minister of Govan, whom he well knew: ‘Oh, Pettigrew, that skull of
-yours is as deep as hell.’
-
-‘Oh, man,’ replied Pettigrew, ‘I’m glad to find you have come to
-believe there is a hell.’ The prosecutor’s counsel, who stood by at the
-time, recommended a compromise, which accordingly took place.
-
-A son of Pitcairn was minister of Dysart; a very good kind of man,
-who was sometimes consulted in a medical way by his parishioners. He
-seems to have had a little of the paternal humour, if we may judge from
-the following circumstance: A lady came to ask what her maid-servant
-should do for sore or tender eyes. The minister, seeing that no active
-treatment could be recommended, said: ‘She must do naething wi’ them,
-but just rub them wi’ her elbucks [elbows].’
-
-Allan Ramsay mentions, of Edinburgh taverns in his day,
-
- ‘Cumin’s, Don’s, and Steil’s,’
-
-as places where one may be as well served as at _The Devil_ in London.
-
- ‘’Tis strange, though true, he who would shun all evil,
- Cannot do better than go to the Devil.’
-
- JOHN MACLAURIN.
-
-One is disposed to pause a moment on Steil’s name, as it is honourably
-connected with the history of music in Scotland. Being a zealous lover
-of the divine science and a good singer of the native melodies, he had
-rendered his house a favourite resort of all who possessed a similar
-taste, and here actually was formed (1728) the first regular society of
-amateur musicians known in our country. It numbered seventy persons,
-and met once a week, the usual entertainments consisting in playing
-on the harpsichord and violin the concertos and sonatas of Handel,
-then newly published. Apparently, however, this fraternity did not
-long continue to use Steil’s house, if I am right in supposing his
-retirement from business as announced in an advertisement of February
-1729, regarding ‘a sale by auction, of the haill pictures, prints,
-music-books, and musical instruments, belonging to Mr John Steill’
-(_Caledonian Mercury_).
-
-Coming down to a later time—1760-1770—we find the tavern in highest
-vogue to have been _Fortune’s_, in the house which the Earl of
-Eglintoune had once occupied in the Stamp-office Close. The gay men
-of rank, the scholarly and philosophical, the common citizens, all
-flocked hither; and the royal commissioner for the General Assembly
-held his levees here, and hence proceeded to church with his cortège,
-then additionally splendid from having ladies walking in it in their
-court-dresses as well as gentlemen.[143] Perhaps the most remarkable
-set of men who met here was the POKER CLUB,[144] consisting of Hume,
-Robertson, Blair, Fergusson, and many others of that brilliant galaxy,
-but whose potations were comparatively of a moderate kind.
-
-The _Star and Garter_, in Writers’ Court, kept by one Clerihugh (the
-_Clerihugh’s_ alluded to in _Guy Mannering_), was another tavern
-of good consideration, the favourite haunt of the magistrates and
-Town-council, who in those days mixed much more of private enjoyments
-with public duties than would now be considered fitting.[145] Here the
-Rev. Dr Webster used to meet them at dinner, in order to give them the
-benefit of his extensive knowledge and great powers of calculation when
-they were scheming out the New Town.
-
-A favourite house for many of the last years of the bygone century
-was _Douglas’s_, in the Anchor Close, near the Cross, a good specimen
-of those profound retreats which have been spoken of as valued in the
-inverse ratio of the amount of daylight which visited them. You went
-a few yards down the dark, narrow alley, passing on the left hand the
-entry to a scale stair, decorated with ‘THE LORD IS ONLY MY SVPORT;’
-then passed another door, bearing the still more antique legend: ‘O
-LORD, IN THE IS AL MY TRAIST;’ immediately beyond, under an architrave
-calling out ‘BE MERCIFVL TO ME,’ you entered the hospitable mansion
-of Dawney Douglas, the scene of the daily and nightly orgies of the
-Pleydells and Fairfords, the Hays, Erskines, and Crosbies, of the time
-of our fathers. Alas! how fallen off is now that temple of Momus and
-the Bacchanals! You find it divided into a multitude of small lodgings,
-where, instead of the merry party, vociferous with toasts and catches,
-you are most likely to be struck by the spectacle of some poor lone
-female, pining under a parochial allowance, or a poverty-struck family
-group, one-half of whom are disposed on sick-beds of straw mingled with
-rags—the terrible exponents of our peculiar phasis of civilisation.
-
-The frequenter of Douglas’s, after ascending a few steps, found himself
-in a pretty large kitchen—a dark, fiery Pandemonium, through which
-numerous ineffable ministers of flame were continually flying about,
-while beside the door sat the landlady, a large, fat woman, in a
-towering head-dress and large-flowered silk gown, who bowed to every
-one passing. Most likely on emerging from this igneous region, the
-party would fall into the hands of Dawney himself, and so be conducted
-to an apartment. A perfect contrast was he to his wife: a thin, weak,
-submissive man, who spoke in a whisper, never but in the way of answer,
-and then, if possible, only in monosyllables. He had a habit of using
-the word ‘quietly’ very frequently, without much regard to its being
-appropriate to the sense; and it is told that he one day made the
-remark that ‘the Castle had been firing to-day—_quietly_;’ which, it
-may well be believed, was not soon forgotten by his customers. Another
-trait of Dawney was that some one lent him a volume of Clarendon’s
-history to read, and daily frequenting the room where it lay, used
-regularly, for some time, to put back the reader’s mark to the same
-place; whereupon, being by-and-by asked how he liked the book, Dawney
-answered: ‘Oh, very weel; but dinna ye think it’s gay mickle the same
-thing o’er again?’ The house was noted for suppers of tripe, rizzared
-haddocks, mince collops, and _hashes_, which never cost more than
-sixpence a head. On charges of this moderate kind the honest couple
-grew extremely rich before they died.
-
-The principal room in this house was a handsome one of good size,
-having a separate access by the second of the entries which have been
-described, and only used for large companies, or for guests of the
-first importance. It was called _the Crown Room_, or _the Crown_—so
-did the guests find it distinguished on the tops of their bills—and
-this name it was said to have acquired in consequence of its having
-once been used by Queen Mary as a council-room, on which occasions
-the emblem of sovereignty was disposed in a niche in the wall, still
-existing. How the queen should have had any occasion to hold councils
-in this place tradition does not undertake to explain; but assuredly,
-when we consider the nature of all public accommodations in that time,
-we cannot say there is any decided improbability in the matter. The
-house appears of sufficient age for the hypothesis. Perhaps we catch a
-hint on the general possibility from a very ancient house farther down
-the close, of whose original purpose or owners we know nothing, but
-which is adumbrated by this legend:
-
- ANGVSTA AD VSVM AVGVSTA[M]
- W F B G
-
-The Crown Room, however, is elegant enough to have graced even the
-presence of Queen Mary, so that she only had not had to reach it by the
-Anchor Close. It is handsomely panelled, with a decorated fireplace,
-and two tall windows towards the alley. At present this supposed seat
-of royal councils, and certain seat of the social enjoyments of many
-men of noted talents, forms a back-shop to Mr Ford, grocer, High
-Street, and, all dingy and out of countenance, serves only to store
-hams, firkins of butter, packages of groceries, and bundles of dried
-cod.[146]
-
-The gentle Dawney had an old Gaelic song called Crochallan, which he
-occasionally sang to his customers. This led to the establishment of
-a club at his house, which, with a reference to the militia regiments
-then raising, was called the Crochallan Corps, or Crochallan Fencibles,
-and to which belonged, amongst other men of original character and
-talent, the well-known William Smellie, author of the _Philosophy of
-Natural History_. Each member bore a military title, and some were
-endowed with ideal offices of a ludicrous character: for example, a
-lately surviving associate had been _depute-hangman_ to the corps.
-Individuals committing a fault were subjected to a mock trial, in which
-such members as were barristers could display their forensic talents
-to the infinite amusement of the brethren. Much mirth and not a little
-horse-play prevailed. Smellie, while engaged professionally in printing
-the Edinburgh edition of the poems of Burns, introduced that genius
-to the Crochallans, when a scene of rough banter took place between
-him and certain privileged old hands, and the bard declared at the
-conclusion that he had ‘never been so abominably thrashed in his life.’
-There was one predominant wit, Willie Dunbar by name, of whom the poet
-has left a characteristic picture:
-
- ‘As I came by Crochallan,
- I cannily keekit ben—
- Rattling roaring Willie
- Was sitting at yon board en’—
- Sitting at yon board en’,
- Amang gude companie;
- Rattling roaring Willie,
- Ye’re welcome hame to me!’
-
-He has also described Smellie as coming to Crochallan with his old
-cocked hat, gray surtout, and beard rising in its might:
-
- ‘Yet though his caustic wit was biting, rude,
- His heart was warm, benevolent, and good.’
-
-The printing-office of this strange genius being at the bottom of the
-close, the transition from the correction of proofs to the roaring
-scenes at Crochallan must have been sufficiently easy for Burns.
-
-[Illustration: UPPER BAXTER’S CLOSE.
-Where Burns first resided in Edinburgh.
-
-PAGE 164.]
-
-I am indebted to a privately printed memoir on the Anchor Close for
-the following anecdote of Crochallan: ‘A comical gentleman, one of the
-members of the corps [old Williamson of Cardrona, in Peeblesshire], got
-rather tipsy one evening after a severe _field-day_. When he came to
-the head of the Anchor Close, it occurred to him that it was necessary
-that he should take possession of the Castle. He accordingly set off
-for this purpose. When he got to the outer gate, he demanded immediate
-possession of the garrison, to which he said he was entitled. The
-sentinel, for a considerable time, laughed at him; he, however, became
-so extremely clamorous that the man found it necessary to apprise the
-commanding officer, who immediately came down to inquire into the
-meaning of such impertinent conduct. He at once recognised his friend
-Cardrona, whom he had left at the festive board of the Crochallan Corps
-only a few hours before. Accordingly, humouring him in the conceit,
-he said: ‘Certainly you have every right to the command of this
-garrison; if you please, I will conduct you to your proper apartment.’
-He accordingly conveyed him to a bedroom in his house. Cardrona took
-formal possession of the place, and immediately afterwards went to
-bed. His feelings were indescribable when he looked out of his bedroom
-window next morning, and found himself surrounded with soldiers and
-great guns. Some time afterwards this story came to the ears of the
-Crochallans; and Cardrona said he never afterwards had the life of a
-dog, so much did they tease and harass him about his strange adventure.’
-
-There is a story connected with the air and song of Crochallan which
-will tell strangely after these anecdotes. The title is properly _Cro
-Chalien_—that is, ‘Colin’s Cattle.’ According to Highland tradition,
-Colin’s wife, dying at an early age, _came back_, some months after she
-had been buried, and was seen occasionally in the evenings milking her
-cow as formerly, and singing this plaintive air. It is curious thus to
-find Highland superstition associated with a snug tavern in the Anchor
-Close and the convivialities of such men as Burns and Smellie.
-
-[Illustration: Dowie’s Tavern.]
-
-_John Dowie’s_, in Liberton’s Wynd, a still more perfect specimen of
-those taverns which Pitcairn eulogises—
-
- ‘Antraque Cocyto penè propinqua’—
-
-enjoyed the highest celebrity during the latter years of the past and
-early years of the present century. A great portion of this house was
-literally without light, consisting of a series of windowless chambers,
-decreasing in size till the last was a mere box, of irregular oblong
-figure, jocularly, but not inappropriately, designated _the Coffin_.
-Besides these, there were but two rooms possessing light, and as that
-came from a deep, narrow alley, it was light little more than in name.
-Hither, nevertheless, did many of the Parliament House men come daily
-for their meridian. Here nightly assembled companies of cits, as
-well as of men of wit and of fashion, to spend hours in what may, by
-comparison, be described as gentle conviviality. The place is said to
-have been a howff of Fergusson and Burns in succession. Christopher
-North somewhere alludes to meetings of his own with Tom Campbell in
-that couthy mansion. David Herd, the editor of the Scottish songs, Mr
-Cumming of the Lyon Office, and George Paton the antiquary were regular
-customers, each seldom allowing a night to pass without a symposium
-at Johnie Dowie’s. Now, these men are all gone; their very habits
-are becoming matters of history; while, as for their evening haunt,
-the place which knew it once knows it no more, the new access to the
-Lawnmarket, by George IV. Bridge, passing over the area where it stood.
-
-_Johnie Dowie’s_ was chiefly celebrated for ale—_Younger’s Edinburgh
-ale_—a potent fluid which almost glued the lips of the drinker
-together, and of which few, therefore, could despatch more than a
-bottle. John, a sleek, quiet-looking man, in a last-century style of
-attire, always brought in the liquor himself, decanted it carefully,
-drank a glass to the health of the company, and then retired. His neat,
-careful management of the bottle must have entirely met the views of
-old William Coke, the Leith bookseller, of whom it is told that if he
-saw a greenhorn of a waiter acting in a different manner, he would
-rush indignantly up to him, take the ale out of his hands, caress it
-tenderly, as if to soothe and put it to rights again, and then proceed
-to the business of decanting it himself, saying: ‘You rascal, is that
-the way you attend to your business? Sirrah, you ought to handle a
-bottle of ale as you would do a new-born babe!’
-
-_Dowie’s_ was also famed for its _petits soupers_, as one of its
-customers has recorded:
-
- ‘’Deed, gif ye please,
- Ye may get a bit toasted cheese,
- A crumb o’ tripe, ham, dish o’ peas,
- The season fitting;
- An egg, or, cauler frae the seas,
- A fleuk or whiting.’
-
-When the reckoning came to be paid, John’s duty usually consisted
-simply in counting the empty bottles which stood on a little shelf
-where he had placed them above the heads of his customers, and
-multiplying these by the price of the liquor—usually threepence.
-Studious of decency, he was rigorous as to hours, and, when pressed
-for additional supplies of liquor at a particular time, would say: ‘No,
-no, gentlemen; it’s past twelve o’clock, and time to go home.’
-
-Of John’s conscientiousness as to money matters there is some
-illustration in the following otherwise trivial anecdote: David Herd,
-being one night prevented by slight indisposition from joining in the
-malt potations of his friends, called for first one and then another
-glass of spirits, which he dissolved, _more Scotico_, in warm water and
-sugar. When the reckoning came to be paid, the antiquary was surprised
-to find the second glass charged a fraction higher than the first—as
-if John had been resolved to impose a tax upon excess. On inquiring the
-reason, however, honest John explained it thus: ‘Whe, sir, ye see, the
-first glass was out o’ the auld barrel, and the second was out o’ the
-new; and as the whisky in the new barrel cost me mair than the other,
-whe, sir, I’ve just charged a wee mair for ’t.’ An ordinary host would
-have doubtless equalised the price by raising that of the first glass
-to a level with the second. It is gratifying, but, after this anecdote,
-not surprising, that John eventually retired with a fortune said to
-have amounted to six thousand pounds. He had a son in the army, who
-attained the rank of major, and was a respectable officer.
-
-We get an idea of a class of taverns, humbler in their appointments,
-but equally comfortable perhaps in their entertainments, from the
-description which has been preserved of _Mrs Flockhart’s_—otherwise
-_Lucky Fykie’s_—in the Potterrow. This was a remarkably small, as well
-as obscure mansion, bearing externally the appearance of a huckstry
-shop. The lady was a neat, little, thin, elderly woman, usually habited
-in a plain striped blue gown, and apron of the same stuff, with a
-black ribbon round her head and lappets tied under her chin. She was
-far from being poor in circumstances, as her husband, the umquhile
-John Flucker, or Flockhart, had left her some ready money, together
-with his whole stock-in-trade, consisting of a multifarious variety of
-articles—as ropes, tea, sugar, whip-shafts, porter, ale, beer, yellow
-sand, _calm-stane_, herrings, nails, cotton-wicks, stationery, thread,
-needles, tapes, potatoes, lollipops, onions, matches, &c., constituting
-her a very respectable _merchant_, as the phrase was understood in
-Scotland. On Sundays, too, Mrs Flockhart’s little visage might have
-been seen in a front-gallery seat in Mr Pattieson’s chapel in the
-Potterrow. Her abode, situated opposite to Chalmers’s Entry in that
-suburban thoroughfare, was a square of about fifteen feet each way,
-divided agreeably to the following diagram:
-
-[Illustration: Potterrow.]
-
-Each forenoon was this place, or at least all in front of the screen,
-put into the neatest order; at the same time three bottles, severally
-containing brandy, rum, and whisky, were placed on a bunker-seat in
-the window of the ‘hotel,’ flanked by a few glasses and a salver of
-gingerbread biscuits. About noon any one watching the place from an
-opposite window would have observed an elderly gentleman entering the
-humble shop, where he saluted the lady with a ‘Hoo d’ye do, mem?’
-and then passed into the side space to indulge himself with a glass
-from one or other of the bottles. After him came another, who went
-through the same ceremonial; after him another again; and so on.
-Strange to say, these were men of importance in society—some of them
-lawyers in good employment, some bankers, and so forth, and all of
-them inhabitants of good houses in George Square. It was in passing to
-or from forenoon business in town that they thus regaled themselves.
-On special occasions Lucky could furnish forth a _soss_—that is,
-stew—which the votary might partake of upon a clean napkin in the
-closet, a place which only admitted of one chair being placed in it.
-Such were amongst the habits of the fathers of some of our present
-(1824) most distinguished citizens!
-
-This may be the proper place for introducing the few notices which I
-have collected respecting Edinburgh inns of a past date.
-
-The oldest house known to have been used in the character of an inn is
-one situated in what is called Davidson’s or the White Horse Close, at
-the bottom of the Canongate. A sort of _porte-cochère_ gives access to
-a court having mean buildings on either hand, but facing us a goodly
-structure of antique fashion, having two outside stairs curiously
-arranged, and the whole reminding us much of certain houses still
-numerous in the Netherlands. A date, deficient in the decimal figure
-(16-3), gives us assurance of the seventeenth century, and, judging
-from the style of the building, I would say the house belongs to an
-early portion of that age. The whole of the ground-floor, accessible
-from the street called North Back of Canongate, has been used as
-stables, thus reminding us of the absence of nicety in a former age,
-when human beings were content to sit with only a wooden floor between
-themselves and their horses.
-
-This house, supposed to have been styled _The White Horse Inn_ or
-_White Horse Stables_ (for the latter was the more common word),
-would be conveniently situated for persons travelling to or arriving
-from London, as it is close to the ancient exit of the town in that
-direction. The adjacent Water-gate took its name from a horse-pond,
-which probably was an appendage of this mansion. The manner of
-procedure for a gentleman going to London in the days of the _White
-Horse_ was to come booted to this house with saddle-bags, and here
-engage and mount a suitable roadster, which was to serve all the way.
-In 1639, when Charles I. had made his first pacification with the
-Covenanters, and had come temporarily to Berwick, he sent messages to
-the chief lords of that party, desiring some conversation with them.
-They were unsuspectingly mounting their horses at this inn, in order to
-ride to Berwick, when a mob, taught by the clergy to suspect that the
-king wished only to wile over the nobles to his side, came and forcibly
-prevented them from commencing their designed journey. Montrose alone
-broke through this restraint; and assuredly the result in his instance
-was such as to give some countenance to the suspicion, as thenceforward
-he was a royalist in his heart.
-
-[Illustration: WHITE HORSE INN.
-
-PAGE 170.]
-
-The _White Horse_ has ceased to be an inn from a time which no ‘oldest
-inhabitant’ of my era could pretend to have any recollection of. The
-only remaining fact of interest connected with it is one concerning Dr
-Alexander Rose, the last Bishop of Edinburgh, and the last survivor
-of the established Episcopacy of Scotland. Bishop Keith, who had been
-one of his presbyters, and describes him as a sweet-natured man,
-of a venerable aspect, states that he died March 20, 1720, ‘in his
-own sister’s house in the Canongate, in which street he also lived.’
-Tradition points to the floor immediately above the _porte-cochère_ by
-which the stable-yard is entered from the street as the humble mansion
-in which the bishop breathed his last. I know at least one person who
-never goes past the place without an emotion of respect, remembering
-the self-abandoning devotion of the Scottish prelates to their
-engagements at the Revolution:[147]
-
- ‘Amongst the faithless, faithful only found.’
-
-To the elegant accommodations of the best New Town establishments of
-the present day, the inns of the last century present a contrast which
-it is difficult by the greatest stretch of imagination to realise.
-For the west road, there was the _White Hart_ in the Grassmarket; for
-the east, the _White Horse Inn_ in Boyd’s Close, Canongate; for the
-south, and partly also the east, Peter Ramsay’s, at the bottom of St
-Mary’s Wynd. Arnot, writing in 1779, describes them as ‘mean buildings;
-their apartments dirty and dismal; and if the waiters happen to be
-out of the way, a stranger will perhaps be shocked with the novelty
-of being shown into a room by a dirty, sunburnt wench, without shoes
-or stockings.’ The fact is, however, these houses were mainly used
-as places for keeping horses. Guests, unless of a very temporary
-character, were usually relegated to lodging-houses, of which there
-were several on a considerable scale—as Mrs Thomson’s at the Cross,
-who advertises, in 1754, that persons not bringing ‘their silver plate,
-tea china, table china, and tea linen, can be served in them all;’ also
-in wines and spirits; likewise that persons boarding with her ‘may
-expect everything in a very genteel manner.’ But hear the unflattering
-Arnot on these houses. ‘He [the stranger] is probably conducted to
-the third or fourth floor, up dark and dirty stairs, and there shown
-into apartments meanly fitted up and poorly furnished.... In Edinburgh,
-letting of lodgings is a business by itself, and thereby the prices
-are very extravagant; and every article of furniture, far from wearing
-the appearance of having been purchased for a happy owner, seems to
-be scraped together with a penurious hand, to pass muster before a
-stranger who will never wish to return!’
-
-_Ramsay’s_ was almost solely a place of stables. General Paoli,[148]
-on visiting Edinburgh in 1771, came to this house, but was immediately
-taken home by his friend Boswell to James’s Court, where he lived
-during his stay in our city; his companion, the Polish ambassador,
-being accommodated with a bed by Dr John Gregory, in a neighbouring
-floor. An old gentleman of my acquaintance used to talk of having
-seen the Duke of Hamilton one day lounging in front of Ramsay’s inn,
-occasionally chatting with any gay or noble friend who passed. To
-one knowing the Edinburgh of the present day, nothing could seem
-more extravagant than the idea of such company at such places. I
-nevertheless find Ramsay, in 1776, advertising that, exclusive of some
-part of his premises recently offered for sale, he is ‘possessed of a
-good house of entertainment, good stables for above one hundred horses,
-and sheds for above twenty carriages.’ He retired from business about
-1790 with £10,000.[149]
-
-The modern _White Horse_ was a place of larger and somewhat better
-accommodations, though still far from an equality with even the
-second-rate houses of the present day. Here also the rooms were
-directly over the stables.
-
-It was almost a matter of course that Dr Johnson, on arriving in
-Edinburgh, August 17, 1773, should have come to the _White Horse_,
-which was then kept by a person of the name of Boyd. His note to
-Boswell informing him of this fact was as follows:
-
- ‘_Saturday night._
-
- ‘Mr Johnson sends his compliments to Mr Boswell, being just
- arrived at Boyd’s.’
-
-When Boswell came, he found his illustrious friend in a violent passion
-at the waiter for having sweetened his lemonade without the ceremony
-of a pair of sugar-tongs. Mr William Scott, afterwards Lord Stowell,
-accompanied Johnson on this occasion; and he informs us, in a note
-to Croker’s edition of Boswell, that when he heard the mistress of
-the house styled, in Scotch fashion, _Lucky_, which he did not then
-understand, he thought she should rather have been styled _Unlucky_,
-for the doctor seemed as if he would destroy the house.[150]
-
-James Boyd, the keeper of this inn, was addicted to horse-racing, and
-his victories on the turf, or rather on Leith sands, are frequently
-chronicled in the journals of that day. It is said that he was at one
-time on the brink of ruin, when he was saved by a lucky run with a
-white horse, which, in gratitude, he kept idle all the rest of its
-days, besides setting up its portrait as his sign. He eventually
-retired from this ‘dirty and dismal’ inn with a fortune of several
-thousand pounds; and, as a curious note upon the impression which its
-slovenliness conveyed to Dr Johnson, it may be stated as a fact, well
-authenticated, that at the time of his giving up the house he possessed
-_napery_ to the value of five hundred pounds!
-
-A large room in the _White Horse_ was the frequent scene of
-the marriages of runaway English couples, at a time when these
-irregularities were permitted in Edinburgh. On one of the windows were
-scratched the words:
-
- ‘JEREMIAH and SARAH BENTHAM, 1768.’
-
-Could this be the distinguished jurist and codificator, on a journey to
-Scotland in company with a female relation?[151]
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[143] The Scottish peers on occasions of election of representatives
-to the House of Lords frequently brought their meetings to a close by
-dining at Fortune’s Tavern.
-
-[144] See note, p. 157.
-
-[145] ‘The wags of the eighteenth century used to tell of a certain
-city treasurer who, on being applied to for a new rope to the Tron Kirk
-bell, summoned the Council to deliberate on the demand; an adjournment
-to Clerihugh’s Tavern, it was hoped, might facilitate the settlement
-of so weighty a matter, but one dinner proved insufficient, and it was
-not till their third banquet that the application was referred to a
-committee, who spliced the old rope, and settled the bill!’—Wilson’s
-_Memorials of Old Edinburgh_.
-
-[146] Since this was written, the whole group of buildings has been
-taken down, and new ones substituted (1868).
-
-[147] The ‘White Horse’ is introduced in _The Abbot_—it was the scene
-of Roland Græme’s encounter with young Seton.
-
-[148] The Corsican patriot whose acquaintance Boswell made on his tour
-abroad. Johnson characterised him as having ‘the loftiest port of any
-man he had ever seen.’
-
-[149] Peter Ramsay was a brother of William Ramsay of Barnton, the
-well-known sporting character of the early part of the nineteenth
-century.
-
-[150] A punning friend, remarking on the old Scottish practice of
-styling elderly landladies by the term _Lucky_, said: ‘Why not?—_Felix
-qui pot_——’
-
-[151] The following curious advertisement, connected with an inn in
-the Canongate, appeared in the _Edinburgh Evening Courant_ for July
-1, 1754. The advertisement is surmounted by a woodcut representing
-the stage-coach, a towering vehicle, protruding at top—the coachman
-a stiff-looking, antique little figure, who holds the reins with both
-hands, as if he were afraid of the horses running away—a long whip
-streaming over his head and over the top of the coach, and falling down
-behind—six horses, like starved rats in appearance—a postillion upon
-one of the leaders, with a whip:
-
-‘The Edinburgh Stage-Coach, for the better accommodation of Passengers,
-will be altered to a new genteel two-end Glass Machine, hung on Steel
-Springs, exceeding light and easy, to go in ten days in summer and
-twelve in winter; to set out the first Tuesday in March, and continue
-it from Hosea Eastgate’s, the _Coach and Horses_ in Dean Street, Soho,
-London, and from John Somerville’s in the Canongate, Edinburgh, every
-other Tuesday, and meet at Burrowbridge on Saturday night, and set
-out from thence on Monday morning, and get to London and Edinburgh on
-Friday. In the winter to set out from London and Edinburgh every other
-[alternate] Monday morning, and to go to Burrowbridge on Saturday
-night; and to set out from thence on Monday morning, and get to London
-and Edinburgh on Saturday night. Passengers to pay as usual. Performed,
-if God permits, by your dutiful servant,
-
- HOSEA EASTGATE.
-
- ‘Care is taken of small parcels _according to their value_.’
-
-
-
-
-THE CROSS—CADDIES.
-
-
-The Cross, a handsome octagonal building in the High Street, surmounted
-by a pillar bearing the Scottish unicorn, was the great centre of
-gossip in former days. The principal coffee-houses and booksellers’
-shops were close to this spot. The chief merchants, the leading
-official persons, the men of learning and talents, the laird, the
-noble, the clergyman, were constantly clustering hereabouts during
-certain hours of the day. It was the very centre and cynosure of the
-old city.
-
-During the reigns of the first and second Georges, it was customary
-for the magistrates of Edinburgh to drink the king’s health on his
-birthday on a stage erected at the Cross—loyalty being a virtue which
-always becomes peculiarly ostentatious when it is under any suspicion
-of weakness. On one of these occasions the ceremony was interrupted by
-a shower of rain, so heavy that the company, with one consent, suddenly
-dispersed, leaving their entertainment half-finished. When they
-returned, the glasses were found full of water, which gave a Jacobite
-lady occasion for the following epigram, reported to me by a venerable
-bishop of the Scottish Episcopal Church:
-
- ‘In Cana once Heaven’s king was pleased
- With some gay bridal folks to dine,
- And then, in honour of the feast,
- He changed the water into wine.
-
- But when, to honour Brunswick’s birth,
- Our tribunes mounted the Theâtre,
- He would not countenance their mirth,
- But turned their claret into water!’
-
-[Illustration: FORENOON AT THE CROSS.
-
-PAGE 174.]
-
-As the place where state proclamations were always made, where the
-execution of noted state criminals took place, and where many important
-public ceremonials were enacted, the Cross of Edinburgh is invested
-with numberless associations of a most interesting kind, extending
-over several centuries. Here took place the mysterious midnight
-proclamation, summoning the Flodden lords to the domains of Pluto, as
-described so strikingly in _Marmion_; the witness being ‘Mr Richard
-Lawson, ill-disposed, ganging in his gallery fore-stair.’ Here did
-King James VI. bring together his barbarous nobles, and make them shake
-hands over a feast partaken of before the eyes of the people. Here did
-the Covenanting lords read their protests against Charles’s feeble
-proclamations. Here fell Montrose, Huntly, the Argylls, Warriston,
-and many others of note, victims of political dissension. Here were
-fountains set a-flowing with the blood-red wine, to celebrate the
-passing of kings along the causeway. And here, as a last notable
-fact, were Prince Charles and his father proclaimed by their devoted
-Highlanders, amidst screams of pipe and blare of trumpet, while the
-beautiful Mrs Murray of Broughton sat beside the party on horseback,
-adorned with white ribbons, and with a drawn sword in her hand! How
-strange it seems that a time should at length have come when a set of
-magistrates thought this structure an encumbrance to the street, and
-had it removed. This event took place in 1756—the ornamental stones
-dispersed, the pillar taken to the park at Drum.[152]
-
-The Cross was the peculiar citadel and rallying-point of a species
-of lazzaroni called _Caddies_ or _Cawdies_, which formerly existed
-in Edinburgh, employing themselves chiefly as street-messengers and
-_valets de place_. A ragged, half-blackguard-looking set they were, but
-allowed to be amazingly acute and intelligent, and also faithful to
-any duty entrusted to them. A stranger coming to reside temporarily in
-Edinburgh got a caddy attached to his service to conduct him from one
-part of the town to another, to run errands for him; in short, to be
-wholly at his bidding.
-
- ‘Omnia novit,
- Græculus esuriens, in cœlum, jusseris, ibit.’
-
-A caddy _did_ literally know everything—of Edinburgh; even to that
-kind of knowledge which we now only expect in a street directory. And
-it was equally true that he could hardly be asked to go anywhere,
-or upon any mission, that he would not go. On the other hand, the
-stranger would probably be astonished to find that, in a few hours,
-his caddy was acquainted with every particular regarding himself,
-where he was from, what was his purpose in Edinburgh, his family
-connections, and his own tastes and dispositions. Of course for every
-particle of scandal floating about Edinburgh, the caddy was a ready
-book of reference. We sometimes wonder how our ancestors did without
-newspapers. We do not reflect on the living vehicles of news which then
-existed: the privileged beggar for the country people; for townsfolk,
-the caddies.
-
-The caddy is alluded to as a useful kind of blackguard in Burt’s
-_Letters from the North of Scotland_, written about 1740. He says that
-although they are mere wretches in rags, lying upon stairs and in the
-streets at night, they are often considerably trusted, and seldom or
-never prove unfaithful. The story told by tradition is that they formed
-a society under a chief called their constable, with a common fund or
-box; that when they committed any misdemeanour, such as incivility
-or lying, they were punished by this officer by fines, or sometimes
-corporeally; and if by any chance money entrusted to them should not
-be forthcoming, it was made up out of the common treasury. Mr Burt
-says: ‘Whether it be true or not I cannot say, but I have been told
-by several that one of the judges formerly abandoned two of his sons
-for a time to this way of life, as believing it would create in them
-a sharpness which might be of use to them in the future course of
-their lives.’ Major Topham, describing Edinburgh in 1774, says of the
-caddies: ‘In short, they are the tutelary guardians of the city; and
-it is entirely owing to them that there are fewer robberies and less
-housebreaking in Edinburgh than anywhere else.’
-
-Another conspicuous set of public servants characteristic of Edinburgh
-in past times were the _Chairmen_, or carriers of sedans, who also
-formed a society among themselves, but were of superior respectability,
-in as far as none but steady, considerate persons of so humble an order
-could become possessed of the means to buy the vehicle by which they
-made their bread. In former times, when Edinburgh was so much more
-limited than now, and rather an assemblage of alleys than of streets,
-sedans were in comparatively great request. They were especially in
-requisition amongst the ladies—indeed, almost exclusively so. From
-time immemorial the sons of the Gael have monopolised this branch of
-service; and as far as the business of a sedan-carrier can yet be said
-to exist amongst us, it is in the possession of Highlanders.
-
-The reader must not be in too great haste to smile when I claim his
-regard for an historical person among the chairmen of Edinburgh. This
-was Edward Burke, the immediate attendant of Prince Charles Edward
-during the earlier portion of his wanderings in the Highlands. Honest
-Ned had been a chairman in our city, but attaching himself as a servant
-to Mr Alexander Macleod of Muiravonside, aide-de-camp to the Prince,
-it was his fortune to be present at the battle of Culloden, and to fly
-from the field in his Royal Highness’s company. He attended the Prince
-for several weeks, sharing cheerfully in all his hardships, and doing
-his best to promote his escape. Thus has his name been inseparably
-associated with this remarkable chapter of history. After parting
-with Charles, this poor man underwent some dreadful hardships while
-under hiding, his fears of being taken having reference chiefly to the
-Prince, as he was apprehensive that the enemy might torture him to
-gain intelligence of his late master’s movements. At length the Act of
-Indemnity placed him at his ease; and the humble creature who, by a
-word of his mouth, might have gained thirty thousand pounds, quietly
-returned to his duty as a chairman on the streets of Edinburgh! Which
-of the venal train of Walpole, which even of the admirers of Pulteney,
-is more entitled to admiration than Ned Burke? A man, too, who could
-neither read nor write—for such was actually his case.[153]
-
-One cannot but feel it to be in some small degree a consolatory
-circumstance, and not without a certain air of the romance of an
-earlier day, that a bacchanal company came with a bowl of punch, the
-night before the demolition, and in that mood of mind when men shed
-‘smiles that might as well be tears,’ drank the Dredgie of the Cross
-upon its doomed battlements.
-
- ‘Oh! be his tomb as lead to lead,
- Upon its dull destroyer’s head!
- A minstrel’s malison is said.’[154]
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[152] The pillar was restored to Edinburgh, and for some years stood
-within an enclosed recess on the north side of St Giles’. When Mr
-W. E. Gladstone rebuilt the Cross in 1885, a little to the south of
-its former site, between St Giles’ Church and the Police Office, the
-original pillar was replaced in its old position.
-
-[153] Bishop Forbes inserts in his manuscript (which I possess) a
-panegyrical epitaph for Ned Burke, stating that he died in Edinburgh
-in November 1751. He also gives the following particulars from Burke’s
-conversation:
-
-‘One of the soles of Ned’s shoes happening to come off, Ned cursed the
-day upon which he should be forced to go without shoes. The Prince,
-hearing him, called to him and said: “Ned, look at me”—when (said Ned)
-I saw him holding up one of his feet at me, where there was de’il a
-sole upon the shoe; and then I said: “Oh, my dear! I have nothing more
-to say. You have stopped my mouth indeed.”
-
-‘When Ned was talking of seeing the Prince again, he spoke these words:
-“If the Prince do not come and see me soon, good faith I will go and
-see my daughter [Charles having taken the name of Betty Burke when
-in a female disguise], and crave her; for she has not yet paid her
-christening money, and as little has she paid the coat I ga’e her in
-her greatest need.”’
-
-[154] ‘Upon the 26th of February [1617], the Cross of Edinburgh was
-taken down. The old long stone, about forty footes or thereby in
-length, was to be translated, by the devise of certain mariners in
-Leith, from the place where it had stood past the memory of man, to
-a place beneath in the High Street, without any harm to the stone;
-and the body of the old Cross was demolished, and another builded,
-whereupon the long stone or obelisk was erected and set up, on the 25th
-day of March.’—Calderwood’s _Church History_.
-
-
-
-
-THE TOWN-GUARD.
-
-
-[Illustration: THE TOWN-GUARD.
-
-PAGE 179.]
-
-One of the characteristic features of Edinburgh in old times was its
-Town-guard, a body of military in the service of the magistrates for
-the purposes of a police, but dressed and armed in all respects as
-soldiers. Composed for the most part of old Highlanders, of uncouth
-aspect and speech, dressed in a dingy red uniform with cocked hats, and
-often exchanging the musket for an antique native weapon called the
-Lochaber axe, these men were (at least in latter times) an unfailing
-subject of mirth to the citizens, particularly the younger ones. In
-my recollection they had a sort of Patmos in the ground-floor of the
-Old Tolbooth, where a few of them might constantly be seen on duty,
-endeavouring to look as formidable as possible to the little boys who
-might be passing by. On such occasions as executions, or races at
-Leith, or the meeting of the General Assembly, they rose into a certain
-degree of consequence; but in general they could hardly be considered
-as of any practical utility. Their numbers were at that time much
-reduced—only twenty-five privates, two sergeants, two corporals, and
-a couple of drummers. Every night did their drum beat through the Old
-Town at eight o’clock, as a kind of curfew. No other drum, it seems,
-was allowed to sound on the High Street between the Luckenbooths and
-Netherbow. They also had an old practice of giving a _charivari_ on the
-drum on the night of a marriage before the lodgings of the bridegroom;
-of course not without the expectation of something wherewithal to
-drink the health of the young couple. A strange remnant of old
-times altogether were the _Town Rats_, as the poor old fellows were
-disrespectfully called by the boys, in allusion to the hue of their
-uniform.
-
-Previous to 1805, when an unarmed police was established for the
-protection of the streets, the Town-guard had consisted of three
-equally large companies, each with a lieutenant (complimentarily called
-captain) at its head. Then it was a somewhat more respectable body,
-not only as being larger, but invested with a really useful purpose.
-The unruly and the vicious stood in some awe of a troop of men bearing
-lethal weapons, and generally somewhat frank in the use of them. If
-sometimes roughly handled on kings’ birthdays and other exciting
-occasions, they in their turn did not fail to treat cavalierly enough
-any unfortunate roisterer whom they might find breaking the peace. They
-had, previous to 1785, a guard-house in the middle of the High Street,
-the ‘black hole’ of which had rather a bad character among the bucks
-and the frail ladies. One of their sergeants in those days, by name
-John Dhu, is commemorated by Scott as the fiercest-looking fellow he
-ever saw. If we might judge from poor Robert Fergusson, they were truly
-formidable in his time. He says:
-
- ‘And thou, great god o’ aquavitæ,
- Wha sway’st the empire o’ this city; ...
- Be thou prepared
- To hedge us frae that _black banditti_,
- The City-guard.’
-
-He adds, apostrophising the irascible veterans:
-
- ‘Oh, soldiers, for your ain dear sakes,
- For Scotland’s love—the land o’ cakes—
- Gi’e not her bairns sae deadly paiks,
- Nor be sae rude,
- Wi’ firelock and Lochaber axe,
- As spill their blude!’
-
-The affair at the execution of Wilson the smuggler in 1736, when, under
-command of Porteous, they fired upon and killed many of the mob, may be
-regarded as a peculiarly impressive example of the stern relation in
-which they stood to the populace of a former age.
-
-The great bulk of the corps was drawn either from the Highlands
-directly or from the Highland regiments. A humble Highlander considered
-it as getting a _berth_ when he was enlisted into the Edinburgh Guard.
-Of this feeling we have a remarkable illustration in an anecdote
-which I was told by the late Mr Alexander Campbell regarding the
-Highland bard, Duncan Macintyre, usually called _Donacha Bhan_. This
-man, really an exquisite poet to those understanding his language,
-became the object of a kind interest to many educated persons in
-Perthshire, his native county. The Earl of Breadalbane sent to let
-him know that he wished to befriend him, and was anxious to procure
-him some situation that might put him comparatively at his ease. Poor
-Duncan returned his thanks, and asked his lordship’s interest—to get
-him into the Edinburgh Town-guard—pay, sixpence a day! What sort of
-material these men would have proved in the hands of the magistrates
-if Provost Stewart had attempted by their means and the other forces at
-his command to hold out the city against Prince Charlie seems hardly
-to be matter of doubt. I was told the following anecdote of a member
-of the corps, on good authority. Robert Stewart, a descendant of the
-Stewarts of Bonskeid in Athole, was then a private in the City-guard.
-When General Hawley left Edinburgh to meet the Highland army in
-the west country, Stewart had just been relieved from duty for the
-customary period of two days. Instantly forming his plan of action,
-he set off with his gun, passed through the English troops on their
-march, and joined those of the Prince. Stewart fought next day like a
-hero in the battle of Falkirk, where the Prince had the best of it;
-and next morning our Town-guardsman was back to Edinburgh in time to
-go upon duty at the proper hour. The captain of his company suspected
-what business Robert and his gun had been engaged in, but preserved a
-friendly silence.
-
-The _Gutter-blood_ people of Edinburgh had an extravagant idea of
-the antiquity of the Guard, led probably by a fallacy arising from
-the antiquity of the individual men. They used to have a strange
-story—too ridiculous, one would have thought, for a moment’s credence
-anywhere—that the Town-guard existed before the Christian era. When
-the Romans invaded Britain, some of the Town-guard joined them; and
-three were actually present in Pilate’s guard at the Crucifixion! In
-reality, the corps took its rise in the difficulties brought on by bad
-government in 1682, when, at the instigation of the Duke of York, it
-was found necessary to raise a body of 108 armed men, under a trusty
-commander, simply to keep the people in check.[155]
-
-Fifty years ago (1824) the so-called captaincies of the Guard were snug
-appointments, in great request among respectable old citizens who had
-not succeeded in business. Kay has given us some illustrations of these
-extraordinary specimens of soldier-craft, one of whom was nineteen
-stone. Captain Gordon of Gordonstown, representative of one of the
-oldest families in Scotland, found himself obliged by fortune to accept
-of one of these situations.
-
-Scott, writing his _Heart of Mid-Lothian_ in 1817, says: ‘Of late, the
-gradual diminution of these civic soldiers reminds one of the abatement
-of King Lear’s hundred knights. The edicts of each set of succeeding
-magistrates have, like those of Goneril and Regan, diminished
-this venerable band with similar question—“What need have we of
-five-and-twenty?—ten?—five?” and now it is nearly come to: “What
-need we one?” A spectre may indeed here and there still be seen of an
-old gray-headed and gray-bearded Highlander, with war-worn features,
-but bent double by age; dressed in an old-fashioned cocked-hat, bound
-with white tape instead of silver lace, and in coat, waistcoat, and
-breeches of a muddy-coloured red; bearing in his withered hand an
-ancient weapon, called a Lochaber axe—a long pole, namely, with an
-axe at the extremity, and a hook at the back of the hatchet. Such a
-phantom of former days still creeps, I have been informed, round the
-statue of Charles II. in the Parliament Square, as if the image of a
-Stuart were the last refuge for any memorial of our ancient manners,’
-&c. At the close of this very year, the ‘What need we one?’ was asked,
-and answered in the negative; and the corps was accordingly dissolved.
-‘Their last march to do duty at Hallow Fair had something in it
-affecting. Their drums and fifes had been wont, in better days, to play
-on this joyous occasion the lively tune of
-
- “Jockey to the fair;”
-
-but on this final occasion the afflicted veterans moved slowly to the
-dirge of
-
- “The last time I came owre the muir.”’[156]
-
-The half-serious pathos of Scott regarding this corps becomes wholly
-so when we learn that a couple of members survived to make an actual
-last public appearance in the procession which consecrated his richly
-deserved monument, August 15, 1846.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[155] See _Domestic Annals of Scotland_, ii. 436.
-
-[156] _Waverley Annotations_, i. 435.
-
-
-
-
-EDINBURGH MOBS.
-
- THE BLUE BLANKET—MOBS OF THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY—BOWED JOSEPH.
-
-
-The Edinburgh populace was noted, during many ages, for its readiness
-to rise in tumultuary fashion, whether under the prompting of religious
-zeal or from inferior motives. At an early time they became an
-impromptu army, each citizen possessing weapons which he was ready
-and willing to use. Thus they are understood to have risen in 1482 to
-redeem James III. from restraint in the Castle; for which service,
-besides certain privileges, ‘he granted them,’ says Maitland, ‘a banner
-or standard, with a power to display the same in defence of their
-king, country, and their own right.’ The historian adds: ‘This flag,
-at present denominated the BLUE BLANKET, is kept by the Convener of
-the Trades; at whose appearance therewith, ’tis said that not only
-the artificers of Edinburgh are obliged to repair to it, but all the
-artisans or craftsmen within Scotland are bound to follow it, and fight
-under the Convener of Edinburgh, as aforesaid.’ The Blue Blanket, I may
-mention, has become a sort of myth in Edinburgh, being magnified by the
-popular imagination into a banner which the citizens carried with them
-to the Holy Land in one of the Crusades—expeditions which took place
-before Edinburgh had become a town fit to furnish any distinct corps of
-armed men.[157]
-
-When the Protestant faith came to stir up men’s minds, the lower order
-of citizens became a formidable body indeed. James VI., who had more
-than once experienced their violence, and consequently knew them well,
-says very naïvely in his _Basilicon Doron_, or ‘Book of Instruction’ to
-his son: ‘They think we should be content with their work, how bad and
-dear soever it be; and if they be in anything controuled, up goeth the
-_Blue Blanket_!’
-
-The tumults at the introduction of the Service-book, in 1637, need
-only be alluded to. So late as the Revolution there appears a military
-spirit of great boldness in the Edinburgh populace, reminding us of
-that of Paris in our own times: witness the bloody contests which took
-place in accomplishing the destruction of the papistical arrangements
-at the Abbey, December 1688. The Union mobs were of unexampled
-violence; and Edinburgh was only kept in some degree of quiet, during
-the greater part of that crisis, by a great assemblage of troops.
-Finally, in the Porteous mob we have a singular example of popular
-vengeance, wreaked out in the most cool but determined manner. Men seem
-to have been habitually under an impression in those days that the
-law was at once an imperfect and a partial power. They seem to have
-felt themselves constantly liable to be called upon to supplement its
-energy, or control or compensate for its errors. The mob had at that
-time a part in the state.
-
-[Illustration: ‘General’ Joe Smith laying down the Law to the
-Magistrates.]
-
-In this ‘fierce democracy’ there once arose a mighty Pyrrhus, who
-contrived, by dint of popular qualifications, to subject the rabble to
-his command, and to get himself elected, by acclamation, dictator of
-all its motions and exploits. How he acquired his wonderful power is
-not recorded; but it is to be supposed that his activity on occasions
-of mobbing, his boldness and sagacity, his strong voice and uncommonly
-powerful whistle, together with the mere whim or humour of the thing,
-conspired to his promotion. His trade was that of a cobbler, and he
-resided in some obscure den in the Cowgate. His person was low and
-deformed, with the sole good property of great muscular strength in the
-arms. Yet this wretch, miserable and contemptible as he appeared, might
-be said to have had at one time the command of the Scottish metropolis.
-The magistrates, it is true, assembled every Wednesday forenoon to
-manage the affairs and deliberate upon the improvements of the city;
-but their power was merely that of a viceroyalty. _Bowed Joseph_,
-otherwise called General Joseph Smith, was the only true potentate;
-and their resolutions could only be carried into effect when not
-inconsistent with his views of policy.
-
-In exercising the functions of his perilous office, it does not appear
-that he ever drew down the vengeance of the more lawfully constituted
-authorities of the land. On the contrary, he was in some degree
-countenanced by the magistracy, who, however, patronised him rather
-from fear than respect. They frequently sent for him in emergencies,
-in order to consult with him regarding the best means of appeasing
-and dispersing the mob. On such occasions nothing could equal the
-consequential air which he assumed. With one hand stuck carelessly into
-his side, and another slapped resolutely down upon the table—with a
-majestic toss of the head, and as much fierceness in his little gray
-eye as if he were himself a mob—he would stand before the anxious and
-feeble council, pleading the cause of his compeers, and suggesting the
-best means of assuaging their just fury. He was generally despatched
-with a promise of amendment and a hogshead of good ale, with which
-he could easily succeed in appeasing his men, whose dismissal, after
-a speech from himself and a libation from the barrel, was usually
-accomplished by the simple words: ‘_Now disperse, my lads!_’
-
-Joseph was not only employed in directing and managing the mobs, but
-frequently performed exploits without the co-operation of his greasy
-friends, though always for their amusement and in their behalf. Thus,
-for instance, when Wilkes by his celebrated Number 45 incensed the
-Scottish nation so generally and so bitterly, Joseph got a cart, fitted
-up with a high gallows, from which depended a straw-stuffed effigy of
-North Britain’s arch-enemy, with the devil perched upon his shoulder;
-and this he paraded through the streets, followed by the multitude,
-till he came to the Gallow Lee in Leith Walk, where two criminals were
-then hanging in chains, beside whom he exposed the figures of Wilkes
-and his companion. Thus also, when the Douglas cause was decided
-against the popular opinion in the Court of Session, Joseph went up to
-the chair of the Lord President as he was going home to his house, and
-called him to account for the injustice of his decision. After the said
-decision was reversed by the House of Lords, Joseph, by way of triumph
-over the Scottish court, dressed up fifteen figures in rags and wigs,
-resembling the judicial attire, mounted them on asses, and led them
-through the streets, telling the populace that they saw the fifteen
-senators of the College of Justice!
-
-When the craft of shoemakers used, in former times, to parade the High
-Street, West Bow, and Grassmarket, with inverted tin kettles on their
-heads and schoolboys’ rulers in their hands, Joseph—who, though a
-leader and commander on every other public occasion, was not admitted
-into this procession on account of his being only a cobbler—dressed
-himself in his best clothes, with a royal crown painted and gilt and a
-wooden truncheon, and marched pompously through the city till he came
-to the Netherbow, where he planted himself in the middle of the street
-to await the approach of the procession, which he, as a citizen of
-Edinburgh, proposed to welcome into the town. When the royal shoemaker
-came to the Netherbow Port, Joseph stood forth, removed the truncheon
-from his haunch, flourished it in the air, and pointing it to the
-ground, with much dignity of manner, addressed his paste-work majesty
-in these words: ‘O great King Crispianus! what are we in thy sight but
-a parcel of puir slaister-kytes—creeshy cobblers—sons of bitches?’
-And I have been assured that this ceremony was performed in a style of
-burlesque exhibiting no small artistic power.
-
-Joseph had a wife, whom he would never permit to walk beside him, it
-being his opinion that women are inferior to the male part of creation,
-and not entitled to the same privileges. He compelled his spouse to
-walk a few paces behind him; and when he turned, she was obliged to
-make a circuit so as to maintain the precise distance from his person
-which he assigned to her. When he wished to say anything to her, he
-whistled as upon a dog, upon which she came up to him submissively and
-heard what he had to say; after which she respectfully resumed her
-station in the rear.
-
-After he had figured for a few years as an active partisan of the
-people, his name waxed of such account with them that it is said he
-could in the course of an hour collect a crowd of not fewer than ten
-thousand persons, all ready to obey his high behests, or to disperse
-at his bidding. In collecting his troops he employed a drum, which,
-though a general, he did not disdain to beat with his own hands; and
-never, surely, had the fiery cross of the Highland chief such an effect
-upon the warlike devotion of his clan as Bowed Joseph’s drum had upon
-the spirit of the Edinburgh rabble. As he strode along, the street was
-cleared of its loungers, every close pouring forth an addition to his
-train, like the populous glens adjacent to a large Highland strath
-giving forth their accessions to the general force collected by the
-aforesaid cross. The Town Rats, who might peep forth like old cautious
-snails on hearing his drum, would draw in their horns with a Gaelic
-execration, and shut their door, as he approached; while the _Lazy
-Corner_ was, at sight of him, a lazy corner no longer; and the West Bow
-ceased to resound as he descended.
-
-It would appear, after all, that there was a moral foundation for
-Joseph’s power, as there must be for that of all governments of a more
-regular nature that would wish to thrive or be lasting. The little man
-was never known to act in a bad cause, or in any way to go against the
-principles of natural justice. He employed his power in the redress
-of such grievances as the law of the land does not or cannot easily
-reach; and it was apparent that almost everything he did was for the
-sake of what he himself designated _fair-play_. Fair-play, indeed, was
-his constant object, whether in clearing room with his brawny arms for
-a boxing-match, insulting the constituted authorities, sacking the
-granary of a monopolist, or besieging the Town-council in their chamber.
-
-An anecdote which proves this strong love of fair-play deserves to be
-recorded. A poor man in the Pleasance having been a little deficient
-in his rent, and in the country on business, his landlord seized and
-rouped his household furniture, turning out the family to the street.
-On the poor man’s return, finding the house desolate and his family in
-misery, he went to a neighbouring stable and hanged himself.[158] Bowed
-Joseph did not long remain ignorant of the case; and as soon as it
-was generally known in the city, he shouldered on his drum, and after
-beating it through the streets for half-an-hour, found himself followed
-by several thousand persons, inflamed with resentment at the landlord’s
-cruelty. With this army he marched to an open space of ground now
-covered by Adam Street, Roxburgh Street, &c., named in former times
-Thomson’s Park, where, mounted upon the shoulders of six of his
-lieutenant-generals, he proceeded to harangue them, in Cambyses’s vein,
-concerning the flagrant oppression which they were about to revenge.
-He concluded by directing his men to sack the premises of the cruel
-landlord, who by this time had wisely made his escape; and this order
-was instantly obeyed. Every article which the house contained was
-brought out to the street, where, being piled up in a heap, the general
-set fire to them with his own hand, while the crowd rent the air with
-their acclamations. Some money and bank-notes perished in the blaze,
-besides an eight-day clock, which, sensible to the last, calmly struck
-ten just as it was consigned to the flames.
-
-On another occasion, during a scarcity, the mob, headed by Joseph, had
-compelled all the meal-dealers to sell their meal at a certain price
-per peck, under penalty of being obliged to shut up their shops. One of
-them, whose place of business was in the Grassmarket, agreed to sell
-his meal at the price fixed by the general, for the good of the poor,
-as he said; and he did so under the superintendence of Joseph, who
-stationed a party at the shop-door to preserve peace and good order
-till the whole stock was disposed of, when, by their leader’s command,
-the mob gave three hearty cheers, and quietly dispersed. Next day, the
-unlucky victualler let his friends know that he had not suffered so
-much by this compulsory trade as might be supposed; because, though the
-price was below that of the market, he had taken care to use a measure
-which gave only about three-fourths instead of the whole. It was not
-long ere this intelligence came to the ears of our tribune, who,
-immediately collecting a party of his troops, beset the meal-dealer
-before he was aware, and compelled him to pay back a fourth of the
-price of every peck of meal sold; then giving their victim a hearty
-drubbing, they sacked his shop, and quietly dispersed as before.
-
-Some foreign princes happening to visit Edinburgh during Joseph’s
-administration, at a period of the year when the mob of Edinburgh
-was wont to amuse itself with an annual burning of the pope, the
-magistrates felt anxious that this ceremony should for once be
-dispensed with, as it might hurt the feelings of their distinguished
-visitors. The provost, in this emergency, resolved not to employ his
-own authority, but that of Joseph, to whom, accordingly, he despatched
-his compliments, with half a guinea, begging his kind offices in
-dissuading the mob from the performance of their accustomed sport.
-Joseph received the message with the respect due to the commission of
-‘his friend the Lord Provost,’ and pocketed the half-guinea with a
-complacent smile; but standing up to his full height, and resolutely
-shaking his rough head, he gave for answer that ‘he was highly
-gratified by his lordship’s message; but, everything considered, the
-pope _must be burnt_!’ And so the pope, honest man, _was_ burnt with
-all the honours accordingly.
-
-Joseph was at last killed by a fall from the top of a Leith
-stage-coach, in returning from the races, while in a state of
-intoxication, about the year 1780. It is to be hoped, for the good of
-society, that ‘we ne’er shall look upon his like again.’[159]
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[157] What is said to be the original Blue Blanket is still preserved
-in the National Museum of Antiquities of Scotland.
-
-[158] _Scots Magazine_, June 1767.
-
-[159] The skeleton of this singular being exists entire in the
-class-room of the professor of anatomy in the College.
-
-
-
-
-BICKERS.
-
-
-Amongst the social features of a bygone age in Edinburgh were the
-_bickers_ in which the boys were wont to indulge—that is, street
-conflicts, conducted chiefly with stones, though occasionally with
-sticks also, and even more formidable weapons. One cannot but wonder
-that, so lately as the period when elderly men now living were boys,
-the powers for preserving peace in the city should have been so weak as
-to allow of such battles taking place once or twice almost every week.
-The practice was, however, only of a piece with the general rudeness of
-those old days; and, after all, there was more appearance than reality
-of danger attending it. It was truly, as one who had borne a part in it
-has remarked, ‘only a rough kind of play.’[160]
-
-The most likely time for a bicker was Saturday afternoon, when the
-schools and hospitals held no restraint over their tenants. Then it
-was almost certain that either the Old Town and New Town boys, the
-George Square and Potterrow boys, the Herioters and the Watsoners, or
-some other parties accustomed to regard themselves as natural enemies,
-would meet on some common ground, and fall a-pelting each other. There
-were hardly anywhere two adjoining streets but the boys respectively
-belonging to them would occasionally hold encounters of this kind; and
-the animosity assumed a darker tinge if there was any discrepancy of
-rank or condition between the parties, as was apt to be the case when,
-for instance, the Old Town lads met the children of the aristocratic
-streets to the north. Older people looked on with anxiety, and wondered
-what the Town-guard was about, and occasionally reports were heard that
-such a boy had got a wound in the head, while another had lost a couple
-of his front teeth; it was even said that fatal cases had occurred in
-the memory of aged citizens. Yet, to the best of my recollection—for I
-do remember something of bickers—there was little likelihood of severe
-damage. The parties somehow always kept at a good distance from each
-other, and there was a perpetual running in one direction or another;
-certainly nothing like hand-to-hand fighting. Occasionally attempts
-were made to put down the riot, but seldom with much success; for it
-was one of the most ludicrous features of these contests that whenever
-the Town-guard made its appearance on the ground, the belligerent
-powers instantly coalesced against the common foe. Besides, they could
-quickly make their way to other ground, and there continue the war.
-
-Bickers must have had a foundation in human nature: from no temporary
-effervescence of the boy-mind did they spring; pleasant, though
-wrong, had they been from all time. Witness the following act of the
-Town-council so long ago as 1529: ‘_Bikkyrringis betwix Barnis_.—It
-is statut and ordainit be the prouest ballies and counsall Forsamekle
-as ther has bene gret bikkyrringis betwix barnis and followis in tymes
-past and diuerse thar throw hurt in perell of ther lyffis and gif
-sik thingis be usit thar man diuerse barnis and innocentis be slane
-and diuisione ryse amangis nychtbouris theirfor we charge straitlie
-and commandis in our Souerane Lord the Kingis name the prouest and
-ballies of this burgh that na sic bykkyrringis be usit in tymes to
-cum. Certifing that and ony persone be fund bykkyrrand that faderis
-and moderis sall ansuer and be accusit for thar deidis and gif thai be
-vagabondis thai to be scurgit and bannist the toune.’
-
-An anecdote which Scott has told of his share in the bickers which took
-place in his youth between the George Square youth and the plebeian
-fry of the neighbouring streets is so pat to this occasion that its
-reproduction may be excusable. ‘It followed,’ he says, ‘from our
-frequent opposition to each other, that, though not knowing the names
-of our enemies, we were yet well acquainted with their appearance, and
-had nicknames for the most remarkable of them. One very active and
-spirited boy might be considered as the principal leader in the cohort
-of the suburbs. He was, I suppose, thirteen or fourteen years old,
-finely made, tall, blue-eyed, with long fair hair, the very picture of
-a youthful Goth. This lad was always first in the charge and last in
-the retreat—the Achilles, at once, and Ajax, of the Crosscauseway. He
-was too formidable to us not to have a cognomen, and, like that of a
-knight of old, it was taken from the most remarkable part of his dress,
-being a pair of old green livery breeches, which was the principal
-part of his clothing; for, like Pentapolin, according to Don Quixote’s
-account, Green Breeks, as we called him, always entered the battle with
-bare arms, legs, and feet.
-
-‘It fell that, once upon a time, when the combat was at the thickest,
-this plebeian champion headed a sudden charge, so rapid and furious
-that all fled before him. He was several paces before his comrades,
-and had actually laid his hands on the patrician standard, when one of
-our party, whom some misjudging friend had entrusted with a _couteau de
-chasse_, or hanger, inspired with a zeal for the honour of the corps
-worthy of Major Sturgeon himself, struck poor Green Breeks over the
-head with strength sufficient to cut him down. When this was seen,
-the casualty was so far beyond what had ever taken place before that
-both parties fled different ways, leaving poor Green Breeks, with his
-bright hair plentifully dabbled in blood, to the care of the watchman,
-who (honest man) took care not to know who had done the mischief. The
-bloody hanger was flung into one of the Meadow ditches, and solemn
-secrecy was sworn on all hands; but the remorse and terror of the actor
-were beyond all bounds, and his apprehensions of the most dreadful
-character. The wounded hero was for a few days in the Infirmary,
-the case being only a trifling one. But though inquiry was strongly
-pressed on him, no argument could make him indicate the person from
-whom he had received the wound, though he must have been perfectly
-well known to him. When he recovered, and was dismissed, the author
-and his brother opened a communication with him, through the medium
-of a popular gingerbread baker, of whom both parties were customers,
-in order to tender a subsidy in name of smart-money. The sum would
-excite ridicule were I to name it; but sure I am that the pockets of
-the noted Green Breeks never held as much money of his own. He declined
-the remittance, saying that he would not sell his blood; but at the
-same time reprobated the idea of being an informer, which he said was
-_clam_—that is, base or mean. With much urgency he accepted a pound
-of snuff for the use of some old woman—aunt, grandmother, or the
-like—with whom he lived. We did not become friends, for the bickers
-were more agreeable to both parties than any more pacific amusement;
-but we conducted them ever after under mutual assurances of the highest
-consideration for each other.’[161]
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[160] Notes to _Waverley_.
-
-[161] _Waverley Annotations_, i. 70.
-
-
-
-
-SUSANNA, COUNTESS OF EGLINTOUNE.
-
-
-The house on the west side of the Old Stamp-office Close, High Street,
-formerly Fortune’s Tavern, was, in the early part of the last century,
-the family mansion of Alexander, Earl of Eglintoune. It is a building
-of considerable height and extent, accessible by a broad scale
-stair. The alley in which it is situated bears great marks of former
-respectability, and contained, till the year 1821, the Stamp-office,
-then removed to the Waterloo Buildings.[162]
-
-The ninth Earl of Eglintoune[163] was one of those patriarchal peers
-who live to an advanced age—indefatigable in the frequency of their
-marriages and the number of their children—who linger on and on, with
-an unfailing succession of young countesses, and die at last leaving a
-progeny interspersed throughout the whole of Douglas’s _Peerage_, two
-volumes, folio, re-edited by Wood. His lordship, in early life, married
-a sister of Lady Dundee, who brought him a large family, and died just
-about that happy period when she could not have greatly increased it.
-His next wife was a daughter of Chancellor Aberdeen, who only added one
-daughter to his stock, and then paused, in a fit of ill-health, to the
-great vexation of his lordship, who, on account of his two sons by the
-first countess having died young, was anxious for an heir. This was a
-consummation to his nuptial happiness which Countess Anne did not seem
-at all likely to bring about, and the chagrin of his lordship must
-have been increased by the longevity which her very ill-health seemed
-to confer upon her; for her ladyship was one of those valetudinarians
-who are too well acquainted with death, being always just at his door,
-ever to come to closer quarters with him. At this juncture the blooming
-Miss Kennedy was brought to Edinburgh by her father, Sir Archibald,
-the rough old cavalier, who made himself so conspicuous in _the
-Persecution_ and in Dundee’s wars.
-
-Susanna Kennedy, though the daughter of a lady considerably under the
-middle size—one of the three co-heiresses of the Covenanting general,
-David Leslie (Lord Newark), whom Cromwell overthrew at Dunbar—was
-six feet high, extremely handsome, elegant in her carriage, and had a
-face and complexion of most bewitching loveliness. Her relations and
-nurses always anticipated that she was to marry the Earl of Eglintoune,
-in spite of their disparity of age;[164] for, while walking one day
-in her father’s garden at Culzean, there alighted upon her shoulder a
-hawk, with his lordship’s name upon its bells, which was considered
-an infallible omen of her fate. Her appearance in Edinburgh, which
-took place about the time of the Union, gained her a vast accession of
-lovers among the nobility and gentry, and set all the rhyming fancies
-of the period agog. Among her swains was Sir John Clerk of Penicuik, a
-man of learning and talent in days when such qualities were not common.
-As Miss Kennedy was understood to be fond of music, he sent her a flute
-as a love-gift; from which it may be surmised that this instrument was
-played by females in that age, while as yet the pianoforte was not.
-When the young lady attempted to blow the instrument, something was
-found to interrupt the sound, which turned out to be a copy of verses
-in her praise:
-
- ‘Harmonious pipe, I languish for thy bliss,
- When pressed to Silvia’s lips with gentle kiss!
- And when her tender fingers round thee move
- In soft embrace, I listen and approve
- Those melting notes which soothe my soul in love.
- Embalmed with odours from her breath that flow,
- You yield your music when she’s pleased to blow;
- And thus at once the charming lovely fair
- Delights with sounds, with sweets perfumes the air.
- Go, happy pipe, and ever mindful be
- To court bewitching Silvia for me;
- Tell all I feel—you cannot tell too much—
- Repeat my love at each soft melting touch—
- Since I to her my liberty resign,
- Take thou the care to tune her heart to mine.’
-
-Unhappily for this accomplished and poetical lover, Lord Eglintoune’s
-sickly wife happened just about this time to die, and set his lordship
-again at large among the spinsters of Scotland. Admirers of a youthful,
-impassioned, and sonnet-making cast might have trembled at his approach
-to the shrine of their divinity; for his lordship was one of those
-titled suitors who, however old and horrible, are never rejected,
-except in novels and romances. It appears that poor Clerk had actually
-made a declaration of his passion for Miss Kennedy, which her father
-was taking into consideration, a short while before the death of Lady
-Eglintoune. As an old friend and neighbour, Sir Archibald thought he
-would consult the earl upon the subject, and he accordingly proceeded
-to do so. Short but decisive was the conference. ‘Bide a wee, Sir
-Archy,’ said his lordship; ‘my wife’s very sickly.’ With Sir Archibald,
-as with Mrs Slipslop, the least hint sufficed: the case was at once
-settled against the elegant baronet of Penicuik. The lovely Susanna
-accordingly became in due time the Countess of Eglintoune.
-
-Even after this attainment of one of the greatest blessings that life
-has to bestow,[165] the old peer’s happiness was like to have been
-destroyed by another untoward circumstance. It was true that he had the
-handsomest wife in the kingdom, and she brought him as many children as
-he could desire. One after another came no fewer than seven daughters.
-But then his lordship wanted a male heir; and every one knows how
-poor a consolation a train of daughters, however long, proves in such
-a case. He was so grieved at the want of a son that he threatened to
-divorce his lady. The countess replied that he need not do that, for
-she would readily agree to a separation, provided he would give back
-what he had with her. His lordship, supposing she alluded only to
-pecuniary matters, assured her she should have her fortune to the last
-penny. ‘Na, na, my lord,’ said she, ‘that winna do: return me my youth,
-beauty, and virginity, and dismiss me when you please.’ His lordship,
-not being able to comply with this demand, willingly let the matter
-drop; and before the year was out her ladyship brought him a son, who
-established the affection of his parents on an enduring basis. Two
-other male children succeeded. The countess was remarkable for a manner
-quite peculiar to herself, and which was remembered as the _Eglintoune
-air_, or the _Eglintoune manner_, long after her death. A Scottish
-gentleman, writing from London in 1730, says: ‘Lady Eglintoune has set
-out for Scotland, much satisfied with the honour and civilities shown
-her ladyship by the queen and all the royal family: she has done her
-country more honour than any lady I have seen here, both by a genteel
-and a prudent behaviour.’[166] Her daughters were also handsome women.
-It was a goodly sight, a century ago, to see the long procession of
-sedans, containing Lady Eglintoune and her daughters, devolve from
-the close and proceed to the Assembly Rooms, where there was sure to
-be a crowd of plebeian admirers congregated to behold their lofty and
-graceful figures step from the chairs on the pavement. It could not
-fail to be a remarkable sight—eight beautiful women, conspicuous for
-their stature and carriage, all dressed in the splendid though formal
-fashions of that period, and inspired at once with dignity of birth and
-consciousness of beauty! Alas! such _visions_ no longer illuminate the
-dark tortuosities of Auld Reekie!
-
-Many of the young ladies found good matches, and were the mothers of
-men more or less distinguished for intellectual attainments. Sir James
-Macdonald, the Marcellus of the Hebrides, and his two more fortunate
-brothers, were the progeny of Lady Margaret; and in various other
-branches of the family talent seems to be hereditary.
-
-The countess was herself a blue-stocking—at that time a sort of
-prodigy—and gave encouragement to the humble literati of her time.
-The unfortunate Boyse dedicated a volume of poems to her; and I need
-scarcely remind the Scottish reader that the _Gentle Shepherd_ was laid
-at her ladyship’s feet. The dedication prefixed to that pastoral drama
-contains what appears the usual amount of extravagant praise; yet it
-was perhaps little beyond the truth. For the ‘penetration, superior
-wit, and profound judgment’ which Allan attributes to her ladyship,
-she was perhaps indebted in some degree to the lucky accident of her
-having exercised it in the bard’s favour; but he assuredly overstrained
-his conscience very little when he said she was ‘possessed of every
-outward charm in the most perfect degree.’ Neither was it too much to
-speak of ‘the unfading beauties of wisdom and piety’ which adorned
-her ladyship’s mind.’[167] Hamilton of Bangour’s prefatory verses,
-which are equally laudatory and well bestowed, contain the following
-beautiful character of the lady, with a just compliment to her
-daughters:
-
- ‘In virtues rich, in goodness unconfined,
- Thou shin’st a fair example to thy kind;
- Sincere, and equal to thy neighbours’ fame,
- How swift to praise, how obstinate to blame!
- Bold in thy presence bashfulness appears,
- And backward merit loses all its fears.
- Supremely blest by Heaven, Heaven’s richest grace
- Confest is thine—an early blooming race;
- Whose pleasing smiles shall guardian wisdom arm—
- Divine instruction!—taught of thee to charm,
- What transports shall they to thy soul impart
- (The conscious transports of a parent’s heart),
- When thou behold’st them of each grace possessed,
- And sighing youths imploring to be blest
- After thy image formed, with charms like thine,
- Or in the visit or the dance[168] to shine:
- Thrice happy who succeed their mother’s praise,
- The lovely Eglintounes of other days!’
-
-It may be remarked that her ladyship’s thorough-paced Jacobitism, which
-she had inherited from her father, tended much to make her the friend
-of Ramsay, Hamilton, and other Cavalier bards. She was, it is believed,
-little given to patronising Whig poets.
-
-The patriarchal peer who made Susanna so happy a mother died in 1729,
-leaving her a dowager of forty, with a good jointure. Retiring to the
-country, she employed her widowhood in the education of her children,
-and was considered a perfect example to all mothers in this useful
-employment. In our days of freer manners, her conduct might appear too
-reserved. The young were taught to address her by the phrase ‘Your
-ladyship;’ and she spoke to them in the same ceremonious style. Though
-her eldest son was a mere boy when he succeeded to the title, she
-constantly called him Lord Eglintoune; and she enjoined all the rest of
-the children to address him in the same manner. When the earl grew up,
-they were upon no less formal terms; and every day in the world he took
-his mother by the hand at the dinner-hour, and led her downstairs to
-her chair at the head of his table, where she sat in state, a perfect
-specimen of the stately and ostentatious politeness of the last age.
-
-All this ceremony was accompanied with so much affection that the
-countess was never known to refuse her son a request but one—to walk
-as a peeress at the coronation of King George III. Lord Eglintoune,
-then a gentleman of the bedchamber, was proud of his mother, and wished
-to display her noble figure on that occasion. But she jestingly excused
-herself by saying that it was not worth while for so old a woman to buy
-new robes.
-
-The unhappy fate of her eldest and favourite son—shot by a man of
-violent passions, whom he was rashly treating as a poacher (1769)—gave
-her ladyship a dreadful shock in her old age. The earl, after receiving
-the fatal wound, was brought to Eglintoune Castle, when his mother was
-immediately sent for from Auchans. What her feelings must have been
-when she saw one so dear to her thus suddenly struck down in the prime
-of his days may be imagined. The tenderness he displayed towards her
-and others in his last hours is said to have been to the last degree
-noble and affecting.
-
-When Johnson and Boswell returned from their tour to the Hebrides,
-they visited Lady Eglintoune at Auchans. She was so well pleased with
-the doctor, his politics, and his conversation that she embraced and
-kissed him at parting, an honour of which the gifted tourist was ever
-afterwards extremely proud. Boswell’s account of the interview is
-interesting. ‘Lady Eglintoune,’ says he, ‘though she was now in her
-eighty-fifth year, and had lived in the country almost half a century,
-was still a very agreeable woman. Her figure was majestic, her manners
-high-bred, her reading extensive, and her conversation elegant. She had
-been the admiration of the gay circles, and the patroness of poets. Dr
-Johnson was delighted with his reception here. Her principles in church
-and state were congenial with his. In the course of conversation, it
-came out that Lady Eglintoune was married the year before Dr Johnson
-was born; upon which she graciously said to him that she might have
-been his mother, and she now adopted him.’
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-This venerable woman amused herself latterly in taming and patronising
-rats. She kept a vast number of these animals in her pay at Auchans,
-and they succeeded in her affections to the poets and artists whom she
-had loved in early life. It does not reflect much credit upon the
-latter that her ladyship used to complain of never having met with
-true gratitude except from four-footed animals. She had a panel in
-the oak wainscot of her dining-room, which she tapped upon and opened
-at meal-times, when ten or twelve jolly rats came tripping forth and
-joined her at table. At the word of command, or a signal from her
-ladyship, they retired again obediently to their native obscurity—a
-trait of good sense in the character and habits of the animals which,
-it is hardly necessary to remark, patrons do not always find in
-two-legged protégés.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Her ladyship died in 1780, at the age of ninety-one, having preserved
-her stately mien and beautiful complexion to the last. The latter was
-a mystery of fineness to many ladies not the third of her age. As her
-secret may be of service to modern beauties, I shall, in kindness
-to the sex, divulge it. _She never used paint, but washed her face
-periodically with SOW’S MILK!_ I have seen a portrait, taken in her
-eighty-first year, in which it is observable that her skin is of
-exquisite delicacy and tint. Altogether, the countess was a woman of
-ten thousand!
-
-The jointure-house of this fine old country-gentlewoman—Auchans
-Castle, a capital specimen of the Scottish manor-house of the
-seventeenth century, situated near Irvine—is now uninhabited, and the
-handsome wainscoted rooms in which she entertained Johnson and Boswell
-are fast hastening to decay. One last trait may now be recorded; in her
-ladyship’s bedroom at this place was hung a portrait of her sovereign
-_de jure_, the ill-starred Charles Edward, so situated as to be _the
-first object which met her sight on awaking in the morning_.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[162] The buildings in this alley are now demolished.
-
-[163] He is said to have been a nobleman of considerable talent, and
-a great underhand supporter of the exiled family; see the _Lockhart
-Papers_. George Lockhart had married his daughter Euphemia, or _Lady
-Effie_, as she was commonly called. In the _Edinburgh Annual Register_
-there is preserved a letter from Lord Eglintoune to his son, replete
-with good sense as well as paternal affection.
-
-[164] The earl was forty-nine and Miss Kennedy twenty.
-
-[165] The anecdote which follows is chiefly taken from _The Tell-tale_,
-a rare collection, published in 1762.
-
-[166] Notes by C. K. Sharpe in Stenhouse’s edition of the _Scots
-Musical Museum_, ii. 200.
-
-[167] As a specimen of the complimentary intercourse of the poet with
-Lady Eglintoune, an anecdote is told of her having once sent him a
-basket of fine fruit; to which he returned this stanza:
-
- ‘Now, Priam’s son, ye may be mute,
- For I can bauldly brag wi’ thee;
- Thou to the fairest gave the fruit—
- The fairest gave the fruit to me.’
-
-The love of raillery has recorded that on this being communicated by
-Ramsay to his friend Eustace Budgell, the following comment was soon
-after received from the English wit:
-
- ‘As Juno fair, as Venus kind,
- She may have been who gave the fruit;
- But had she had Minerva’s mind,
- She’d ne’er have given ’t to such a brute.’
-
-[168] An old gentleman told our informant that he never saw so
-beautiful a figure in his life as Lady Eglintoune at a Hunters’ Ball in
-Holyrood House, dancing a minuet in a large hoop, and a suit of black
-velvet, trimmed with gold.
-
-
-
-
-FEMALE DRESSES OF LAST CENTURY.
-
-
-Ladies in the last century wore dresses and decorations many of which
-were of an inconvenient nature; yet no one can deny them the merit of
-a certain dignity and grace. How fine it must have been to see, as an
-old gentleman told me he had seen, two hooped ladies moving along the
-Lawnmarket in a summer evening, and filling up the whole footway with
-their stately and voluminous persons!
-
-Amongst female articles of attire in those days were calashes,
-bongraces, capuchins, negligées, stomachers, stays, hoops, lappets,
-pinners, plaids, fans, busks, rumple-knots, &c., all of them now
-forgotten.
-
-The calash was a species of hood, constructed of silk upon a framework
-of cane, and was used as a protection to a cap or head-dress in walking
-out or riding in a carriage. It could be folded back like the hood of a
-carriage, so as to lie gathered together behind the neck.
-
-The bongrace was a bonnet of silk and cane, in shape somewhat like a
-modern bonnet.
-
-The capuchin was a short cloak, reaching not below the elbows. It was
-of silk, edged with lace, or of velvet. Gentlemen also wore capuchins.
-The first Sir William Forbes frequently appeared at the Cross in one. A
-lady’s _mode tippet_ was nearly the same piece of dress.
-
-The negligée was a gown, projecting in loose and ample folds from the
-back. It could only be worn with stays. It was entirely open in front,
-so as to show the stomacher, across which it was laced with flat silk
-cords, while below it opened more widely and showed the petticoat. This
-latter, though shorter, was sometimes more splendid than the gown,
-and had a deep flounce. Ladies in walking generally carried the skirt
-of the gown over the arm, and exhibited the petticoat; but when they
-entered a room, they always came sailing in, with the train sweeping
-full and majestically behind them.
-
-The stomacher was a triangular piece of rich silk, one corner pointing
-downwards and joining the fine black lace-bordered apron, while the
-other two angles pointed to the shoulders. Great pains were usually
-discovered in the adornment of this beautiful and most attractive
-piece of dress. Many wore jewels upon it; and a lady would have thought
-herself poor indeed if she could not bedizen it with strings of bugles
-or tinsel.
-
-Stays were made so long as to touch the chair, both in front and rear,
-when a lady sat. They were calculated to fit so tightly that the
-wearers had to hold by the bedpost while the maid was lacing them.
-There is a story told of a lady of high rank in Scotland, about 1720,
-which gives us a strange idea of the rigours and inconvenience of this
-fashion. She stinted her daughters as to diet, with a view to the
-improvement of their shapes; but the young ladies, having the cook in
-their interest, used to unlace their stays at night, after her ladyship
-went to bed, and make a hearty meal. They were at last discovered, by
-the smell of a roast goose, carried upstairs to their bedchamber; as
-unluckily their lady-mother did not take snuff,[169] and was not asleep.
-
-The hoop was contemporary with, and a necessary appendage of, the
-stays. There were different species of hoops, being of various shapes
-and uses. The pocket-hoop, worn in the morning, was like a pair of
-small panniers, such as one sees on an ass. The bell-hoop was a sort of
-petticoat, shaped like a bell and made with cane or rope for framework.
-This was not quite full-dress. There was also a straw petticoat, a
-species of hoop such as is so common in French prints. The full-sized
-evening hoop was so monstrous that people saw one-half of it enter
-the room before the wearer. This was very inconvenient in the Old
-Town, where doorways and closes were narrow. In going down a close or
-a turnpike stair, ladies tilted them up and carried them under their
-arms. In case of this happening, there was a _show petticoat_ below;
-and such care was taken of appearances that even the _garters_ were
-worn fine, being either embroidered or having gold and silver fringes
-and tassels.
-
-The French silks worn during the last century were beautiful, the
-patterns were so well drawn and the stuff of such excellent quality.
-The dearest common brocade was about a guinea a yard; if with gold or
-silver, considerably more.
-
-The lappet was a piece of Brussels or point lace, hanging in two pieces
-from the crown of the head and streaming gracefully behind.
-
-Pinners, such as the celebrated Egyptian Sphinx wears, were pinned down
-the stomacher.
-
-Plaids were worn by ladies to cover their heads and muffle their faces
-when they went into the street. The council records of Edinburgh abound
-in edicts against the use of this piece of dress, which, they said,
-confounded decent women with those who were the contrary.
-
-Fans were large, the sticks curiously carved, and if of leather,
-generally very well painted—being imported from Italy or Holland. In
-later times these have been sometimes framed like pictures and hung on
-the walls.
-
-All women, high and low, wore enormous busks, generally with a heart
-carved at the upper end. In low life this was a common present to
-sweethearts; if from carpenters, they were artificially veneered.
-
-The rumple-knot was a large bunch of ribbons worn at the peak of the
-waist behind. Knots of ribbons were then numerous over the whole body.
-There were the breast-knots, two hainch-knots (at which there were
-also buttons for looping up the gown behind), a knot at the tying of
-the beads behind the neck, one in front and another at the back of the
-head-gear, and knots upon the shoes. It took about twelve yards or
-upwards to make a full suit of ribbons.[170]
-
-Other minor articles of dress and adornment were the _befong_
-handkerchief (spelt at random), of a stuff similar to what is now
-called _net_, crossed upon the breast; paste ear-rings and necklace;
-broad black bracelets at the wrists; a _pong pong_—a jewel fixed to a
-wire with a long pin at the end, worn in front of the cap, and which
-shook as the wearer moved. It was generally stuck in the cushion over
-which the hair was turned in front. Several were frequently worn at
-once. A song in the _Charmer_, 1751, alludes to this bijou:
-
- ‘Come all ye young ladies whose business and care
- Is contriving new dresses, and curling your hair;
- Who flirt and coquet with each coxcomb who comes
- To toy at your toilets, and strut in your rooms;
- While you’re placing a patch, _or adjusting pong pong_,
- Ye may listen and learn by the truth of my song.’
-
-Fly-caps, encircling the head, worn by young matrons, and mob-caps,
-falling down over the ears, used only by old ones; pockets of silk or
-satin, of which young girls wore one above their other attire; silk
-or linen stockings—never of cotton, which is a modern stuff—slashed
-with pieces of a colour in strong contrast with the rest, or gold or
-silver clocks, wove in. The silk stockings were very thick, and could
-not be washed on account of the gold or silver. They were frequently of
-scarlet silk, and (1733) worn both by ladies and gentlemen. High-heeled
-shoes, set off with fine lace or sewed work, and sharply pointed in
-front.
-
-To give the reader a more picturesque idea of the former dresses of the
-ladies of Edinburgh, I cite a couple of songs, the first wholly old,
-the second a revivification:
-
- ‘I’ll gar our guidman trow that I’ll sell the ladle,
- If he winna buy to me a new side-saddle—
- To ride to the kirk, and frae the kirk, and round about the toun—
- Stand about, ye fisher jades, and gi’e my goun room!
-
- I’ll gar our guidman trow that I’ll tak the fling-strings,
- If he winna buy to me twelve bonnie goud rings,
- Ane for ilka finger, and twa for ilka thumb—
- Stand about, ye fisher jades, and gi’e my goun room!
-
- I’ll gar our guidman trow that I’m gaun to dee,
- If he winna fee to me twa valets or three,
- To beir my tail up frae the dirt and ush me through the toun—
- Stand about, ye fisher jades, and gi’e my goun room!’
-
- * * * * *
-
- ‘As Mally Lee cam’ down the street, her _capuchin_ did flee;
- She coost a look behind her, to see her _negligee_.
- And we’re a’ gaun east and wast, we’re a’ gaun agee,
- We’re a’ gaun east and wast, courtin’ Mally Lee.[171]
-
- She had twa _lappets_ at her head, that flaunted gallantlie,
- And _ribbon knots_ at back and breast of bonnie Mally Lee.
- And we’re a’ gaun, &c.
-
- A’ down alang the Canongate were beaux o’ ilk degree;
- And mony are turned round to look at bonnie Mally Lee.
- And we’re a’ gaun, &c.
-
- And ilka bab her _pong pong_ gi’ed, ilk lad thought that’s to me;
- But feint a ane was in the thought of bonnie Mally Lee.
- And we’re a’ gaun, &c.
-
- Frae Seton’s Land a countess fair looked owre a window hie,
- And pined to see the genty shape of bonnie Mally Lee.
- And we’re a’ gaun, &c.
-
- And when she reached the palace porch, there lounged erls three;
- And ilk ane thought his Kate or Meg a drab to Mally Lee.
- And we’re a’ gaun, &c.
-
- The dance gaed through the palace ha’, a comely sight to see;
- But nane was there sae bright or braw as bonnie Mally Lee.
- And we’re a’ gaun, &c.
-
- Though some had jewels in their hair, like stars ’mang cluds did shine,
- Yet Mally did surpass them a’ wi’ but her glancin’ eyne.
- And we’re a’ gaun, &c.
-
- A prince cam’ out frae ’mang them a’, wi’ garter at his knee,
- And danced a stately minuet wi’ bonnie Mally Lee.
- And we’re a’ gaun, &c.’
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[169] Snuff-taking was prevalent among young women in our grandmothers’
-time. Their flirts used to present them with pretty snuff-boxes. In one
-of the monthly numbers of the _Scots Magazine_ for the year 1745 there
-is a satirical poem by a swain upon the practice of snuff-taking; to
-which a lady replies next month, defending the fashion as elegant and
-of some account in coquetry. Almost all the old ladies who survived the
-commencement of this century took snuff. Some kept it in pouches, and
-abandoned, for its sake, the wearing of white ruffles and handkerchiefs.
-
-[170] A gown then required ten yards of stuff.
-
-[171] This verse appears in a manuscript subsequent to 1760. The name,
-however, is Sleigh, not Lee. Mrs Mally Sleigh was married in 1725 to
-the Lord Lyon Brodie of Brodie. Allan Ramsay celebrates her.
-
-
-
-
-THE LORD JUSTICE-CLERK ALVA.[172]
-
- LADIES SUTHERLAND AND GLENORCHY—THE PIN OR RISP.
-
-
-[Illustration: Mylne’s Court, where some of the Mylne family resided.]
-
-This eminent person—a cadet of the ancient house of Mar (born 1680,
-died 1763)—had his town mansion in an obscure recess of the High
-Street called Mylne Square,[173] the first place bearing such a
-designation in our northern capital: it was, I may remark, built by
-one of a family of Mylnes, who are said to have been master-masons to
-the Scottish monarchs for eight generations, and some of whom are at
-this day architects by profession.[174] Lord Alva’s residence was in
-the second and third floors of the large building on the west side
-of the square. Of the same structure, an Earl of Northesk occupied
-another _flat_. And, to mark the character of Lord Alva’s abode,
-part of it was afterwards, in the hands of a Mrs Reynolds, used as a
-lodging-house of the highest grade. The Earl of Hopetoun, while acting
-as Commissioner to the General Assembly, there held viceregal state.
-But to return to Lord Alva: it gives a curious idea of the habits of
-such a dignitary before the rise of the New Town that we should find
-him content with this dwelling while in immediate attendance upon the
-court, and happy during the summer vacation to withdraw to the shades
-of his little villa at Drumsheugh, standing on a spot now surrounded
-by _town_. Lord Lovat, who, on account of his numerous law-pleas, was
-a great intimate of Lord Alva’s, frequently visited him here; and Mrs
-Campbell of Monzie, Lord Alva’s daughter, used to tell that when she
-met Lord Lovat on the stair he always took her up in his arms and
-kissed her, to her great annoyance and horror—_he was so ugly_. During
-one of his law-pleas, he went to a dancing-school ball, which Misses
-Jean and Susanna, Lord Alva’s daughters, attended. He had his pocket
-full of _sweeties_, as Mrs Campbell expressed it; and so far did he
-carry his exquisitely refined system of cunning, that—in order no
-doubt to find favour with their father—he devoted the greater share
-of his attentions and the whole of his comfits to them alone. Those
-who knew this singular man used to say that, with all his duplicity,
-faithlessness, and cruelty, his character exhibited no redeeming trait
-whatever: nobody ever knew any good of him.
-
-In his Mylne Square mansion Lord Alva’s two step-daughters were
-married; one to become Countess of Sutherland, the other Lady
-Glenorchy. There was something very striking in the fate of Lady
-Sutherland and of the earl, her husband—a couple distinguished as
-much by personal elegance and amiable character as by lofty rank. Lady
-Sutherland was blessed with a temper of extraordinary sweetness, which
-shone in a face of so much beauty as to have occasioned admiration
-where many were beautiful—the coronation of George III. and his queen.
-The happiness of the young pair had been increased by the birth of a
-daughter. One unlucky day his lordship, coming after dinner into the
-drawing-room at Dunrobin a little flushed with wine, lifted up the
-infant above his head by way of frolic, when, sad to tell, he dropped
-her by accident on the floor, and she received injuries from which she
-never recovered. This incident had such an effect upon his lordship’s
-spirits that his health became seriously affected, so as finally to
-require a journey to Bath, where he was seized with an infectious
-fever. For twenty-one successive days and nights he was attended by his
-wife, then pregnant, till she herself caught the fatal distemper. The
-countess’s death was concealed from his lordship; nevertheless, when
-his delirium left him, the day before he died, he frequently said: ‘I
-am going to join my dear wife;’ appearing to know that she had ‘already
-reached the goal with mended pace!’ Can it be that we are sometimes
-able to penetrate the veil which hangs, in thick and gloomy folds,
-between this world and the next; or does the ‘mortal coil’ in which
-the light of mind is enveloped become thinner and more transparent by
-the wearing of deadly sickness? The bodies of the earl and countess
-were brought to Holyrood House, where they had usually resided when in
-town, and lay in state for some time previous to their interment in
-one grave in the Abbey Chapel. The death of a pair so young, so good,
-and who had stood in so distinguished a position in society—leaving
-one female infant to a disputed title—made a deep impression on the
-public, and was sincerely lamented in their own immediate circle. Of
-much poetry written on the occasion, a specimen may be seen in Evans’s
-_Old Ballads_. Another appears in Brydges’s _Censura Literaria_, being
-the composition of Sir Gilbert Elliot of Minto:
-
- ‘In pity, Heaven bestowed
- An early doom: lo, on the self-same bier,
- A fairer form, cold by her husband’s side,
- And faded every charm. She died for thee,
- For thee, her only love. In beauty’s prime,
- In youth’s triumphant hour, she died for thee.
-
- Bring water from the brook, and roses spread
- O’er their pale limbs; for ne’er did wedded love
- To one sad grave consign a lovelier pair,
- Of manners gentler, or of purer heart!’
-
-Lady Glenorchy, the younger sister of Lady Sutherland, was remarkable
-for her pious disposition. Exceedingly unfortunate in her marriage, she
-was early taught to seek consolation from things ‘not of this world.’
-I have been told that nothing could have been more striking than to
-hear this young and beautiful creature pouring forth her melodious
-notes and hymns, while most of her sex and age at that time exercised
-their voices only upon the wretched lyrics imported from Vauxhall and
-Ranelagh, or the questionable verses of Ramsay and his contemporaries.
-She met with her rich reward, even in this world; for she enjoyed
-the applause of the wealthy and the blessings of the poor, with that
-supreme of all pleasures—the conviction that the eternal welfare of
-those in whose fate she was chiefly interested was forwarded, if not
-perfected, by her precepts and example.[175]
-
-[Illustration: Old Risps.]
-
-It is not unworthy of notice, in this record of all that is old and
-quaint in our city, that the Lord Justice-clerk’s house was provided
-with a _pin_ or _risp_, instead of the more modern convenience—a
-knocker. The Scottish ballads, in numberless passages, make reference
-to this article: no hero in those compositions ever comes to his
-mistress’s door but he _tirles at the pin_. What, then, was a pin? It
-was a small slip or bar of iron, starting out from the door vertically,
-serrated on the side towards the door, and provided with a small ring,
-which, being drawn roughly along the serrations or nicks, produced a
-harsh and grating sound, to summon the servant to open. Another term
-for the article was a _crow_. In the fourth eclogue of Edward Fairfax,
-a production of the reign of James VI. and I., quoted in the _Muses’
-Library_, is this passage:
-
- ‘Now, farewell Eglon! for the sun stoops low,
- And calling guests before my sheep-cot’s door;
- Now _clad in white, I see my porter-crow_;
- Great kings oft want these blessings of the poor;’
-
-with the following note: ‘The ring of the door, called a _crow_, and
-when covered with white linen, denoted the mistress of the house was
-in travel.’ It is quite appropriate to this explanation that a small
-Latin vocabulary, published by Andrew Simpson in 1702, places among
-the parts of a house, ‘_Corvex—a clapper or ringle_.’ Hardly one
-specimen of the pin, crow, or ringle now survives in the Old Town. They
-were almost all disused many years ago, when knockers were generally
-substituted as more stylish. Knockers at that time did not long remain
-in repute, though they have never been altogether superseded, even by
-bells, in the Old Town. The comparative merit of knockers and pins was
-for a long time a controversial point, and many knockers got their
-heads twisted off in the course of the dispute. Pins were, upon the
-whole, considered very inoffensive, decent, old-fashioned things, being
-made of a modest metal, and making little show upon a door; knockers
-were thought upstart, prominent, brazen-faced articles, and received
-the full share of odium always conferred by Scotsmen of the old school
-upon tasteful improvements. Every drunken fellow, in reeling home at
-night, thought it good sport to carry off all the knockers that came
-in his way; and as drunken gentlemen were very numerous, many acts
-of violence were committed, and sometimes a whole stair was found
-stripped of its knockers in the morning; when the voice of lamentation
-raised by the servants of the sufferers might have reminded one of the
-wailings of the Lennox dairy-women after a _creagh_ in the days of
-old. Knockers were frequently used as missile weapons by the bucks of
-that day against the Town-guard; and the morning sun sometimes saw the
-High Street strewed with them. The aforesaid Mrs Campbell remembered
-residing in an Old Town house, which was one night disturbed in the
-most intolerable manner by a drunken party at the knocker. In the
-morning the greater part of it was found to be gone; and it was besides
-discovered, to the horror of the inmates, that part of a finger was
-left sticking in the fragments, with the appearance of having been
-forcibly wrenched from the hand.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[172] James Erskine on ascending the bench first took the title of Lord
-Tinwald, from his estate in Dumfriesshire. That of Lord Alva he assumed
-when he purchased the family estate of Alva, in Clackmannanshire, from
-his eldest brother, Sir Charles Erskine.
-
-[173] The site of Mylne Square is now occupied by the block of
-buildings directly opposite the north front of the Tron Church.
-
-[174] The first of this name was made ‘master-mason’ to the king in
-1481, and the position descended in regular succession in the family
-till 1710, when they adopted the style of architect.
-
-[175] Lady Glenorchy built a chapel, which was named after her, on the
-low ground to the south of the Calton Hill. The chapel was swept away,
-along with that of the fine Gothic building Trinity College Church, for
-the convenience of the North British Railway. The lady’s name is still
-preserved in Lady Glenorchy’s Established Church in Roxburgh Place and
-Lady Glenorchy’s United Free Church in Greenside.
-
-
-
-
-MARLIN’S AND NIDDRY’S WYNDS.
-
- TRADITION OF MARLIN THE PAVIER—HOUSE OF PROVOST EDWARD—STORY
- OF LADY GRANGE.
-
-
-Where South Bridge Street now stands, there formerly existed two wynds,
-or alleys, of the better class, named Marlin’s and Niddry’s Wynds. Many
-persons of importance lived in these obscurities. Marlin’s Wynd, which
-extended from behind the Tron Church, and contained several bookshops
-and stalls, the favourite lounge of the lovers of old literature, was
-connected with a curious tradition, which existed at the time when
-Maitland wrote his _History of Edinburgh_ (1753). It was said that the
-High Street was first paved or _causewayed_ by one Marlin, a Frenchman,
-who, thinking that specimen of his ingenuity the best monument he could
-have, desired to be buried under it, and was accordingly interred at
-the head of this wynd, which derived its name from him. The tradition
-is so far countenanced by there having formerly been a space in the
-pavement at this spot, marked by six flat stones, in the shape of a
-grave. According, however, to more authentic information, the High
-Street was first paved in 1532[176] by John and Bartoulme Foliot, who
-appear to have had nothing in common with this legendary Marlin, except
-country. The grave of at least Bartoulme Foliot is distinctly marked by
-a flat monument in the Chapel-Royal at Holyrood House. It is possible,
-nevertheless, that Marlin may have been the more immediate executor or
-superintendent of the work.
-
-Niddry’s Wynd abounded in curious antique houses, many of which had
-been the residences of remarkable persons. The most interesting _bit_
-was a paved court, about half-way down, on the west side, called
-Lockhart’s Court, from its having latterly been the residence of
-the family of Lockhart of Carnwath.[177] This was, in reality, a
-quadrangular palace, the whole being of elegant old architecture in one
-design, and accessible by a deep arched gateway. It was built by Nicol
-Edward, or Udward, who was provost of Edinburgh in 1591; a wealthy
-citizen, and styled in his _writts_, ‘of old descent in the burgh.’
-On a mantelpiece within the house his arms were carved, along with an
-anagram upon his name:
-
- VA D’UN VOL À CHRIST—
-
-_Go with one flight to Christ_; which, the reader will find, can only
-be made out by Latinising his name into NICHOLAUS EDUARTUS. We learn
-from Moyses’s _Memoirs_ that, in January 1591, this house was the
-temporary residence of James VI. and his queen, then recently arrived
-from Denmark; and that, on the 7th of February, the Earl of Huntly
-passed hence, out of the immediate royal presence, when he went to
-murder the Bonny Earl of Moray at Donibrissle; which caused a suspicion
-that His Majesty was concerned in that horrid outburst of feudal
-hate. Lockhart’s Court was latterly divided into several distinct
-habitations, one of which, on the north side of the quadrangle, was
-occupied by the family of Bruce of Kinnaird, the celebrated traveller.
-In the part on the south side, occupied by the Carnwath family, there
-was a mantelpiece in the drawing-room of magnificent workmanship, and
-reaching to the ceiling. The whole mansion, even in its reduced state,
-bore an appearance of security and strength which spoke of other times;
-and there was, moreover, a profound dungeon underground, which was only
-accessible by a secret trap-door, opening through the floor of a small
-closet, the most remote of a suite of rooms extending along the south
-and west sides of the court. Perhaps, at a time when to be rich was
-neither so common nor so safe as now, Provost Edward might conceal his
-hoards in this _massy more_.
-
-Alexander Black of Balbirney, who was provost of Edinburgh from 1579 to
-1583, had a house at the head of the wynd. King James lodged in this
-house on the 18th of August 1584, and walked from it in state next day
-to hold a parliament in the Tolbooth. Here also lodged the Chancellor
-Thirlstain, in January 1591, while the king and queen were the guests
-of Nicol Edward.[178] It must be understood that these visits of
-royalty were less considered in the light of an honour than of a tax.
-The king in those times went to live at the board of a wealthy subject
-when his own table happened to be scantily furnished; which was too
-often the case with poor King James.
-
-On the east side of the wynd, nearly opposite to Lockhart’s Court, was
-a good house,[179] which, early in the last century, was possessed
-by James Erskine of Grange, best known by his judicial title of Lord
-Grange, and the brother of John, Earl of Mar. This gentleman has
-acquired an unhappy notoriety in consequence of his treatment of his
-wife. He was externally a professor of ultra-evangelical views of
-religion, and a patron of the clergy on that side, yet in his private
-life is understood to have been far from exemplary. The story of Lady
-Grange, as Mrs Erskine was called, had a character of romance about it
-which has prevented it from being forgotten. It also reflects a curious
-light upon the state of manners in Scotland in the early part of the
-eighteenth century. The lady was a daughter of that Chiesly of Dalry
-whom we have already seen led by an insane violence of temper to commit
-one of the most atrocious of murders.
-
-
-STORY OF LADY GRANGE.[180]
-
-Lord and Lady Grange had been married upwards of twenty years, and
-had had several children, when, in 1730, a separation was determined
-on between them. It is usually difficult in such cases to say in what
-degree the parties are respectively blamable; how far there have been
-positive faults on one side, and want of forbearance on the other, and
-so forth. If we were to believe the lady in this instance, there had
-been love and peace for twenty years, when at length Lord Grange took a
-sudden dislike to his wife, and would no longer live with her. He, on
-the other hand, speaks of having suffered long from her ‘unsubduable
-rage and madness,’ and of having failed in all his efforts to bring her
-to a reasonable conduct. There is too much reason to believe that the
-latter statement is in the main true; although, were it more so, it
-would still leave Lord Grange unjustifiable in the measures which he
-took with respect to his wife. It is traditionally stated that in their
-unhappy quarrels the lady did not scruple to remind her husband whose
-daughter she was—thus hinting at what she was capable of doing if she
-thought herself deeply aggrieved. However all this might be, in the
-year 1730 a separation was agreed to (with great reluctance on the part
-of the lady), his lordship consenting to give her a hundred a year for
-her maintenance so long as she should continue to live apart from him.
-
-After spending some months in the country, Lady Grange returned to
-Edinburgh, and took a lodging near her husband’s house, for the
-purpose, as she tells us, of endeavouring to induce him to take her
-back, and that she might occasionally see her children. According to
-Lord Grange, she began to torment him by following him and the children
-on the street ‘in a scandalous and shameful manner,’ and coming to
-his house, and calling reproaches to him through the windows,[181]
-especially when there was company with him. He thus writes: ‘In his
-house, at the bottom of Niddry’s Wynd, where there is a court through
-which one enters the house, one time among others, when it was full of
-chairs, chairmen, and footmen, who attended the company that were with
-himself, or his sister Lady Jane Paterson, then keeping house together,
-she came into this court, and among that mob shamelessly cried up
-to the windows injurious reproaches, and would not go away, though
-entreated, till, hearing the late Lord Lovat’s voice, who was visiting
-Mr E——, and seeing two of his servants among the other footmen, “Oh,”
-said she, “is your master here?” and instantly ran off.’ He speaks of
-her having attacked him one day in church; at another time she forced
-him to take refuge with his son in a tavern for two hours. She even
-threatened to assault him on the bench, ‘which he every day expected;
-for she professed that she had no shame.’
-
-The traditionary account of Lady Grange represents her fate as having
-been at last decided by her threatening to expose her husband to the
-government for certain treasonable practices. It would now appear that
-this was partially true. In his statement, Lord Grange tells us that
-he had some time before gone to London to arrange the private affairs
-of the Countess of Mar, then become unable to conduct them herself,
-and he had sent an account of his procedure to his wife, including
-some reflections on a certain great minister (doubtless Walpole), who
-had thwarted him much, and been of serious detriment to the interests
-of his family in this matter. This document she retained, and she
-now threatened to take it to London and use it for her husband’s
-disadvantage, being supported in the design by several persons with
-whom she associated. While denying that he had been concerned in
-anything treasonable, Lord Grange says, ‘he had already too great a
-load of that great minister’s wrath on his back to stand still and
-see more of it fall upon him by the treachery and madness of such a
-wife and such worthy confederates.’ The lady had taken a seat in a
-stage-coach for London.[182] Lord Grange caused a friend to go and make
-interest to get her money returned, and the seat let to another person;
-in which odd proceeding he was successful. Thus was the journey stayed
-for the meantime; but the lady declared her resolution to go as soon as
-possible. ‘What,’ says Lord Grange, ‘could a man do with such a wife?
-There was great reason to think she would daily go on to do mischief to
-her family, and to affront and bring a blot on her children, especially
-her daughters. There were things that could not be redressed in a court
-of justice, and we had not then a madhouse to lock such unhappy people
-up in.’
-
-The result of his lordship’s deliberations was a plan for what he calls
-‘sequestrating’ his wife. It appears to have been concerted between
-himself and a number of Highland chiefs, including, above all, the
-notorious Lord Lovat.[183] We now turn to the lady’s narrative, which
-proceeds to tell that, on the evening of the 22nd of January 1732, a
-party of Highlandmen, wearing the livery of Lord Lovat, made their
-way into her lodgings, and forcibly seized her, throwing her down and
-gagging her, then tying a cloth over her head, and carrying her off
-as if she had been a corpse. At the bottom of the stair was a chair
-containing a man, who took the hapless lady upon his knees, and held
-her fast in his arms till they had got to a place in the outskirts of
-the town. Then they took her from the chair, removed the cloth from her
-head, and mounted her upon a horse behind a man, to whom she was tied;
-after which the party rode off ‘by the lee light of the moon,’ to quote
-the language of the old ballads, whose incidents the present resembles
-in character.
-
-The treatment of the lady by the way was, if we can believe her own
-account, by no means gentle. The leader, although a gentleman (Mr
-Forster of Corsebonny), disregarded her entreaties to be allowed to
-stop on account of cramp in her side, and only answered by ordering a
-servant to renew the bandages over her mouth. She observed that they
-rode along the Long Way (where Princes Street now stands), past the
-Castle, and so to the Linlithgow road. After a ride of nearly twenty
-miles, they stopped at Muiravonside, the house of Mr John Macleod,
-advocate, where servants appeared waiting to receive the lady—and
-thus showed that the master of the house had been engaged to aid in
-her abduction. She was taken upstairs to a comfortable bedroom; but a
-man being posted in the room as a guard, she could not go to bed nor
-take any repose. Thus she spent the ensuing day, and when it was night,
-she was taken out and remounted in the same fashion as before; and the
-party then rode along through the Torwood, and so to the place called
-Wester Polmaise, belonging to a gentleman of the name of Stewart,
-whose steward or factor was one of the cavalcade. Here was an old
-tower, having one little room on each floor, as is usually the case in
-such buildings; and into one of these rooms, the window of which was
-boarded over, the lady was conducted. She continued here for thirteen
-or fourteen weeks, supplied with a sufficiency of the comforts of life,
-but never allowed to go into the open air; till at length her health
-gave way, and the factor began to fear being concerned in her death. By
-his intercession with Mr Forster, she was then permitted to go into the
-court, under a guard; but such was the rigour of her keepers that the
-garden was still denied to her.
-
-[Illustration: THE CASTLE
-from Princes Street.
-
-PAGE 214.]
-
-Thus time passed drearily on until the month of August, during all
-which time the prisoner had no communication with the external world.
-At length, by an arrangement made between Lord Lovat and Mr Forster,
-at the house of the latter, near Stirling, Lady Grange was one night
-forcibly brought out, and mounted again as formerly, and carried off
-amidst a guard of horsemen. She recognised several of Lovat’s people
-in this troop, and found Forster once more in command. They passed
-by Stirling Bridge, and thence onward to the Highlands; but she no
-longer knew the way they were going. Before daylight they stopped at
-a house, where she was lodged during the day, and at night the march
-was resumed. Thus they journeyed for several days into the Highlands,
-never allowing the unfortunate lady to speak, and taking the most rigid
-care to prevent any one from becoming aware of her situation. During
-this time she never had off her clothes: one day she slept in a barn,
-another in an open enclosure. Regard to delicacy in such a case was
-impossible. After a fortnight spent at a house on Lord Lovat’s ground
-(probably in Stratherrick, Inverness-shire), the journey was renewed in
-the same style as before; only Mr Forster had retired from the party,
-and the lady found herself entirely in the hands of Frasers.
-
-They now crossed a loch into Glengarry’s land, where they lodged
-several nights in cow-houses or in the open air, making progress all
-the time to the westward, where the country becomes extremely wild. At
-Lochourn, an arm of the sea on the west coast, the unfortunate lady was
-transferred to a small vessel which was in waiting for her. Bitterly
-did she weep, and pitifully implore compassion; but the Highlanders
-understood not her language; and though they had done so, a departure
-from the orders which had been given them was not to be expected from
-men of their character. In the vessel, she found that she was in the
-custody of one Alexander Macdonald, a tenant of one of the Western
-Islands named Heskir, belonging to Sir Alexander Macdonald of Sleat;
-and here we have a curious indication of the spirit in which the
-Highlanders conducted such transactions. ‘I told him,’ says the lady,
-‘that I was stolen at Edinburgh, and brought there by force, and that
-it was contrary to the laws what they were doing. He answered that
-he would not keep me, or any other, against their will, _except Sir
-Alexander Macdonald were in the affair_.’ While they lay in Lochourn,
-waiting for a wind, the brother and son of Macdonald of Scothouse came
-to see but not to relieve her. Other persons visited the sloop, and
-among these one William Tolmy, a tenant of the chief of Macleod, and
-who had once been a merchant at Inverness. This was the first person
-she had seen who expressed any sympathy with her. He undertook to bear
-information of her retreat to her friend and ‘man of business,’ Mr Hope
-of Rankeillor, in Edinburgh; but it does not appear that he fulfilled
-his promise.
-
-Lady Grange remained in Macdonald’s charge at Heskir nearly two
-years—during the first year without once seeing bread, and with no
-supply of clothing; obliged, in fact, to live in the same miserable
-way as the rest of the family; afterwards some little indulgence was
-shown to her. This island was of desolate aspect, and had no inhabitant
-besides Macdonald and his wife. The wretchedness of such a situation
-for a lady who had been all her life accustomed to the refined society
-of a capital may of course be imagined. Macdonald would never allow
-her to write to any one; but he went to his landlord, Sir Alexander,
-to plead for the indulgences she required. On one of these occasions,
-Sir Alexander expressed his regret at having been concerned in such
-an affair, and wished he were quit of it. The wonder is how Erskine
-should have induced all these men to interest themselves in the
-‘sequestration’ of his wife. One thing is here remarkable: they were
-all of them friends of the Stuart family, as was Macleod of Macleod,
-into whose hands the lady subsequently fell. It therefore becomes
-probable that Erskine had at least convinced them that her seclusion
-from the world was necessary in some way for the preservation of
-political secrets important to them.
-
-In June 1734 a sloop came to Heskir to take away the lady; it was
-commanded by a Macleod, and in it she was conveyed to the remotest spot
-of ground connected with the British Islands—namely, the isle of St
-Kilda, the property of the chief of Macleod, and remarkable for the
-simple character of the poor peasantry who occupy it. There cannot, of
-course, be a doubt that those who had an interest in the seclusion of
-Lady Grange regarded this as a more eligible place than Heskir, in as
-far as it was more out of the way, and promised better for her complete
-and permanent confinement. In some respects it was an advantageous
-change for the lady: the place was not uninhabited, as Heskir very
-nearly was; and her domestic accommodation was better. In St Kilda, she
-was placed in a house or cottage of two small apartments, tolerably
-well furnished, with a girl to wait upon her, and provided with a
-sufficiency of good food and clothing. Of educated persons the island
-contained not one, except for a short time a Highland Presbyterian
-clergyman, named Roderick Maclennan. There was hardly even a person
-capable of speaking or understanding the English language within reach.
-No books, no intelligence from the world in which she had once lived.
-Only once a year did a steward come to collect the rent paid in kind
-by the poor people; and by him was the lady regularly furnished with a
-store of such articles, foreign to the place, as she needed—usually
-a stone of sugar, a pound of tea, six pecks of wheat, and an anker of
-spirits.[184] Thus she had no lack of the common necessaries of life;
-she only wanted society and freedom. In this way she spent seven dreary
-years in St Kilda. How she contrived to pass her time is not known.
-We learn, however, some particulars of her history during this period
-from the testimony of those who had a charge over her. If this is to be
-believed, she made incessant efforts, though without effect, to bribe
-the islanders to assist in liberating her. Once a stray vessel sent a
-boat ashore for water; she no sooner heard of it than she despatched
-the minister’s wife to apprise the sailors of her situation, and
-entreat them to rescue her; but Mrs Maclennan did not reach the spot
-till after they had departed. She was kind to the peasantry, giving
-them from her own stores, and sometimes had the women to come and
-dance before her; but her temper and habits were not such as to gain
-their esteem. Often she drank too much; and whenever any one near her
-committed the slightest mistake, she would fly into a furious passion,
-and even resort to violence. Once she was detected in an attempt,
-during the night, to obtain a pistol from above the steward’s bed,
-in the room next to her own. On his awaking and seeing her, she ran
-off to her own bed. One is disposed, of course, to make all possible
-allowances for a person in her wretched circumstances; yet there can be
-little doubt, from the evidence before us, that it was a natural and
-habitual violence of temper which displayed itself during her residence
-in St Kilda.
-
-Meanwhile it was known in Edinburgh that Lady Grange had been forcibly
-carried away and placed in seclusion by orders of her husband; but
-her whereabouts was a mystery to all besides a few who were concerned
-to keep it secret. During the years which had elapsed since her
-abduction, Mr Erskine had given up his seat on the bench, and entered
-into political life as a friend of the Prince of Wales and opponent
-of Sir Robert Walpole. The world had wondered at the events of his
-domestic life, and several persons denounced the singular means he
-had adopted for obtaining domestic peace. But, in the main, he stood
-as well with society as he had ever done. At length, in the winter of
-1740-41, a communication from Lady Grange for the first time reached
-her friends. It was brought by the minister Maclennan and his wife, who
-had left the island in discontent, after quarrelling with Macleod’s
-steward. The idea of a lady by birth and education being immured for a
-series of years in an outlandish place where only the most illiterate
-peasantry resided, and this by the command of a husband who could only
-complain of her irritable temper, struck forcibly upon public feeling,
-and particularly upon the mind of Lady Grange’s legal agent, Mr Hope
-of Rankeillor, who had all along felt a keen interest in her fate. Of
-Mr Hope it may be remarked that he was also a zealous Jacobite; yet,
-though all the persons engaged in the lady’s abduction were of that
-party, he hesitated not to take active measures on the contrary side.
-He immediately applied to the Lord Justice-clerk (supreme criminal
-judge) for a warrant to search for and liberate Lady Grange. This
-application was opposed by the friends of Mr Erskine, and eventually
-it was defeated; yet he was not on that account deterred from hiring
-a vessel, and sending it with armed men to secure the freedom of the
-lady—a step which, as it was illegal and dangerous, obviously implied
-no small risk on his own part. This ship proceeded no farther than the
-harbour called the Horse-shoe, in Lorn (opposite to the modern town of
-Oban), where the master quarrelled with and set on shore Mrs Maclennan,
-his guide. Apparently the voyage was not prosecuted in consequence of
-intelligence being received that the lady had been removed to another
-place, where she was kept in more humane circumstances. If so, its
-object might be considered as in part at least, though indirectly,
-accomplished.
-
-I have seen a warrant, signed in the holograph of Normand Macleod—the
-same insular chief who, a few years after, lost public respect in
-consequence of his desertion of the Jacobite cause, and showing an
-active hostility to Prince Charles when in hiding. The document is
-dated at Dunvegan, February 17, 1741, and proceeds upon a rumour which
-has reached the writer that a certain gentlewoman, called Lady Grange,
-was carried to his isle of St Kilda in 1734, and has ever since been
-confined there under cruel circumstances. Regarding this as a scandal
-which he is bound to inquire into (as if it could have hitherto been a
-secret to him), he orders his baron-bailie of Harris, Donald Macleod of
-Bernera (this was a gallant fellow who went out in the ’Forty-five), to
-proceed to that island and make the necessary investigations. I have
-also seen the original precognition taken by honest Donald six days
-thereafter, when the various persons who had been about Lady Grange
-gave evidence respecting her. The general bearing of this testimony,
-besides establishing the fact of her confinement as a prisoner, is to
-the effect that she was treated well in all other respects, having
-a house forty feet long, with an inner room and a chimney to it, a
-curtained bed, arm-chair, table, and other articles; ample store of
-good provisions, including spirits; and plenty of good clothes; but
-that she was addicted to liquor, and liable to dreadful outbreaks of
-anger. Evidence was at the same time taken regarding the character of
-the Maclennans, upon whose reports Mr Hope had proceeded. It was Mr
-Erskine’s interest to establish that they were worthless persons, and
-to this effect strong testimony was given by several of the islanders,
-though it would be difficult to say with what degree of verity. The
-whole purpose of these precognitions was to meet the clamours raised by
-Mr Hope as to the barbarities to which Lady Grange had been subjected.
-They had the effect of stopping for a time the legal proceedings
-threatened by that gentleman; but he afterwards raised an action in the
-Court of Session for payment of the arrears of aliment or allowance due
-to the lady, amounting to £1150, and obtained decreet or judgment in
-the year 1743 against the defender in absence, though he did not choose
-to put it in force.
-
-The unfortunate cause of all these proceedings ceased to be a trouble
-to any one in May 1745. Erskine, writing from Westminster, June 1, in
-answer to an intimation of her death, says: ‘I most heartily thank
-you, my dear friend, for the timely notice you gave me of the death
-of _that person_. It would be a ridiculous untruth to pretend grief
-for it; but as it brings to my mind a train of various things for many
-years back, it gives me concern. Her retaining wit and facetiousness to
-the last surprises me. These qualities none found in her, no more than
-common-sense or good-nature, before she went to these parts; and of the
-reverse of all which, if she had not been irrecoverably possest, in
-an extraordinary and insufferable degree, after many years’ fruitless
-endeavours to reclaim her, she had never seen these parts. I long for
-the particulars of her death, which, you are pleased to tell me, I am
-to have by next post.’
-
-Mr Hope’s wife and daughters being left as heirs of Lady Grange, an
-action was raised in their name for the £1150 formerly awarded, and
-for three years additional of her annuity; and for this compound sum
-decreet was obtained, which was followed by steps for forcing payment.
-The Hopes were aware, however, of the dubious character of this claim,
-seeing that Mr Erskine, from whatever causes, had substituted an actual
-subsistence since 1732. They accordingly intimated that they aimed
-at no personal benefit from Lady Grange’s bequest; and the affair
-terminated in Mr Erskine reimbursing Mr Hope for all the expenses he
-had incurred on behalf of the lady, including that for the sloop which
-he had hired to proceed to St Kilda for her rescue.
-
-It is humbly thought that this story casts a curious and faithful
-light upon the age of our grandfathers, showing things in a kind of
-transition from the sanguinary violence of an earlier age to the
-humanity of the present times. Erskine, not to speak of his office of a
-judge in Scotland, moved in English society of the highest character.
-He must have been the friend of Lyttelton, Pope, Thomson, and other
-ornaments of Frederick’s court; and as the brother-in-law of the
-Countess of Mar, who was sister of Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, he would
-figure in the brilliant circle which surrounded that star of the age of
-the second George. Yet he does not appear to have ever felt a moment’s
-compunction at leaving the mother of his children to pine and fret
-herself to death in a half-savage wilderness—
-
- ‘Placed far amidst the melancholy main;’
-
-for in a paper which expresses his feelings on the subject pretty
-freely, he justifies the ‘sequestration’ as a step required by prudence
-and decency; and in showing that the gross necessaries of life were
-afforded to his wife, seems to have considered that his whole duty
-towards her was discharged. Such an insensibility could not be peculiar
-to one man: it indicates the temper of a class and of an age. While
-congratulating ourselves on the improved humanity of our own times,
-we may glance with satisfaction to the means which it places in our
-power for the proper treatment of patients like Mrs Erskine. Such a
-woman would now be regarded as the unfortunate victim of disease, and
-instead of being forcibly carried off under cloud of night by a band
-of Highlanders, and committed to confinement on the outskirts of the
-world, she would, with proper precautions, be remitted to an asylum,
-where, by gentle and rational management, it might be hoped that she
-would be restored to mental health, or, at the worst, enabled to
-spend the remainder of her days in the utmost comfort which her state
-admitted of.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[1868.—About the middle of Cant’s Close,[185] on the west side,
-there exists a remarkable edifice, different from all others in the
-neighbourhood. It is two stories in height, the second story being
-reached by an outside stone stair within a small courtyard, which had
-originally been shut in by a gate. The stone pillars of the gateway are
-decorated with balls at the top, as was the fashion of entrances to the
-grounds of a country mansion. The building is picturesque in character,
-in the style of the sixteenth century in Scotland. As it resembles a
-neat, old-fashioned country-house, one wonders to find it jammed up
-amidst tall edifices in this confined alley. Ascending the stair, we
-find that the interior consists of three or four apartments, with
-handsome panelled walls and elaborately carved stucco ceilings. The
-principal room has a double window on the west to Dickson’s Close.[186]
-
-[Illustration: Old Mansion, Cant’s Close.]
-
-Daniel Wilson, in his _Memorials of Edinburgh_, speaks of this building
-in reference to Dickson’s Close. He says: ‘A little lower down the
-close on the same side, an old and curious stone tenement bears on
-its lower crow-step the Haliburton arms, impaled with another coat,
-on one shield. It is a singularly antique and time-worn edifice,
-evidently of considerable antiquity. A curious double window projects
-on a corbelled base into the close, while the whole stone-work is so
-much decayed as greatly to add to its picturesque character. In the
-earliest deed which exists, bearing date 1582, its first proprietor,
-Master James Halyburton—a title then of some meaning—is spoken of in
-indefinite terms as _umq^{le}_, or deceased; so that it is a building
-probably of the early part of the sixteenth century.’ It is known that
-the adjoining properties on the north once pertained to the collegiate
-church of Crichton; while those on the east, in Strichen’s Close,
-comprehended the town residence of the Abbot of Melrose, 1526.
-
-The adjoining woodcut [p. 221] will give some idea of this strange
-old mansion in Cant’s Close, with its gateway and flight of steps. In
-looking over the titles, we find that the tenement was conveyed in
-1735 from Robert Geddes of Scotstoun, Peeblesshire, to George Wight, a
-burgess of Edinburgh, since which period it has gradually deteriorated;
-every apartment, from the ground to the garret, is now a dwelling for
-a separate family; and the whole surroundings are most wretched. The
-edifice formed one of the properties removed under the Improvement Act
-of 1867.]
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[176] The Canongate seems to have been paved about the same time. In
-1535 the king granted to the Abbot of Holyrood a duty of one penny upon
-every loaded cart, and a halfpenny upon every empty one, to repair and
-maintain the causeway.
-
-[177] George Lockhart of Carnwath lived here in 1753. Afterwards he
-resided in Ross House, a suburban mansion, which afterwards was used as
-a lying-in hospital. The park connected with this house is now occupied
-by George Square. While in Mr Lockhart’s possession Ross House was the
-scene of many gay routs and balls.
-
-The Lords Ross, the original proprietors of this mansion, died out in
-1754. One of the last persons in Scotland supposed to be possessed
-by an evil spirit was a daughter of George, the second last lord. A
-correspondent says: ‘A person alive in 1824 told me that, when a child,
-he saw her clamber up to the top of an old-fashioned four-post bed
-like a cat. In her fits it was almost impossible to hold her. About
-the same time, a daughter of Lord Kinnaird was supposed to have the
-second-sight. One day, during divine worship in the High Church, she
-fainted away; on her recovery, she declared that when Lady Janet Dundas
-(a daughter of Lord Lauderdale) entered the pew with Miss Dundas, who
-was a beautiful young girl, she saw the latter as it were in a shroud
-gathered round her neck, and upon her head. Miss Dundas died a short
-time after.’
-
-[178] Both facts from Moyses’s _Memoirs_.
-
-[179] In the house to the north of this was a shop kept by an eccentric
-personage, who exhibited a sign bearing this singular inscription:
-
- ORRA THINGS BOUGHT AND SOLD—
-
-which signified that he dealt in odd articles, such as a single
-shoe-buckle, one of a pair of skates, a teapot wanting a lid, or
-perhaps, as often, a lid _minus_ a teapot; in short, any unpaired
-article which was not to be got in the shops where only new things were
-sold, and which, nevertheless, was now and then as indispensably wanted
-by householders as anything else.
-
-[180] The present article is almost wholly from original sources, a
-fact probably unknown to a contemporary novelist, who has made it the
-groundwork of a fiction without any acknowledgment. Some additional
-particulars may be found in _Tales of the Century_, by John Sobieski
-Stuart (Edinburgh, 1846). In the _Spalding Miscellany_, vol. iii., are
-several letters of Lord Grange, containing allusions to his wife; and a
-production of his, which has been printed under the title of _Diary of
-a Senator of the College of Justice_ (Stevenson, Edinburgh, 1833), is
-worthy of perusal.
-
-[181] Here and elsewhere a paper in Lord Grange’s own hand is quoted.
-
-[182] ‘Then, and some time before and after, there was a stage-coach
-from hence to England.’ So says his lordship; implying that in 1751,
-when he was writing, there was no such public conveniency! It had been
-tried, and had failed.
-
-[183] If we could believe Lord Lovat, however, he personally was
-innocent, and regretted he was innocent, of any association with the
-abduction of Lady Grange. ‘They said it was all my contrivance, and
-that it was my servants that took her away; but I defyed them then, as
-I do now, and do declare to you upon honour, that I do not know what
-has become of that woman, where she is or who takes care of her, but if
-I had contrived and assisted, and saved my Lord Grange from that devil,
-who threatened every day to murder him and his children, I would not
-think shame of it before God or man.’—Letter of Lord Lovat’s quoted in
-_Genealogie of the Hayes of Tweeddale_.
-
-[184] About four gallons.
-
-[185] Named after John Cant, a pious citizen of the sixteenth century,
-who, with his wife, Agnes Kerkettle, was a contributor to the
-foundation of the Convent of St Catherine of Siena on the south side of
-the Meadows. The district is now known as Sciennes—pronounced _Sheens_.
-
-[186] Only fragments of the ancient buildings remain in Cant’s and
-Dickson’s Closes.
-
-
-
-
-ABBOT OF MELROSE’S LODGING.
-
- SIR GEORGE MACKENZIE—LADY ANNE DICK.
-
-
-In Catholic times several of the great dignitaries of the Church had
-houses in Edinburgh, as the Archbishop of St Andrews at the foot
-of Blackfriars Wynd, the Bishop of Dunkeld in the Cowgate, and the
-Abbot of Cambuskenneth in the Lawnmarket.[187] The Abbot of Melrose’s
-‘lodging’ appears from public documents to have been in what is now
-called Strichen’s Close, in the High Street, immediately to the west of
-Blackfriars Wynd. It had a garden extending down to the Cowgate and up
-part of the opposite slope.
-
-[Illustration: Strichen’s Close.]
-
-A successor of the abbot in this possession was Sir George Mackenzie
-of Rosehaugh, king’s advocate in the reigns of Charles II. and James
-II., and author of several able works in Scottish law, as well as a
-successful cultivator of miscellaneous literature. He got a charter
-of the property from the magistrates in 1677. The house occupied by
-Sir George still exists,[188] and appears to have been a goodly enough
-mansion for its time. It is now, however, possessed by a brass-founder
-as a place of business. From Sir George the alley was called
-Rosehaugh’s Close, till, this house falling by marriage connection into
-the possession of Lord Strichen, it got the name of Strichen’s Close,
-which it still bears. Lord Strichen was a judge of the Court of Session
-for forty-five years subsequent to 1730. He was the direct ancestor of
-the present Lord Lovat of the British peerage.
-
-[Illustration: Back of Mackenzie’s House, looking into Cant’s House.]
-
-Mackenzie has still a place in the popular imagination in Edinburgh as
-the _Bluidy Mackingie_, his office having been to prosecute the unruly
-Covenanters. It therefore happens that the founder of our greatest
-national library,[189] one whom Dryden regarded as a friend, and who
-was the very first writer of classic English prose in Scotland, is
-a sort of Raw-head and Bloody-bones by the firesides of his native
-capital. He lies in a beautiful mausoleum, which forms a conspicuous
-object in the Greyfriars Churchyard, and which describes him as
-an ornament to his age, and a man who was kind to all, ‘except a
-rebellious crew, from whose violence, with tongue and pen, he defended
-his country and king, whose virulence he stayed by the sword of
-justice, and whose ferocity he, by the force of reason, blunted, and
-only did not subdue.’ This monument was an object of horror to the good
-people of Edinburgh, as it was almost universally believed that the
-spirit of the persecutor could get no rest in its superb but gloomy
-tenement. It used to be ‘a feat’ for a set of boys, in a still summer
-evening, to march up to the ponderous doors, bedropt with white tears
-upon a black ground, and cry in at the keyhole:—
-
- ‘Bluidy Mackingie, come out if ye daur,
- Lift the sneck, and draw the bar!’
-
-after which they would run away as if some hobgoblin were in chase of
-them, probably not looking round till they were out of the churchyard.
-
-Sir George Mackenzie had a country-house called Shank, about ten miles
-to the south of Edinburgh,[190] now a ruin. One day the Marquis of
-Tweeddale, having occasion to consult him about some law business, rode
-across the country, and arrived at so early an hour in the morning that
-the lawyer was not yet out of bed. Soliciting an immediate audience,
-he was admitted to the bedroom, where he sat down and detailed the
-case to Sir George, who gave him all necessary counsel from behind the
-curtains. When the marquis advanced to present a fee, he was startled
-at the apparition of a female hand through the curtains, in an attitude
-expressive of a readiness to receive, while no hand appeared on the
-part of Sir George. The explanation was that Sir George’s lady, as
-has been the case with many a weaker man, took entire charge of his
-purse.[191]
-
-Several of the descendants of this great lawyer have been remarkable
-for their talents. None, perhaps, possessed more of the _vivida vis
-animi_ than his granddaughter, Lady Anne Dick of Corstorphine (also
-granddaughter, by the father’s side, to the clever but unscrupulous
-‘Tarbat Register,’ the first Earl of Cromarty).[192] This lady excited
-much attention in Edinburgh society by her eccentric manners and her
-droll pasquinade verses: one of those beings she was who astonish,
-perplex, and fidget their fellow-creatures, till at last the world
-feels a sort of relief when they are removed from the stage. She made
-many enemies by her lampoons; and her personal conduct only afforded
-them too good room for revenge. Sometimes she would dress herself in
-men’s clothes, and go about the town in search of adventures. One
-of her frolics ended rather disgracefully, for she and her maid,
-being apprehended in their disguise, were lodged all night in the
-Town Guard-house. It may be readily imagined that by those whom her
-wit had exasperated such follies would be deeply relished and made
-the most of. We must not, therefore, be surprised at Scandal telling
-that Lady Anne had at one period lain a whole year in bed, in a vain
-endeavour—to baffle _himself_.
-
-Through private channels have oozed out at this late day a few
-specimens of Lady Anne’s poetical abilities; less brilliant than might
-be expected from the above character of her, yet having a certain air
-of dash and _espièglerie_ which looks appropriate. They are partly
-devoted to bewailing the coldness of a certain Sir Peter Murray of
-Balmanno, towards whom she chose to act as a sort of she-Petrarch,
-but apparently in the mere pursuit of whim. One runs in the following
-tender strain:
-
- ‘Oh, when he dances at a ball,
- He’s rarely worth the seeing;
- So light he trips, you would him take
- For some aërial being!
- While pinky-winky go his een,
- How blest is each bystander!
- How gracefully he leads the fair,
- When to her seat he hands her!
-
- But when in accents saft and sweet,
- He chants forth _Lizzie Baillie_,
- His dying looks and attitude
- Enchant, they cannot fail ye.
- The loveliest widow in the land,
- When she could scarce disarm him,
- Alas! the belles in Roxburghshire
- Must never hope to charm him!
-
- O happy, happy, happy she,
- Could make him change his plan, sir,
- And of this rigid bachelor,
- Convert the married man, sir:
- O happy, and thrice happy she,
- Could make him change his plan, sir,
- And to the gentle Benedick
- Convert the single man, sir,’ &c.
-
-In another, tired, apparently, of the apathy of this sweet youth, she
-breaks out as follows:
-
- ‘Oh, wherefore did I cross the Forth,
- And leave my love behind me?
- Why did I venture to the north,
- With one that did not mind me?
-
- Had I but visited Carin!
- It would have been much better,
- Than pique the prudes, and make a din
- For careless, cold Sir Peter!
-
- I’m sure I’ve seen a better limb,
- And twenty better faces;
- But still my mind it ran on him,
- When I was at the races.
-
- At night, when we went to the ball,
- Were many there discreeter;
- The well-bred duke, and lively Maule,
- Panmure behaved much better.
-
- They kindly showed their courtesy,
- And looked on me much sweeter;
- Yet easy could I never be,
- For thinking on Sir Peter.
-
- I fain would wear an easy air,
- But, oh, it looked affected,
- And e’en the fine ambassador
- Could see he was neglected.
-
- Though Powrie left for me the spleen,
- My temper grew no sweeter;
- I think I’m mad—what do I mean,
- To follow cold Sir Peter!’
-
-Her ladyship died, without issue, in 1741.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[187] At the head of the Old Bank Close, to the westward; burned down
-in 1771.
-
-[188] Only a small portion of this building now remains.
-
-[189] The Advocates’ Library.
-
-[190] In the parish of Borthwick.
-
-[191] This anecdote was related to me by the first Lord Wharncliffe,
-grandson’s grandson to Sir George, about 1828.
-
-[192] Cromarty, at seventy, contrived to marry ‘a young and beautiful
-countess in her own right, a widow, wealthy, and in universal
-estimation. The following distich was composed on the occasion:
-
- Thou sonsie auld carl, the world has not thy like,
- For ladies fa’ in love with thee, though thou be ane auld tyke.’
-
- C. K. Sharpe, Notes to _Law’s Memorials_, p. xlvii.
-
-
-
-
-BLACKFRIARS WYND.
-
- PALACE OF ARCHBISHOP BETHUNE—BOARDING-SCHOOLS OF THE LAST
- CENTURY—THE LAST OF THE LORIMERS—LADY LOVAT.
-
-
-Those who now look into Blackfriars Wynd—passing through it is out of
-the question—will be surprised to learn that, all dismal and wretched
-as it is in all respects, it was once a place of some respectability
-and even dignity. On several of its tall old _lands_ may be seen
-inscriptions implying piety on the part of the founder—one, for
-example:
-
- PAX INTRANTIBUS,
- SALUS EXEUNTIBUS;
-
-another:
-
- MISERERE MEI, DEUS;
-
-this last containing in its _upper floor_ all that the adherents of
-Rome had forty years ago as a place of worship in Edinburgh—the
-chapel to which, therefore, as a matter of course, the late Charles X.
-resorted with his suite, when residing as Comte d’Artois in Holyrood
-House. The alley gets its name from having been the access to the
-Blackfriars’ Monastery on the opposite slope, and being built on their
-land.
-
-[Illustration: BLACKFRIARS’ WYND.
-
-PAGE 228.]
-
-
-PALACE OF ARCHBISHOP BETHUNE [OR BEATON].
-
-At the foot of the wynd, on the east side, is a large mansion of
-antique appearance, forming two sides of a quadrangle, with a
-_porte-cochère_ giving access to a court behind, and a picturesque
-overhanging turret at the exterior angle.[193] This house was built by
-James Bethune, Archbishop of Glasgow (1508-1524), chancellor of the
-kingdom, and one of the Lords Regent under the Duke of Albany during
-the minority of James V. Lyndsay, in his _Chronicles_, speaks of it
-as ‘his owen ludging quhilk he biggit in the Freiris Wynd.’ Keith, at
-a later period, says: ‘Over the entry of which the arms of the family
-of Bethune are to be seen to this day.’ Common report represents it as
-the house of Cardinal Bethune, who was the nephew of the Archbishop
-of Glasgow; and it is not improbable that the one prelate bequeathed
-it to the other, and that it thus became what Maitland calls it, ‘the
-archiepiscopal palace belonging to the see of St Andrews.’
-
-[Illustration: Cardinal Bethune’s House.]
-
-The ground-floor of this extensive building is arched over with strong
-stone-work, after the fashion of those houses of defence of the same
-period which are still scattered over the country. Some years ago, when
-one of the arches was removed to make way for a common ceiling, a thick
-layer of sand, firmly beaten down, was found between the surface of
-the vault and the floor above. Ground-floors thus formed were applied
-in former times to inferior domestic uses, and to the storing of
-articles of value. The chief apartments for living in were on the floor
-above—that is, the so-called _first floor_. And such is the case in
-all the best houses of an old fashion in the city of St Andrews at this
-day.
-
-I shall afterwards have something to say of an event of the year 1517,
-with which Archbishop Bethune’s house was connected. It appears to have
-been occupied by James V. in 1528, while he was deliberating on the
-propriety of calling a parliament.[194]
-
-The Bethune palace is now, like its confrères, abandoned to the
-humblest class of tenants. Eighty years ago, however, it must still
-have been a tolerably good house, as it was then the residence of
-Bishop Abernethy Drummond, of the Scottish Episcopal communion, the
-husband of the heiress of Hawthornden. This worthy divine occupied
-some space in the public eye in his day, and was particularly active
-in obtaining the repeal of the penal statutes against his church. Some
-wag, figuring the surprise in high places at a stir arising from a
-quarter so obscure, penned this epigram:
-
- ‘Lord Sydney, to the privy-council summoned,
- By testy majesty was questioned quick:
- “Eh, eh! who, who’s this Abernethy Drummond,
- And where, in Heaven’s name, is his bishopric?”’
-
-
-BOARDING-SCHOOLS OF THE LAST CENTURY.
-
-When the reader hears such things of the Freir Wynd, he must not be
-surprised overmuch on perusing the following advertisement from the
-_Edinburgh Gazette_ of April 19, 1703: ‘There is a Boarding-school to
-be set up in Blackfriars Wynd, in Robinson’s Land, upon the west side
-of the wynd, near the middle thereof, in the first door of the stair
-leading to the said land, against the latter end of May, or first of
-June next, where young Ladies and Gentlewomen may have all sorts of
-breeding that is to be had in any part of Britain, and great care taken
-of their conversation.’
-
-I know not whether this was the same seminary which, towards the
-middle of the century, was kept by a distinguished lady named Mrs
-Euphame or Effie Sinclair, who was descended from the ancient family
-of Longformacus, in Berwickshire, being the granddaughter of Sir
-Robert Sinclair, first baronet of Longformacus, upon whom that dignity
-was conferred by King Charles II., in consideration of his services
-and losses during the civil war. Mrs Effie was allied to many of
-the best families in Scotland, who made it a duty to place their
-children under her charge; and her school was thus one of the most
-respectable in Edinburgh. By her were educated the beautiful Miss Duff,
-afterwards Countess of Dumfries and Stair, and, by a second marriage,
-lady of the Honourable Alexander Gordon (Lord Rockville); the late
-amiable and excellently well informed Mrs Keith, sister of Sir Robert
-Keith, commonly called, from his diplomatic services, _Ambassador
-Keith_;[195] the two Misses Hume of Linthill; and Miss Rutherford,
-the mother of Sir Walter Scott. All these ladies were Scottish cousins
-to Mrs Effie. To judge by the proficiency of her scholars, although
-much of what is called accomplishment might be then left untaught, she
-must have been possessed of uncommon talents for education; for all
-the ladies before mentioned had well-cultivated minds, were fond of
-reading, wrote and spelled admirably, were well acquainted with history
-and with _belles-lettres_, without neglecting the more homely duties of
-the needle and the account-book; and, while two of them were women of
-extraordinary talents, all of them were perfectly well-bred in society.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-It may be added that many of these young ladies were sent to reside
-with and be _finished off_ by the Honourable Mrs Ogilvie, lady of the
-Honourable Patrick Ogilvie of Longmay and Inchmartin, who was supposed
-to be the _best-bred_ woman of her time in Scotland (ob. 1753). Her
-system was very rigorous, according to the spirit of the times. The
-young ladies were taught to sit quite upright; and the mother of
-my informant (Sir Walter Scott), even when advanced to nearly her
-eightieth year, never permitted her back to touch the chair in sitting.
-There is a remarkably good and characteristic anecdote told of the
-husband of this rigorous preceptress, a younger brother of the Earl of
-Findlater, whose exertions, while Lord High-chancellor of Scotland,
-in favour of the Union were so conspicuous. The younger brother, it
-appears, had condescended to trade a little in cattle, which was not
-considered derogatory to the dignity of a Scottish gentleman at that
-time, and was by no means an uncommon practice among them. However,
-the earl was offended at the measure, and upbraided his brother for
-it. ‘Haud your tongue, man!’ said the cattle-dealer; ‘better sell
-nowte than sell nations,’ pronouncing the last word with peculiar and
-emphatic breadth.
-
-I am tempted, by the curious and valuable document appended, to suspect
-that the female accomplishments of the last century were little behind
-those of the present in point of useless elaboration.
-
-‘_Thursday, December 9, 1703._—Near Dundee, at Dudhope, there is
-to be taught, by a gentlewoman from London, the following works,
-viz.—1. Wax-work of all sorts, as any one’s picture to the life,
-figures in shadow glasses, fruits upon trees or in dishes, all manner
-of confections, fish, flesh, fowl, or anything that can be made of
-wax.—2. Philligrim-work of any sort, whether hollow or flat.—3.
-Japan-work upon timber or glass.—4. Painting upon glass.—5. Sashes
-for windows, upon sarsnet or transparent paper.—6. Straw-work of any
-sort, as houses, birds, or beasts.—7. Shell-work, in sconces, rocks,
-or flowers.—8. Quill-work.—9. Gum-work.—10. Transparent-work.—11.
-Puff-work.—12. Paper-work.—13. Plate-work on timber, brass,
-or glass.—14. Tortoise-shell-work.—15. Mould-work, boxes and
-baskets.—16. Silver landskips.—17. Gimp-work.—18. Bugle-work.—19.
-A sort of work in imitation of japan, very cheap.—20. Embroidering,
-stitching, and quilting.—21. True point or tape lace.—22. Cutting
-glass.—23. Washing gauzes, or Flanders lace and point.—24.
-Pastry of all sorts, with the finest cuts and shapes that’s now
-used in London.—25. Boning fowls, without cutting the back.—26.
-Butter-work.—27. Preserving, conserving, and candying.—28. Pickling
-and colouring.—29. All sorts of English wines.—30. Writing and
-arithmetic.—31. Music, and the great end of dancing, which is a good
-carriage; and several other things too tedious here to be mentioned.
-Any who are desirous to learn the above works may board with herself at
-a reasonable rate, or may board themselves in Dundee, and may come to
-her quarterly.’—Advertisement in _Edinburgh Gazette_, 1703.
-
-[Illustration: ‘The great end of dancing.’]
-
-Another distinguished Edinburgh boarding-school of the last century was
-kept by two ladies, of Jacobite predilections, named the Misses Ged, in
-Paterson’s Court, Lawnmarket. They were remarkable at least for their
-family connections, for it was a brother of theirs who, under the name
-of Don Patricio Ged, rendered such kindly and effective service to
-Commodore Byron, as gratefully recorded in the well-known _Narrative_,
-and gracefully touched on by Campbell in the _Pleasures of Hope_:
-
- ‘He found a warmer world, a milder clime,
- A home to rest, a shelter to defend,
- Peace and repose, _a Briton and a friend_.’
-
-Another member of the family, William Ged, originally a goldsmith in
-Edinburgh, was the inventor of stereotype printing. The Misses Ged
-were described by their friends as of the Geds of Baldridge, near
-Dunfermline; thorough Fife Jacobites every one of them. The old ladies
-kept a portrait of the Chevalier in their parlour, and looked chiefly
-to partisans of the Stuarts for support. They had another relative of
-less dignity, who, accepting a situation in the Town-guard, became
-liable to satiric reference from Robert Fergusson:
-
- ‘Nunc est bibendum, et bendere bickerum magnum,
- Cavete Town-guardum, _Dougal Geddum_, atque Campbellum.’
-
-Dougal had been a silversmith, but in his own conceit his red coat as a
-Town-guard officer made him completely military. Seeing a lady without
-a beau at the door of the Assembly Room, he offered his services, ‘if
-the arm of an old soldier could be of any use.’ ‘Hoot awa, Dougal,’
-said the lady, accepting his assistance, however; ‘an auld tinkler, you
-mean.’
-
-
-THE LAST OF THE LORIMERS.
-
-To return for a moment to the archiepiscopal palace. It contained,
-about eighty years ago, a person calling himself a LORIMER—an
-appellative once familiar in Edinburgh, being applied to those who deal
-in the ironwork used in saddlery.[196]
-
-
-LADY LOVAT.
-
-The widow of the rebel Lord Lovat spent a great portion of a long
-widowhood and died (1796) in a house at the head of Blackfriars Wynd.
-
-Her ladyship was a niece of the first Duke of Argyll, and born, as
-she herself expressed it, in the year _Ten_—that is, 1710. The
-politic _Mac Shemus_[197] marked her out as a suitable second wife, in
-consideration of the value of the Argyll connection. As he was above
-thirty years her senior, and not famed for the tenderest treatment of
-his former spouse, or for any other amiable trait of disposition, she
-endeavoured, by all gentle means, to avoid the match; but it was at
-length effected through the intervention of her relations, and she was
-carried north to take her place in the semi-barbarous state which her
-husband held at Castle Downie.
-
-Nothing but misery could have been expected from such an alliance. The
-poor young lady, while treated with external decorum, was in private
-subjected to such usage as might have tried the spirit of a Griselda.
-She was occasionally kept confined in a room by herself, from which she
-was not allowed to come forth even at meals, only a scanty supply of
-coarse food being sent to her from his lordship’s table. When pregnant,
-her husband coolly told her that if she brought forth a girl he would
-put it on the back of the fire. His eldest son by the former marriage
-was a sickly child. Lovat therefore deemed it necessary to raise a
-strong motive in the step-mother for the child being taken due care
-of during his absence in the Lowlands. On going from home, he would
-calmly inform her that any harm befalling _the boys_ in his absence
-would be attended with the penalty of her own death, for in that event
-he would undoubtedly shoot her through the head. It is added that she
-did, from this in addition to other motives, take an unusual degree of
-care of her step-son, who ever after felt towards her the tenderest
-love and gratitude. One is disposed to believe that there must be some
-exaggeration in these stories; and yet when we consider that it is an
-historical fact that Lovat applied to Prince Charles for a warrant to
-take President Forbes _dead or alive_ (Forbes being his friend and
-daily intimate), it seems no extravagance that he should have acted in
-this manner to his wife. Sir Walter Scott tells an additional story,
-which helps out the picture. ‘A lady, the intimate friend of her youth,
-was instructed to visit Lady Lovat, as if by accident, to ascertain
-the truth of those rumours concerning her husband’s conduct which had
-reached the ears of her family. She was received by Lord Lovat with
-an extravagant affectation of welcome, and with many assurances of
-the happiness his lady would receive from seeing her. The chief then
-went to the lonely tower in which Lady Lovat was secluded, without
-decent clothes, and even without sufficient nourishment. He laid a
-dress before her becoming her rank, commanded her to put it on, to
-appear, and to receive her friend as if she were the mistress of the
-house; in which she was, in fact, a naked and half-starved prisoner.
-And such was the strict watch which he maintained, and the terror
-which his character inspired, that the visitor durst not ask, nor
-Lady Lovat communicate, anything respecting her real situation.’[198]
-Afterwards, by a letter rolled up in a clew of yarn and dropped over
-a window to a confidential person, she was enabled to let her friends
-know how matters actually stood; and steps were then taken to obtain
-her separation from her husband. When, some years later, his political
-perfidy had brought him to the Tower—forgetting all past injuries,
-and thinking only of her duty as a wife, Lady Lovat offered to come to
-London to attend him. He returned an answer, declining the proposal,
-and containing the only expressions of kindness and regard which she
-had ever received from him since her marriage.
-
-The singular character of Lord Lovat makes almost every particular
-regarding him worth collecting.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Previous to 1745, when the late Mr Alexander Baillie of Dochfour
-was a student at the grammar-school of Inverness, cock-fights were
-very common among the boys. This detestable sport, by the way, was
-encouraged by the schoolmasters of those days, who derived a profit
-from the beaten cocks, or, as they were called, _fugies_, which became,
-at the end of every game, their appropriated perquisite. In pursuit of
-cocks, Mr Baillie went to visit his friends in the Aird, and in the
-course of his researches was introduced to Lord Lovat, whose policy
-it was, on all occasions, to show great attentions to his neighbours
-and their children. The situation in which his lordship was found by
-the schoolboy was, if not quite unprecedented, nevertheless rather
-surprising. He was stretched out in bed between two Highland lasses,
-who, on being seen, affected out of modesty to hide their faces under
-the bedclothes. The old lord accounted for this strange scene by saying
-that his blood had become cold, and he was obliged to supply the want
-of heat by the application of animal warmth.
-
-It is said that he lay in bed for the most part of the two years
-preceding the Rebellion; till, hearing of Prince Charles’s arrival
-in Arisaig, he roused himself with sudden vehemence, crying to an
-attendant: ‘Lassie, bring me my brogues—I’ll rise _noo_!’
-
-One of his odd fancies was to send a retainer every day to Loch Ness, a
-distance of eight miles, for the water he drank.
-
-His intimacy with his neighbour President Forbes is an amusing affair,
-for the men must have secretly known full well what each other was, and
-yet policy made them keep on decent terms for a long course of years.
-Lovat’s son by the subject of this notice—the Honourable Archibald
-Campbell Fraser—was a boy at Petty school in 1745. The President
-sometimes invited him to dinner. One day, pulling a handful of foreign
-gold pieces out of his pocket, he carelessly asked the boy if he had
-ever seen such coins before. Here was a stroke worthy of Lovat himself,
-for undoubtedly he meant thus to be informed whether the lord of Castle
-Downie was accustomed to get remittances for the Chevalier’s cause from
-abroad.
-
-After the death of Lord Lovat, there arose some demur about his lady’s
-jointure, which was only £190 per annum. It was not paid to her for
-several years, during which, being destitute of other resources, she
-lived with one of her sisters. Some of her numerous friends—among
-the rest, Lord Strichen—offered her the loan of money to purchase
-a house and suffice for present maintenance. But she did not choose
-to encumber herself with debts which she had no certain prospect of
-repaying. At length the dispute about her jointure was settled in a
-favourable manner, and her ladyship received in a lump the amount of
-past dues, out of which she expended £500 in purchasing a house at the
-head of Blackfriars Wynd,[199] and a further sum upon a suite of plain
-substantial furniture.
-
-It would surprise a modern dowager to know how much good Lady Lovat
-contrived to do amongst her fellow-creatures with this small allowance.
-It is said that the succeeding Lady of Lovat, with a jointure of
-£4000, was less distinguished for her benefactions. In Lady Lovat’s
-dusky mansion, with a waiting-maid, cook, and footboy, she not only
-maintained herself in the style of a gentlewoman, but could welcome
-every kind of Highland cousin to a plain but hospitable board, and even
-afford permanent shelter to several unfortunate friends. A certain
-Lady Dorothy Primrose, who was her niece, lived with her for several
-years, using the best portion of her house, namely, the rooms fronting
-the High Street, while she herself was contented with the duller
-apartments towards the _wynd_. There was another desolate old person,
-styled Mistress of Elphinstone, whom Lady Lovat supported as a friend
-and equal for many years. Not by habit a card-player herself, she would
-make up a whist-party every week for the benefit of _the Mistress_.
-At length the poor Mistress came to a sad fate. A wicked, perhaps
-half-crazy boy, grandson to her ladyship, having taken an antipathy to
-his venerable relative, put poison into the oatmeal porridge which she
-was accustomed to take at supper. Feeling unwell that night, she did
-not eat any, and the Mistress took the porridge instead, of which she
-died. The boy was sent away, and died in obscurity.
-
-An unostentatious but sincere piety marked the character of Lady
-Lovat. Perhaps her notions of Providence were carried to the verge of
-a kind of fatalism; for not merely did she receive all crosses and
-troubles as trials arranged for her benefit by a Higher Hand, but when
-a neighbouring house on one occasion took fire, she sat unmoved in her
-own mansion, notwithstanding the entreaties of the magistrates, who
-ordered a sedan to be brought for her removal. She said if her hour
-was come, it would be vain to try to elude her fate; and if it was not
-come, she would be safe where she was. She had a conscientiousness
-almost ludicrously nice. If detained from church on any occasion,
-she always doubled her usual oblation at the _plate_ next time. When
-her chimney took fire, she sent her fine to the Town-guard before
-they knew the circumstance. Even the tax-collector experienced her
-ultra-rectitude. When he came to examine her windows, she took him to a
-closet lighted by a single pane, looking into a narrow passage between
-two houses. He hesitated about charging for such a small modicum of
-light, but her ladyship insisted on his taking note of it.[200]
-
-Lady Lovat was of small stature, had been thought a beauty, and
-retained in advanced old age much of her youthful delicacy of features
-and complexion. Her countenance bore a remarkably sweet and pleasing
-expression. When at home, her dress was a red silk gown, with ruffled
-cuffs, and sleeves puckered like a man’s shirt; a fly-cap, encircling
-the head, with a mob-cap laid across it, falling down over the cheeks,
-and tied under the chin; her hair dressed and powdered; a double muslin
-handkerchief round the neck and bosom; _lammer-beads_; a white lawn
-apron, edged with lace; black stockings with red gushets; high-heeled
-shoes.[201] She usually went abroad in a chair, as I have been informed
-by the daughter of a lady who was one of the first inhabitants of the
-New Town, and whom Lady Lovat regularly visited there once every three
-months. As her chair emerged from the head of Blackfriars Wynd, any
-one who saw her sitting in it, so neat and fresh and clean, would have
-taken her for a queen in waxwork, pasted up in a glass-case.
-
-Lady Lovat was intimate with Lady Jane Douglas; and one of the
-strongest evidences in favour of Lord Douglas being the son of that
-lady[202] was the following remarkable circumstance: Lady Lovat,
-passing by a house in the High Street, saw a child at a window, and
-remarked to a friend who was with her: ‘If I thought Lady Jane Douglas
-could be in Edinburgh, I would say that was her child—he is so like
-her!’ Upon returning home, she found a note from Lady Jane, informing
-her that she had just arrived in Edinburgh, and had taken lodgings
-in —— Land, which proved to be the house in which Lady Lovat had
-observed the child, and that child was young Archibald Douglas. Lady
-Lovat was a person of such strict integrity that no consideration
-could have tempted her to say what she did not think; and at the time
-she saw the child, she had no reason to suppose that Lady Jane was in
-Scotland.
-
-Such was the generosity of her disposition that when her grandson
-Simon was studying law, she at various times presented him with £50,
-and when he was to pass as an advocate she sent him £100. It was
-wonderful how she could spare such sums from her small jointure. Whole
-tribes of grand-nephews and grand-nieces experienced the goodness of
-her heart, and loved her with almost filial affection. She frequently
-spoke to them of her misfortunes, and was accustomed to say: ‘I dare
-say, bairns, the events of my life would make a good _novelle_; but
-they have been of so strange a nature that nobody would believe
-them’—meaning that they wanted the _vraisemblance_ necessary in
-fiction. She contemplated the approach of death with fortitude, and
-in anticipation of her obsequies, had her grave-clothes ready and
-the stair whitewashed. Yet the disposal of her poor remains little
-troubled her. When asked by her son if she wished to be placed in the
-burial-vault at Beaufort, she said: ‘’Deed, Archie, ye needna put
-yoursel’ to ony fash about me, for I dinna care though ye lay me aneath
-that hearthstane!’ After all, it chanced, from some misarrangements,
-that her funeral was not very promptly executed; whereupon a Miss
-Hepburn of Humbie, living in a floor above, remarked, ’she wondered
-what they were keeping her sae lang for—stinkin’ a’ the stair.’ This
-gives some idea of circumstances connected with Old Town life.
-
-The conduct of her ladyship’s son in life was distinguished by a degree
-of eccentricity which, in connection with that of his son already
-stated, tends to raise a question as to the character of Lord Lovat,
-and make us suspect that wickedness so great as his could only result
-from a certain unsoundness of mind. It is admitted, however, that the
-eldest son, Simon, who rose to be a major-general in the army, was a
-man of respectable character. He retained nothing of his father but a
-genius for making fine speeches.[203] The late Mrs Murray of Henderland
-told me she was present at a supper-party given by some gentleman in
-the Horse Wynd, where General Fraser, eating his egg, said to the
-hostess: ‘Mrs ——, other people’s eggs overflow with _milk_; but yours
-run over with _cream_!’
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[193] This historic building was demolished many years ago. Its main
-front faced the Cowgate, and to the north and east were extensive
-gardens.
-
-[194] In this house, too, Queen Mary was entertained at a banquet given
-by the citizens. ‘Upon the nynt day of Februar at evin the Queen’s
-grace come up in ane honourable manner fra the palice of Holyrudhouse
-to the Cardinal’s ludging in Blackfriars Wynd, ... and efter supper the
-honest young men in the town come with ane convoy to her,’ and escorted
-her back to Holyrood.—_Diurnal of Occurrents._
-
-Before the opening of the original High School in the grounds of the
-Blackfriars’ Monastery the pupils were temporarily accommodated in
-Beaton’s palace.
-
-[195] The title ‘Ambassador Keith’ is usually applied to Sir Robert’s
-father, who, after several minor diplomatic appointments on the
-Continent, was the representative of Great Britain at the court of St
-Petersburg. An interesting sketch of him, under the title of ‘Felix,’
-by Mrs Cockburn, is appended to the volume of that lady’s _Letters_,
-edited by Mr T. Craig Brown. Miss Keith, known to Edinburgh society as
-‘Sister Anne,’ was Scott’s ‘Mrs Bethune Balliol’ of the _Chronicles
-of the Canongate_. This gentleman was absent from Edinburgh about
-twenty-two years, and returned at a time when it was supposed that
-manners were beginning to exhibit symptoms of great improvement. He,
-however, complained that they were degenerated. In his early time, he
-said, every Scottish gentleman of £300 a year travelled abroad when
-young, and brought home to the bosom of domestic life, and to the
-profession in which it might be his fate to engage, a vast fund of
-literary information, knowledge of the world, and genuine good manners,
-which dignified his character through life. But towards the year 1770
-this practice had been entirely given up, and in consequence a sensible
-change was discoverable upon the face of good society. (See the _Life
-of John Home_, by Henry Mackenzie, Esq.).
-
-[196] It is curious to observe how, in correspondence with the change
-in our manners and customs, one trade has become extinct, while
-another succeeded in its place. At the end of the sixteenth century
-the manufacture of offensive weapons predominated over all other
-trades in Edinburgh. We had then cutlers, whose _essay-piece_, on
-being admitted of the corporation, was ‘ane plain finished quhanzear’
-or sword; gaird-makers, whose business consisted in fashioning
-sword-handles; Dalmascars, who gilded the said weapon; and belt-makers,
-who wrought the girdles that bound it to the wearer’s body. There were
-also dag-makers, who made hackbuts (short-guns) and dags (pistols).
-These various professions all became associated in the general one
-of armourers, or gunsmiths, when the wearing of weapons went into
-desuetude—there being then no further necessity for the expedition
-and expediency of the modern political economist’s boasted ‘division
-of labour.’ As the above arts gave way, those which tended to provide
-the comforts and luxuries of civilised life gradually arose. About
-1586 we find the first notice of locksmiths in Edinburgh, and there
-was then only one of the trade, whose essay was simply ‘a kist lock.’
-In 1609, however, as the security of property increased, the essay
-was ‘a kist lock and a hingand bois lock, with an double plate lock;’
-and in 1644 ‘a key and sprent band’ were added to the essay. In 1682
-‘a cruik and cruik band’ were further added; and in 1728, for the
-safety of the lieges, the locksmith’s essay was appointed to be ‘a
-cruik and cruik band, a pass lock with a round filled bridge, not
-cut or broke in the backside, with nobs and jamb bound.’ In 1595 we
-find the first notice of shearsmiths. In 1609 a heckle-maker was
-admitted into the Corporation of Hammermen. In 1613 a tinkler makes
-his appearance; Thomas Duncan, the first tinkler, was then admitted.
-Pewterers are mentioned so far back as 1588. In 1647 we find the first
-knock-maker (_clock-maker_), but so limited was his business that he
-was also a locksmith. In 1664 the first white-iron man was admitted;
-also the first harness-maker, though lorimers had previously existed.
-Paul Martin, a distressed French Protestant, in 1691, was the first
-manufacturer of surgical instruments in Edinburgh. In 1720 we find the
-first pin-maker; in 1764, the first edge-tool maker and first fish-hook
-maker.
-
-[197] The Highland appellative of Lord Lovat, expressing _the son of
-Simon_.
-
-[198] _Quarterly Review_, vol. xiv. p. 326.
-
-[199] First door up the stair at the head of the wynd, on the west
-side. The house was burnt down in 1824, but rebuilt in its former
-arrangement.
-
-[200] [The window-tax was first imposed in 1695, and repealed in 1851.]
-
-[201] An old domestic of her ladyship’s preserved one of her shoes as a
-relic for many years. The heel was three inches deep.
-
-[202] [The view of the famous ‘Douglas Cause,’ affirmed in the House of
-Lords in 1771.]
-
-[203] Mrs Grant of Laggan held another opinion of General Simon
-Fraser. A pleasing exterior covered a large share of the paternal
-character—‘No heart was ever harder, no hands more rapacious than
-his.’
-
-
-
-
-THE COWGATE.
-
- HOUSE OF GAVIN DOUGLAS THE POET—SKIRMISH OF
- CLEANSE-THE-CAUSEWAY—COLLEGE WYND—BIRTHPLACE OF SIR WALTER
- SCOTT—THE HORSE WYND—TAM O’ THE COWGATE—MAGDALEN CHAPEL.
-
-
-Looking at the present state of this ancient street, it is impossible
-to hear without a smile the description of it given by Alexander
-Alesse about the year 1530—_Ubi nihil est humile aut rusticum, sed
-omnia magnifica!_ (‘Where nothing is humble or homely, but everything
-magnificent!’) The street was, he tells us, that in which the nobles
-and judges resided, and where the palaces of princes were situated. The
-idea usually entertained of its early history is that it rose as an
-elegant suburb after the year 1460, when the existing city, consisting
-of the High Street alone, was enclosed in a wall. It would appear,
-however, that some part of it was built before that time, and that it
-was in an advanced, if not complete, state as a street not long after.
-It was to enclose this esteemed suburb that the city wall was extended
-after the battle of Flodden.
-
-
-HOUSE OF GAVIN DOUGLAS THE POET—SKIRMISH OF CLEANSE-THE-CAUSEWAY.
-
-So early as 1449, Thomas Lauder, canon of Aberdeen, granted an
-endowment of 40s. annually to a chaplain in St Giles’s Church, ‘out of
-his own house lying in the Cowgaite, betwixt the land of the Abbot of
-Melrose on the east, and of George Cochrane on the west.’ This appears
-to have been the same Thomas Lauder who was preceptor to James II.,
-and who ultimately became Bishop of Dunkeld. We are told that, besides
-many other munificent acts, he purchased a lodging in Edinburgh _for
-himself and his successors_.[204] That its situation was the same as
-that above described appears from a charter of Thomas Cameron, in 1498,
-referring to a house on the south side of the Cowgate, ‘betwixt _the
-Bishop of Dunkeld’s land on the east_, and William Rappilowe’s on the
-west, the common street on the north, and the gait that leads to the
-Kirk-of-Field on the south.’
-
-[Illustration: THE COWGATE.
-‘Nothing is humble or homely, but everything magnificent!’
-
-PAGE 240.]
-
-From these descriptions we attain a tolerably distinct idea of the site
-of the house of the bishops of Dunkeld in Edinburgh, including, of
-course, one who is endeared to us from a peculiar cause—Gavin Douglas,
-who succeeded to the see in 1516. This house must have stood nearly
-opposite to the bottom of Niddry Street, but somewhat to the eastward.
-It would have gardens behind, extending up to the line of the present
-Infirmary Street.
-
-We thus not only have the pleasure of ascertaining the Edinburgh
-whereabouts of one of our most distinguished national poets, but we can
-now read, with a somewhat clearer intelligence, a remarkable chapter in
-the national history.
-
-It was in April 1520 that the Hamiltons (the party of the Earl of
-Arran), with Bethune, Archbishop of Glasgow, called an assembly of
-the nobility in Edinburgh, in order to secure the government for the
-earl. The rival magnate, the Earl of Angus, soon saw danger to himself
-in the great crowds of the Hamilton party which flocked into town.
-Indeed warlike courses seem to have been determined on by that side.
-Angus sent his uncle, the Bishop of Dunkeld, to caution them against
-any violence, and to offer that he should submit to the laws if any
-offence were laid to his charge. The reverend prelate, proceeding to
-the place of assembly, which was in the archbishop’s house, at the
-foot of Blackfriars Wynd, found the Hamilton party obstinate. Thinking
-an archbishop could not or ought not to allow strife to take place if
-he could help it, he appealed to Bethune, who, however, had actually
-prepared for battle by putting on armour under his rochet. ‘Upon my
-conscience, my lord,’ said Bethune, ‘I know nothing of the matter,’
-at the same time striking his hand upon his breast, which caused the
-armour to return a rattling sound. Douglas’s remark was simply, ‘Your
-conscience clatters;’ a happy pun for the occasion, clatter being
-a Scotch word signifying to tell tales. Gavin then returned to his
-lodging, and told his nephew that he must do his best to defend himself
-with arms. ‘For me,’ he said, ‘I will go to my chamber and pray for
-you.’ With our new light as to the locality of the Bishop of Dunkeld’s
-lodging, we now know that Angus and his uncle held their consultations
-on this occasion within fifty yards of the house in which the Hamiltons
-were assembled. The houses, in fact, nearly faced each other in the
-same narrow street.
-
-Angus now put himself at the head of his followers, who, though not
-numerous, stood in a compact body in the High Street. They were,
-moreover, the favourites of the Edinburgh citizens, who handed spears
-from their windows to such as were not armed with that useful weapon.
-Presently the Hamiltons came thronging up from the Cowgate, through
-narrow lanes, and entering the High Street in separate streams, armed
-with swords only, were at a great disadvantage. In a short time the
-Douglases had cleared the streets of them, killing many, and obliging
-Arran himself and his son to make their escape through the North Loch,
-mounted on a coal-horse. Archbishop Bethune, with others, took refuge
-in the Blackfriars’ Monastery, where he was seized behind the altar
-and in danger of his life, when Gavin Douglas, learning his perilous
-situation, flew to save him, and with difficulty succeeded in his
-object. Here, too, local knowledge is important. The Blackfriars’
-Monastery stood where the High School latterly was, a spot not more
-than a hundred yards from the houses of both Bethune and Gavin Douglas.
-It would not necessarily require more than five minutes to apprise
-Douglas of Bethune’s situation, and bring him to the rescue.
-
-The popular name given to this street battle is
-characteristic—_Cleanse-the-Causeway_.
-
-
-COLLEGE WYND—BIRTHPLACE OF SIR WALTER SCOTT.
-
-The old buildings of the College of Edinburgh, themselves mean, had
-for their main access, in former times, only that narrow dismal alley
-called the College Wynd,[205] leading up from the Cowgate. Facing
-down this humble lane was the gateway, displaying a richly ornamented
-architrave. The wynd itself, strange as the averment may now appear,
-was the abode of many of the professors. The illustrious Joseph Black
-lived at one time in a house adjacent to the College gate, on the east
-side, afterwards removed to make way for North College Street.[206]
-Another floor of the same building was occupied by Mr Keith, father of
-the late Sir Alexander Keith of Ravelston, Bart.; and there did the
-late Lord Keith reside in his student days. There was a tradition,
-but of a vague nature, that Goldsmith, when studying at the Edinburgh
-University, lived in the College Wynd.
-
-[Illustration: OLD HOUSES, COLLEGE WYND.
-Near here Sir Walter Scott was born.
-
-PAGE 242.]
-
-The one peculiar glory of this humble place remains to be
-mentioned—its being the birthplace of Sir Walter Scott. In the third
-floor of the house just described, accessible by an entry leading
-to a common stair behind, did this distinguished person first see the
-light, August 15, 1771. It was a house of plain aspect, like many of
-its old neighbours yet surviving; its truest disadvantage, however,
-being in the unhealthiness of the situation, to which Sir Walter
-himself used to attribute the early deaths of several brothers and
-sisters born before him. When the house was required to give way for
-the public conveniency, the elder Scott received a fair price for his
-portion of it; he had previously removed to an airier mansion, No. 25
-George Square, where Sir Walter spent his boyhood and youth.
-
-[Illustration: 25 George Square.]
-
-In the course of a walk through this part of the town in 1825, Sir
-Walter did me the honour to point out the site of the house in which
-he had been born. On his mentioning that his father had got a good
-price for his share of it, in order that it might be taken down for
-the public convenience, I took the liberty of jocularly expressing
-my belief that more money might have been made of it, and the public
-certainly _much more_ gratified, if it had remained to be shown as the
-birthplace of a man who had written so many popular books. ‘Ay, ay,’
-said Sir Walter, ‘that is very well; but I am afraid I should have
-required to be dead first, and that would not have been so comfortable,
-you know.’
-
-In the transition state of the College, from old to new buildings, the
-gate at the head of the wynd was shut up by Principal Robertson, who,
-however, living within the walls, found this passage convenient as an
-access to the town, and used it accordingly. It became the joke of a
-day, that from being the principal gate it had become only a gate for
-the Principal.[207]
-
-
-THE HORSE WYND.
-
-This alley, connecting the Cowgate with the grounds on the south side
-of the town within the walls, and broad enough for a carriage, is
-understood to have derived its name from an inn which long ago existed
-at its head, where the Gaelic Church long after stood. Although the
-name is at least as old as the middle of the seventeenth century, none
-of the buildings appear older than the middle of the eighteenth. They
-had all been renewed by people desirous of the benefit of such air as
-was to be had in an alley double the usual breadth. Very respectable
-members of the bar were glad to have a flat in some of the tall _lands_
-on the east side of the wynd.[208]
-
-On the west side of the wynd, about the middle, the Earl of Galloway
-had built a distinct mansion, ornamented with vases at top. They kept
-a coach and six, and it was alleged that when the countess made calls,
-the leaders were sometimes at the door she was going to, when she was
-stepping into the carriage at her own door. This may be called a _tour
-de force_ illustration of the nearness of friends to each other in Old
-Edinburgh.
-
-
-TAM O’ THE COWGATE.
-
-A court of old buildings, in a massive style of architecture, existed,
-previous to 1829, on a spot in the Cowgate now occupied by the southern
-piers of George IV. Bridge. In the middle of the last century it was
-used as the Excise-office; but even this was a kind of declension
-from its original character. It is certain that the celebrated Thomas
-Hamilton, first Earl of Haddington, President of the Court of Session,
-and Secretary of State for Scotland, lived here at the end of the
-sixteenth century, renting the house from Macgill of Rankeillour.[209]
-This distinguished person, from the circumstance of his living here,
-was endowed by his master, King James, with the nickname of TAM O’ THE
-COWGATE, under which title he is now better remembered than by any
-other.
-
-The earl, who had risen through high legal offices to the peerage, and
-who was equally noted for his penetration as a judge, his industry
-as a collector of decisions, and his talent for amassing wealth,
-was one evening, after a day’s hard labour in the public service,
-solacing himself with a friend over a flask of wine in his house in the
-Cowgate[210]—attired, for his better ease, in a nightgown, cap, and
-slippers—when he was suddenly disturbed by a great hubbub which arose
-under his window in the street. This soon turned out to be a _bicker_
-between the High School youths and those of the College; and it also
-appeared that the latter, fully victorious, were, notwithstanding a
-valiant defence, in the act of driving their antagonists before them.
-The Earl of Haddington’s sympathies were awakened in favour of the
-retiring party, for he had been brought up at the High School, and
-going thence to complete his education at Paris, had no similar reason
-to affect the College. He therefore sprang up, dashed into the street,
-sided with and rallied the fugitives, and took a most animated share
-in the combat that ensued, so that finally the High School youths,
-acquiring fresh strength and valour at seeing themselves befriended by
-the prime judge and privy-councillor of their country (though not in
-his most formidable habiliments), succeeded in turning the scale of
-victory upon the College youths, in spite of their superior individual
-ages and strength. The earl, who assumed the command of the party, and
-excited their spirits by word as well as action, was not content till
-he had pursued the Collegianers through the Grassmarket, and out at
-the West Port, the gate of which he locked against their return, thus
-compelling them to spend the night in the suburbs and the fields. He
-then returned home in triumph to his castle of comfort in the Cowgate,
-and resumed the enjoyment of his friend and flask. We can easily
-imagine what a rare jest this must have been for King Jamie.
-
-[Illustration: A Court of Old Buildings.]
-
-When this monarch visited Scotland in 1617, he found the old statesman
-very rich, and was informed that the people believed him to be in
-possession of the Philosopher’s Stone; there being no other feasible
-mode of accounting for his immense wealth, which rather seemed the
-effect of supernatural agency than of worldly prudence or talent. King
-James, quite tickled with the idea of the Philosopher’s Stone, and
-of so enviable a talisman having fallen into the hands of a Scottish
-judge, was not long in letting his friend and gossip know of the story
-which he had heard respecting him. The Lord President immediately
-invited the king, and the rest of the company present, to come to his
-house next day, when he would both do his best to give them a good
-dinner and lay open to them the mystery of the Philosopher’s Stone.
-This agreeable invitation was of course accepted; and the next day
-saw his Cowgate _palazzo_ thronged with king and courtiers, all of
-whom the President feasted to their hearts’ content. After dinner
-the king reminded him of his Philosopher’s Stone, and expressed his
-anxiety to be speedily made acquainted with so rare a treasure, when
-the pawky lord addressed His Majesty and the company in a short
-speech, concluding with this information, that his whole secret lay
-in two simple and familiar maxims—‘Never put off till to-morrow what
-can be done to-day; nor ever trust to another’s hand what your own
-can execute.’ He might have added, from the works of an illustrious
-contemporary:
-
- ‘This is the only witchcraft I have used;’
-
-and none could have been more effectual.
-
-A ludicrous idea is obtained from the following anecdote of the
-estimation in which the wisdom of the Earl of Haddington was held by
-the king, and at the same time, perhaps, of that singular monarch’s
-usual mode of speech. It must be understood, by way of prefatory
-illustration, that King James, who was the author of the earl’s popular
-appellation, ‘_Tam o’ the Cowgate_,’ had a custom of bestowing such
-ridiculous _sobriquets_ on his principal councillors and courtiers.
-Thus he conferred upon that grave and sagacious statesman, John, Earl
-of Mar, the nickname _Jock o’ Sklates_—probably in allusion to some
-circumstance which occurred in their young days when they were the
-fellow-pupils of Buchanan. On hearing of a meditated alliance between
-the Haddington and Mar families, His Majesty exclaimed, betwixt jest
-and earnest: ‘The Lord hand a grup o’ me! If Tam o’ the Cowgate’s
-son marry Jock o’ Sklates’s daughter, what’s to come o’ _me_?’ The
-good-natured monarch probably apprehended that so close a union betwixt
-two of his most subtle statesmen might make them too much for their
-master—as hounds are most dangerous when they hunt in couples.
-
-The Earl of Haddington died in 1637, full of years and honours. At
-Tyningham, the seat of his family, there are two portraits of his
-lordship, one a half-length, the other a head; as also his state-dress;
-and it is a circumstance too characteristic to be overlooked that in
-the crimson-velvet breeches there are no fewer than _nine pockets_!
-Among many of the earl’s papers which remain in Tyningham House, one
-contains a memorandum conveying a curious idea of the way in which
-public and political affairs were then managed in Scotland. The paper
-details the heads of a petition in his own handwriting to the Privy
-Council, and at the end is a note ‘to _gar_ [that is, make] the
-chancellor’ do something else in his behalf.
-
-A younger son of Tam o’ the Cowgate was a person of much ingenuity, and
-was popularly known, for what reason I cannot tell, by the nickname
-of ‘Dear Sandie Hamilton.’ He had a foundry in the Potterrow, where
-he fabricated the cannon employed in the first Covenanting war in
-1639. This artillery, be it remarked, was not formed exclusively of
-metal. The greater part of the composition was leather; and yet, we
-are informed, they did some considerable execution at the battle of
-Newburnford, above Newcastle (August 28, 1640), where the Scots drove
-a large advanced party of Charles I.’s troops before them, thereby
-causing the king to enter into a new treaty. The cannon, which were
-commonly called ‘Dear Sandie’s Stoups,’ were carried in swivel fashion
-between two horses.
-
-The Excise-office had been removed, about 1730, from the Parliament
-Square to the house occupied many years before by Tam o’ the Cowgate.
-It afforded excellent accommodations for this important public office.
-The principal room on the second floor, towards the Cowgate, was a very
-superb one, having a stucco ceiling divided into square compartments,
-each of which contained some elegant device. To the rear of the house
-was a bowling-green, which the Commissioners of Excise let on lease
-to a person of the name of Thomson. In those days bowling was a much
-more prevalent amusement than now, being chiefly a favourite with the
-graver order of the citizens. There were then no fewer than three
-bowling-greens in the grounds around Heriot’s Hospital; one in the
-Canongate, near the Tolbooth; another on the opposite side of the
-street; another immediately behind the palace of Holyrood House, where
-the Duke of York used to play when in Scotland; and perhaps several
-others scattered about the outskirts of the town. The arena behind the
-Excise-office was called Thomson’s Green, from the name of the man who
-kept it; and it may be worth while to remind the reader that it is
-alluded to in that pleasant-spirited poem by Allan Ramsay, in imitation
-of the _Vides ut alta_ of Horace:
-
- ‘Driving their ba’s frae whins or tee,
- There’s no ae gouffer to be seen,
- Nor doucer folk wysing a-jee
- The byas bowls on Tamson’s green.’
-
-The green was latterly occupied by the relict of this Thomson; and
-among the bad debts on the Excise books, all of which are yearly
-brought forward and enumerated, there still stands a sum of something
-more than six pounds against Widow Thomson, being the last half-year’s
-rent of _the green_, which the poor woman had been unable to pay.
-The north side of Brown’s Square was built upon part of this space
-of ground; the rest remained a vacant area for the recreation of the
-people dwelling in Merchant Street, until the erection of the bridge,
-which has overrun that, as well as every other part of the scene of
-this article.[211]
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[204] Myln’s _Lives of the Bishops of Dunkeld_. Edinburgh, 1831.
-
-[205] Originally the name was the ‘Wynd of the Blessed Virgin Mary in
-the Fields,’ as being the approach to the collegiate church so named
-which stood on the site of the University—the ‘Kirk o’ Field’ of the
-Darnley tragedy.
-
-[206] Now Chambers Street.
-
-[207] A small ‘bit’ of College Wynd, ending in a _cul de sac_, is all
-that remains of this once leading thoroughfare between the city and the
-‘Oure Tounis Colledge.’
-
-[208] When it became an unfashionable place of residence it was dubbed
-by the fops of the town ‘Cavalry Wynd.’ The northern end of Guthrie
-Street is the site of the old Horse Wynd.
-
-[209] Macgill was King’s Advocate to James VI., and is said to have
-died of grief when his rival, Thomas Hamilton, was preferred for the
-presidentship.
-
-[210] Most of the traditionary anecdotes in this article were
-communicated by Charles, eighth Earl of Haddington, through
-conversation with Sir Walter Scott, by whom they were directly imparted
-to the author.
-
-[211] Near by is the Magdalen Chapel, a curious relic of the sixteenth
-century, belonging to the Corporation of Hammermen. It was erected
-immediately before the Reformation by a pious citizen, Michael
-Macquhan, and Jonet Rhynd, his widow, whose tomb is shown in the floor.
-The windows towards the south were anciently filled with stained glass;
-and there still remain some specimens of that kind of ornament, which,
-by some strange chance, had survived the Reformation. In a large
-department at the top of one window are the arms of Mary of Guise,
-who was queen-regent at the time the chapel was built. The arms of
-Macquhan and his wife are also to be seen. In the lower panes, which
-have been filled with small figures of saints, only one remains—a St
-Bartholomew—who, by a rare chance, has survived the general massacre.
-The whole is now very carefully preserved. When the distinguished
-Reformer, John Craig, returned to Scotland at the Reformation, after
-an absence of twenty-four years, he preached for some time in this
-chapel, in the Latin language, to a select congregation of the learned,
-being unable, by long disuse, to hold forth in his vernacular tongue.
-This divine subsequently was appointed a colleague to John Knox, and
-is distinguished in history for having refused to publish the banns
-between Queen Mary and Bothwell, and also for having written the
-National Covenant in 1589. Another circumstance in the history of this
-chapel is worthy of notice. The body of the Earl of Argyll, after his
-execution, June 30, 1685, was brought down and deposited in this place,
-to wait till it should be conveyed to the family burying-place at
-Kilmun.
-
-
-
-
-ST CECILIA’S HALL.
-
-
-Few persons now living (1847) recollect the elegant concerts that were
-given many years ago in what is now an obscure part of our ancient
-city, known by the name of St Cecilia’s Hall. They did such honour to
-Edinburgh, nearly for half a century, that I feel myself called on to
-make a brief record of them, and am glad to be enabled to do so by a
-living authority, one of the most fervent worshippers in the temple of
-the goddess. Hear, then, his last _aria parlante_ on this interesting
-theme.
-
-[Illustration: St Cecilia’s Hall.]
-
-‘The concerts of St Cecilia’s Hall formed one of the most liberal and
-attractive amusements that any city in Europe could boast of. The
-hall was built on purpose at the foot of Niddry’s Wynd, by a number
-of public-spirited noblemen and gentlemen; and the expense of the
-concerts was defrayed by about two hundred subscribers paying two or
-three guineas each annually; and so respectable was the institution
-considered, that upon the death of a member there were generally
-several applications for the vacancy, as is now the case with the
-Caledonian Hunt. The concerts were managed by a governor and a set of
-six or more directors, who engaged the performers—the principal ones
-from Italy, one or two from Germany, and the rest of the orchestra
-was made up of English and native artists. The concerts were given
-weekly during most of the time that I attended; the instrumental
-music consisting chiefly of the concertos of Corelli and Handel, and
-the overtures of Bach, Abel, Stamitz, Vanhall, and latterly of Haydn
-and Pleyel; for at that time, and till a good many years after, the
-magnificent symphonies of Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven, which now
-form the most attractive portions of all public concerts, had not
-reached this country. Those truly grand symphonies do not seem likely
-to be superseded by any similar compositions for a century to come,
-transcending so immensely, as they do, all the orchestral compositions
-that ever before appeared; yet I must not venture to prophesy, when I
-bear in mind what a powerful influence fashion and folly exercise upon
-music, as well as upon other objects of taste. When the overtures and
-quartettes of Haydn first found their way into this country, I well
-remember with what coldness the former were received by most of the
-grave Handelians, while at the theatres they gave delight. The old
-concert gentlemen said that his compositions wanted the solidity and
-full harmony of Handel and Corelli; and when the celebrated leader—the
-elder Cramer—visited St Cecilia’s Hall, and played a spirited charming
-overture of Haydn’s, an old amateur next to whom I was seated asked me:
-“Whase music is that, now?” “Haydn’s, sir,” said I. “Poor new-fangled
-stuff,” he replied; “I hope I shall never hear it again!” Many years
-have since rolled away, and mark what some among us now say: A friend,
-calling lately on an old lady much in the fashionable circle of
-society, heard her give directions to the pianist who was teaching her
-nieces to bring them some new and fashionable pieces of music, but
-no more of the _unfashionable_ compositions of Haydn! Alas for those
-ladies whose taste in music is regulated by fashion, and who do not
-know that the music of Haydn is the admiration and delight of all the
-real lovers and judges of the art in Europe!
-
-‘The vocal department of our concerts consisted chiefly of the songs of
-Handel, Arne, Gluck, Sarti, Jornelli, Guglielmi, Paisiello, Scottish
-songs, &c.; and every year, generally, we had an oratorio of Handel
-performed, with the assistance of a principal bass and a tenor singer,
-and a few chorus-singers from the English cathedrals; together with
-some Edinburgh amateurs,[212] who cultivated that sacred and sublime
-music; Signor and Signora Domenico Corri, the latter our _prima donna_,
-singing most of the principal songs, or most interesting portions of
-the music. On such occasions the hall was always crowded to excess by
-a splendid assemblage, including all the beauty and fashion of our
-city. A supper to the directors and their friends at Fortune’s Tavern
-generally followed the oratorio, where the names of the chief beauties
-who had graced the hall were honoured by their healths being drunk:
-the champion of the lady whom he proposed as his toast being sometimes
-challenged to maintain the pre-eminence of her personal charms by
-the admirer of another lady filling a glass of double depth to her
-health, and thus forcing the champion of the first lady to _say more_
-by drinking a still deeper bumper in honour of her beauty; and if
-this produced a rejoinder from the other, by his seizing and quaffing
-the cup of _largest_ calibre, there the contest generally ended, and
-the deepest drinker _saved_ his lady, as it was phrased, although he
-might have had some difficulty in saving himself from a flooring while
-endeavouring to regain his seat.[213] Miss Burnet of Monboddo and Miss
-Betsy Home, reigning beauties of the time, were said more than once to
-have been the innocent cause of the fall of man in this way. The former
-was gifted with a countenance of heavenly sweetness and expression,
-which Guido, had he beheld it, would have sought to perpetuate upon
-canvas as that of an angel; while the other lady, quite piquant and
-brilliant, might have sat to Titian for a Hebe or one of the Graces.
-Miss Burnet died in the bloom of youth, universally regretted both for
-her personal charms and the rare endowments of her mind. Miss Home was
-happily married to Captain Brown, her ardent admirer, who had made her
-his _toast_ for years, and vowed he would continue to do so till he
-toasted her _Brown_. This sort of exuberant loyalty to beauty was by no
-means uncommon at the convivial meetings of those days, when “time had
-not thinned our flowing hair, nor bent us with his iron hand.”
-
-‘Let me call to mind a few of those whose lovely faces at the concerts
-gave us the sweetest zest for the music. Miss Cleghorn of Edinburgh,
-still living in single-blessedness; Miss Chalmers of Pittencrief, who
-married Sir William Miller of Glenlee, Bart.; Miss Jessie Chalmers
-of Edinburgh, who was married to Mr Pringle of Haining; Miss Hay of
-Hayston, who married Sir William Forbes of Pitsligo, Bart.; Miss Murray
-of Lintrose, who was called the _Flower of Strathmore_, and upon whom
-Burns wrote the song:
-
- “Blithe, blithe, and merry was she,
- Blithe was she but and ben;
- Blithe by the banks of the Earn,
- And blithe in Glenturit Glen.”
-
-She married David Smith, Esq. of Methven, one of the Lords of
-Session; Miss Jardine of Edinburgh, who married Mr Home Drummond of
-Blairdrummond—their daughter, if I mistake not, is now the Duchess
-of Athole; Miss Kinloch of Gilmerton, who married Sir Foster Cunliffe
-of Acton, Bart.; Miss Lucy Johnston of East Lothian, who married Mr
-Oswald of Auchincruive; Miss Halket of Pitferran, who became the wife
-of the celebrated Count Lally-Tollendal; and Jane, Duchess of Gordon,
-celebrated for her wit and spirit, as well as for her beauty. These,
-with Miss Burnet and Miss Home, and many others whose names I do not
-distinctly recollect, were indisputably worthy of all the honours
-conferred upon them. But beauty has tempted me to digress too long from
-my details relative to the hall and its concerts, to which I return.
-
-‘The hall [built in 1762 from a design of Mr Robert Mylne, after the
-model of the great opera theatre of Parma] was an exact oval, having
-a concave elliptical ceiling, and was remarkable for the clear and
-perfect conveyance of sounds, without responding echoes, as well as for
-the judicious manner in which the seating was arranged. In this last
-respect, I have seen no concert-room equal to it either in London or
-Paris. The orchestra was erected at the upper end of the hall, opposite
-to the door of entrance; a portion of the area, in the centre or widest
-part, was without any seats, and served as a small promenade, where
-friends could chat together during the intervals of performance. The
-seats were all _fixed_ down on both sides of the hall, and each side
-was raised by a gradual elevation from the level area, backward, the
-rows of seats behind each other, till they reached a passage a few
-feet broad, that was carried quite round the hall behind the last of
-the elevated seats; so that when the audience was seated, each half of
-it fronted the other—an arrangement much preferable to that commonly
-adopted, of placing all the seats upon a _level_ behind each other,
-for thus the whole company must look one way, and see each other’s
-_backs_. A private staircase at the upper end of the hall, not seen by
-the company, admitted the musicians into the orchestra; in the front
-of which stood a harpsichord, with the singers, and the principal
-violoncellist; and behind these, on a platform a little elevated, were
-the violins, and other stringed and wind instruments, just behind which
-stood a noble organ. The hall, when filled, contained an audience of
-about four hundred. No money was taken for admission, tickets being
-given gratis to the lovers of music, and to strangers. What a pity
-that such a liberal and gratifying institution should have ceased to
-exist! But after the New Town arose, the Old was deserted by the
-upper classes: the hall was too small for the increased population,
-and concerts were got up at the Assembly Rooms and Corri’s Rooms by
-the professional musicians, and by Corri himself. Now a capacious
-Music Hall is erected behind the Assembly Rooms, where a pretty good
-subscription concert is carried on; and from the increased facility of
-intercourse between Paris, London, and Edinburgh, it seems probable
-that concerts by artists of the highest talents will ere long be set on
-foot in Edinburgh in this fine hall, diversified sometimes by oratorios
-or Italian operas.
-
-‘Before concluding this brief memoir of St Cecilia’s Hall Concerts, I
-shall mention the chief performers who gave attractions to them. These
-were Signor and Signora Domenico Corri, from Rome; he with a falsetto
-voice, which he managed with much skill and taste; the signora with a
-fine, full-toned, flexible soprano voice. Tenducci, though not one of
-the band, nor resident among us, made his appearance occasionally when
-he came to visit the Hopetoun family, his liberal and steady patrons;
-and while he remained he generally gave some concerts at the hall,
-which made quite a sensation among the musicals. I considered it a
-jubilee year whenever Tenducci arrived, as no singer I ever heard sang
-with more expressive simplicity, or was more efficient, whether he sang
-the classical songs of Metastasio, or those of Arne’s _Artaxerxes_, or
-the simple melodies of Scotland. To the latter he gave such intensity
-of interest by his impassioned manner, and by his clear enunciation of
-the words, as equally surprised and delighted us. I never can forget
-the pathos and touching effect of his _Gilderoy_, _Lochaber no more_,
-_The Braes of Ballenden_, _I’ll never leave thee_, _Roslin Castle_,
-&c. These, with the _Verdi prati_ of Handel, _Fair Aurora_ from
-Arne’s _Artaxerxes_, and Gluck’s _Che faro_, were above all praise.
-Miss Poole, Mr Smeaton, Mr Gilson, and Mr Urbani were also for a time
-singers at the hall—chiefly of English and Scottish songs.
-
-‘In the instrumental department we had Signor Puppo, from Rome or
-Naples, as leader and violin concerto player, a most capital artist;
-Mr Schetky, from Germany, the principal violoncellist, and a fine
-solo concerto player; Joseph Reinagle, a very clever violoncello and
-viola player; Mr Barnard, a very elegant violinist; Stephen Clarke,
-an excellent organist and harpsichord player; and twelve or fifteen
-violins, basses, flutes, violas, horns, and clarionets, with extra
-performers often from London. Upon the resignation of Puppo, who
-charmed all hearers, Stabilini succeeded him, and held the situation
-till the institution was at an end: he had a good round tone, though,
-to my apprehension, he did not exceed mediocrity as a performer.
-
-‘But I should be unpardonable if I omitted to mention the most
-accomplished violin-player I ever heard, Paganini only excepted—I
-mean Giornovicki, who possessed in a most extraordinary degree
-the various requisites of his beautiful art: execution peculiarly
-brilliant, and finely articulated as possible; a tone of the richest
-and most exquisite quality; expression of the utmost delicacy, grace,
-and tenderness; and an animation that commanded your most intense and
-eager attention. Paganini did not appear in Edinburgh till [thirty
-years] after the hall was closed. There, as well as at private parties,
-I heard Giornovicki often, and always with no less delight than I
-listened to Paganini.[214] Both, if I may use the expression, threw
-their whole hearts and souls into their Cremonas, bows, and fingers.
-
- “Hall of sweet sounds, adieu, with all thy fascinations of langsyne,
- My dearest reminiscences of music all are thine.”’
-
- _G. T. Octogenarius Edinburgensis_, Feb. 1847.[215]
-
-Stabilini, to whom our dear G. T. refers, and who died in 1815, much
-broken down by dissipation, was obliged, against his will, to give
-frequent attendance at the private concerts of one of these gentlemen
-performers, where Corelli’s trios were in great vogue. There was always
-a capital supper afterwards, at which Stab (so he was familiarly
-called) ate and drank for any two. A waggish friend, who knew his
-opinion of Edinburgh amateurs, meeting him next day, would ask: ‘Well,
-Mr Stabilini, what sort of music had you the other night at ——
-——’s?’
-
-‘Vera good soaper, sir; vera good soaper!’
-
-‘But tell us the verse you made about one of these parties.’
-
-Stabilini, twitching up his shirt-collar, a common trick of his, would
-say:
-
- ‘A piece ov toarkey for a hungree bellee
- Is moatch sup_eer_ior to Corelli!’
-
-The accent, the manner, the look with which this was delivered, is said
-to have been beyond expression rich.
-
-It is quite remarkable, when we consider the high character of the
-popular melodies, how late and slow has been the introduction of a
-taste for the higher class of musical compositions into Scotland. The
-Earl of Kelly, a man of yesterday, was the first Scotsman who ever
-composed music for an orchestra.[216] This fact seems sufficient. It
-is to be feared that the beauty of the melodies is itself partly to
-be blamed for the indifference to higher music. There is too great
-a disposition to rest with the distinction thus conferred upon the
-nation; too many are content to go no further for the enjoyments which
-music has to give. It would be well if, while not forgetting those
-beautiful simple airs, we were more generally to open our minds to the
-still richer charms of the German and the Italian muses.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[212] The amateurs who took the lead as choristers were Gilbert
-Innes, Esq. of Stow; Alexander Wight, Esq., advocate; Mr John Hutton,
-papermaker; Mr John Russel, W.S.; and Mr George Thomson. As an
-instrumentalist, we could boast of our countryman the Earl of Kelly,
-who also composed six overtures for an orchestra, one of which I heard
-played in the hall, himself leading the band.
-
-[213] See a different account of this custom, p. 147.
-
-[214] [‘John M. Giornovicki, commonly known in Britain under the name
-of Jarnowick, was a native of Palermo. About 1770 he went to Paris,
-where he performed a concerto of his famous master Lolli, but did not
-succeed. He then played one of his own concertos, that in A major, and
-became quite the fashion. The style of Giornovicki was highly elegant
-and finished, his intonation perfect, and his taste pure. The late
-Domenico Dragonetti, one of the best judges in Europe, told me that
-Giornovicki was the most elegant and graceful violin-player he had ever
-heard before Paganini, but that he wanted power. He seems to have been
-a dissipated and passionate man; a good swordsman too, as was common in
-those days. One day, in a dispute, he struck the Chevalier St George,
-then one of the greatest violin-players and best swordsmen in Europe.
-St George said coolly: “I have too much regard for his musical talent
-to fight him.” A noble speech, showing St George in all respects the
-better man. Giornovicki died suddenly at St Petersburg in 1804.’—G. F.
-G.]
-
-[215] G. T., it may now be explained, was George Thomson, the
-well-known and generally loved editor of the _Melodies of Scotland_.
-He might rather have described himself as _Nonogenarius_, for at his
-death, in 1851, he had reached the age of ninety-four, his violin, as
-he believed, having prolonged his life much beyond the usual term.
-
-[216] The earl was the leader of the amateur orchestra of St Cecilia’s
-Hall, which included Lord Colville, Sir John Pringle, Mr Seton of
-Pitmedden, General Middleton, Lord Elcho, Sir Gilbert Elliot, Mrs
-Forbes of Newhall, and others of the aristocracy. General Middleton was
-credited with ‘singing a song with much humour,’ which he sometimes
-accompanied with a key and tongs. Sir Gilbert Elliot, who played the
-German flute, was the first to introduce that instrument to a Scottish
-audience. St Cecilia’s Hall has passed through many vicissitudes since
-then, and is now a bookbinder’s warehouse, but its fine ceiling and the
-orchestral balcony at the southern end are still preserved as memorials
-of its early days.
-
-
-
-
-THE MURDER OF DARNLEY.
-
-
-While this event is connected with one of the most problematical points
-in our own history, or that of any other nation, it chances that the
-whole topography of the affair is very distinctly recorded. We know not
-only the exact spot where the deed was perpetrated, but almost every
-foot of the ground over which the perpetrators walked on their way to
-execute it. It is chiefly by reason of the depositions and confessions
-brought out by the legal proceedings against the inferior instruments
-that this minute knowledge is attained.
-
-The house in which the unfortunate victim resided at the time was one
-called the Prebendaries’ Chamber, being part of the suite of domestic
-buildings connected with the collegiate church of St-Mary-in-the-Fields
-(usually called the _Kirk o’ Field_). Darnley was brought to lodge
-here on the 30th of January 1566-7. He had contracted the smallpox
-at Glasgow, and it was thought necessary, or pretended to be thought
-necessary, to lodge him in this place for air, as also to guard against
-infecting the infant prince, his son, who was lodged in Holyrood House.
-The house, which then belonged, by gift, to a creature of the Earl
-of Bothwell, has been described as so very mean as to excite general
-surprise. Yet, speaking by comparison, it does not appear to have been
-a bad temporary lodging for a person in Darnley’s circumstances. It
-consisted of two stories, with a _turnpike_ or spiral staircase behind.
-The gable adjoined to the town-wall, which there ran in a line east and
-west, and the cellar had a postern opening through that wall. In the
-upper floor were a chamber and closet, with a little gallery having a
-window also through the town-wall.[217] Here Darnley was deposited
-in an old purple travelling-bed. Underneath his room was an apartment
-in which the queen slept for one or two nights before the murder took
-place. On the night of Sunday, February 9, she was attending upon her
-husband in his sick-room, when the servants of the Earl of Bothwell
-deposited the powder in her room, immediately under the king’s bed. The
-queen afterwards took her leave, in order to attend the wedding of two
-of her servants at the palace.
-
-It appears, from the confessions of the wretches executed for this
-foul deed, that as they returned from depositing the powder they saw
-‘the Queenes grace gangand before thame with licht torches up the
-Black Frier Wynd.’ On their returning to Bothwell’s lodging at the
-palace, that nobleman prepared himself for the deed by changing his
-gay suit of ‘hose, stockit with black velvet, passemented with silver,
-and doublett of black satin of the same maner,’ for ‘ane uther pair
-of black hose,[218] and ane canvas doublet white, and tuke his syde
-[long] riding-cloak about him, of sad English claith, callit the new
-colour.’ He then went, attended by Paris, the queen’s servant, Powry,
-his own porter, Pate Wilson, and George Dalgleish, ‘downe the turnepike
-altogedder, and along the bak of the Queene’s garden, till you come to
-the bak of the cunyie-house [mint], and the bak of the stabbillis, till
-you come to the Canongate fornent the Abbey zett.’ After passing up
-the Canongate, and gaining entry with some difficulty by the Netherbow
-Port, ‘thai gaid up abone Bassentyne’s hous on the south side of
-the gait,[219] and knockit at ane door beneath the sword slippers,
-and callit for the laird of Ormistounes, and one within answerit he
-was not thair; and thai passit down a cloiss beneath the Frier Wynd
-[_apparently Toddrick’s Wynd_], and enterit in at the zett of the Black
-Friers, till thay came to the back wall and dyke of the town-wall,
-whair my lord and Paris past in over the wall.’ The explosion took
-place soon after, about two in the morning. The earl then came back
-to his attendants at this spot, and ‘thai past all away togidder out
-at the Frier zett, and sinderit in the Cowgait.’ It is here evident
-that the alley now called the High School Wynd was the avenue by which
-the conspirators approached the scene of their atrocity. Bothwell
-himself, with part of his attendants, went up the same wynd ‘be east
-the Frier Wynd,’ and crossing the High Street, endeavoured to get out
-of the city by leaping a broken part of the town-wall in Leith Wynd,
-but finding it too high, was obliged to rouse once more the porter at
-the Netherbow. They then passed—for every motion of the villains has a
-strange interest—down St Mary’s Wynd, and along the south back of the
-Canongate to the earl’s lodgings in the palace.
-
-[Illustration: High School Wynd.]
-
-The house itself, by this explosion, was destroyed, ‘_even_,’ as the
-queen tells in a letter to her ambassador in France, ‘_to the very
-grund-stane_.’ The bodies of the king and his servant were found next
-morning in a garden or field on the outside of the town-wall. The
-buildings connected with the Kirk o’ Field were afterwards converted
-into the College of King James, now our Edinburgh University. The hall
-of the Senatus in the new buildings occupies nearly the exact site
-of the Prebendaries’ Chamber, the ruins of which are laid down in De
-Witt’s map of 1648.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[217] About seventy paces to the east of the site of the Prebendaries’
-Chamber, and exactly opposite to the opening of Roxburgh Place, was a
-projection in the wall, which has been long demolished and the wall
-altered. Close, however, to the west of the place, and near the ground,
-are some remains of an arch in the wall, which Malcolm Laing supposes
-to have been a gun-port connected with the projection at this spot.
-It certainly has no connection, as Arnot and (after him) Whitaker
-have supposed, with the story of Darnley’s murder. [This relic of the
-Flodden wall is now removed, but a portion of the wall itself still
-stands behind the houses at the north-east junction of Drummond Street
-and the Pleasance. Another portion was recently discovered at the east
-end of Lothian Street, between that street and the Royal Scottish
-Museum. Another part forms the north side of a _cul de sac_ at Lindsay
-Place, and at the Vennel is the largest part of this old wall, with
-one of its few towers, forming the western boundary of the grounds of
-Heriot’s Hospital.]
-
-[218] Hose in those days covered the whole of the lower part of the
-person.
-
-[219] This indicates pretty nearly the site of the house of Bassendyne,
-the early printer. It must have been opposite, or nearly opposite, to
-the Fountain Well.
-
-
-
-
-MINT CLOSE.
-
- THE MINT—ROBERT CULLEN—LORD CHANCELLOR LOUGHBOROUGH.
-
-
-The _Cunyie House_, as the Scottish Mint used to be called, was near
-Holyrood Palace in the days of Queen Mary. In the regency of Morton a
-large house was erected for it in the Cowgate, where it may still be
-seen,[220] with the following inscription over the door:
-
- BE. MERCYFULL. TO. ME. O. GOD. 1574.
-
-In the reign of Charles II. other buildings were added behind, forming
-a neat quadrangle; and here was the Scottish coin produced till the
-Union, when a separate coinage was given up and this establishment
-abandoned; though, to gratify prejudice, the offices were still kept
-up as sinecures. This court with its buildings was a sanctuary for
-persons prosecuted for debt, as was the King’s Stables, a mean place at
-the west end of the Grassmarket. There was, however, a small den near
-the top of the oldest building, lighted by a small window looking up
-the Cowgate, which was used as a jail for debtors or other delinquents
-condemned by the Mint’s own officers.
-
-In the western portion of the old building, accessible by a stair from
-the court, is a handsome room with an alcove ceiling, and lighted
-by two handsomely proportioned windows, which is known to have been
-the council-room of the Mint, being a portion of the private mansion
-of the master. Here, in May 1590, on a Sunday evening, the town of
-Edinburgh entertained the Danish lords who accompanied James VI. and
-his queen from her native court—namely, Peter Monk, the admiral of
-Denmark; Stephen Brahe, captain of Eslinburg [perhaps a relative of
-Tycho?]; Braid Ransome Maugaret; Nicholaus Theophilus, Doctor of Laws;
-Henry Goolister, captain of Bocastle; William Vanderwent; and some
-others. For this banquet, ‘maid in Thomas Aitchinsoune, master of the
-cunyie-house lugeing,’ it was ordered ‘that the thesaurer caus by and
-lay in foure punsheouns wyne; John Borthuik baxter to get four bunnis
-of beir, with foure gang of aill, and to furneis breid; Henry Charteris
-and Roger Macnacht to caus hing the hous with tapestrie, set the
-burdis, furmis, chandleris [_candlesticks_], and get flowris; George
-Carketill and Rychert Doby to provyde the cupbuirds and men to keep
-thame; and my Lord Provest was content to provyde naprie and twa dozen
-greit veschell, and to avance ane hunder pund or mair, as thai sall
-haif a do.’
-
-In the latter days of the Mint as an active establishment, the
-coining-house was in the ground-floor of the building, on the north
-side of the court; in the adjoining house, on the east side, was
-the finishing-house, where the money was polished and fitted for
-circulation. The chief instruments used in coining were a hammer and
-steel dies, upon which the device was engraved. The metal, being
-previously prepared of the proper fineness and thickness, was cut into
-longitudinal slips, and a square piece being cut from the slip, it
-was afterwards rounded and adjusted to the weight of the money to be
-made. The blank pieces of metal were then placed between two dies, and
-the upper one was struck with a hammer. After the Restoration another
-method was introduced—that of the mill and screw, which, modified
-by many improvements, is still in use. At the Union, the ceremony of
-destroying the dies of the Scottish coinage took place in the Mint.
-After being heated red-hot in a furnace, they were defaced by three
-impressions of a broad-faced _punch_, which were of course visible on
-the dies as long as they existed; but it must be recorded that all
-these implements, which would now have been great curiosities, are
-lost, and none of the machinery remains but the press, which, weighing
-about half a ton, was rather too large to be readily appropriated, or
-perhaps it would have followed the rest.
-
-The floors over the coining-house—bearing the letters, C. R. II.,
-surmounting a crown, and the legend, GOD SAVE THE KING, 1674,
-originally the mansion of the master—were latterly occupied by the
-eminent Dr Cullen, whose family were all born here, and who died here
-himself in 1792.
-
-
-ROBERT CULLEN.
-
-Robert Cullen, the son of the physician, made a great impression
-on Edinburgh society by his many delightful social qualities, and
-particularly his powers as a mimic of the Mathews genus. He manifested
-this gift in his earliest years, to the no small discomposure of his
-grave old father. One evening, when Dr Cullen was going to the theatre,
-Robert entreated to be taken along with him, but for some reason was
-condemned to remain at home. Some time after the departure of the
-doctor, Mrs Cullen heard him come along the passage, as if from his own
-room, and say at her door: ‘Well, after all, you may let Robert go.’
-Robert was accordingly allowed to depart for the theatre, where his
-appearance gave no small surprise to his father. On the old gentleman
-coming home and remonstrating with his lady for allowing the boy to go,
-it was discovered that the voice which seemed to give the permission
-had proceeded from the young wag himself.
-
-In maturer years, Cullen could not only mimic any voice or mode of
-speech, but enter so thoroughly into the nature of any man that
-he could supply exactly the ideas which he was likely to use. His
-imitations were therefore something much above mimicries—they were
-artistic representations of human character. He has been known in a
-social company, where another individual was expected, to stand up,
-in the character of that person, and return thanks for the proposal
-of his health; and this was done so happily that when the individual
-did arrive and got upon his legs to speak for himself, the company
-was convulsed with an almost exact repetition of what Cullen had
-previously uttered, the manner also and every inflection of the voice
-being precisely alike. In relating anecdotes, of which he possessed a
-vast store, he usually prefaced them with a sketch of the character
-of the person referred to, which greatly increased the effect, as the
-story then told characteristically. These sketches were remarked to be
-extremely graphic and most elegantly expressed.
-
-When a young man, residing with his father, he was very intimate
-with Dr Robertson, the Principal of the university. To show that
-Robertson was not likely to be easily imitated, it may be mentioned,
-from the report of a gentleman who has often heard him making public
-orations, that when the students observed him pause for a word, and
-would themselves mentally supply it, they invariably found that the
-word which he did use was different from that which they had hit
-upon. Cullen, however, could imitate him to the life, either in his
-more formal speeches or in his ordinary discourse. He would often, in
-entering a house which the Principal was in the habit of visiting,
-assume his voice in the lobby and stair, and when arrived at the
-drawing-room door, astonish the family by turning out to be—Bob
-Cullen. Lord Greville, a pupil of the Principal’s, having been one
-night detained at a protracted debauch, where Cullen was also present,
-the latter gentleman next morning got admission to the bedroom of the
-young nobleman, where, personating Dr Robertson, he sat down by the
-bedside, and with all the manner of the reverend Principal, gave him
-a sound lecture for having been out so late last night. Greville, who
-had fully expected this visit, lay in remorseful silence, and allowed
-his supposed monitor to depart without saying a word. In the course of
-a quarter of an hour, however, when the real Dr Robertson entered, and
-commenced a harangue exactly duplicating that just concluded, he could
-not help exclaiming that it was _too bad_ to give it him twice over.
-‘Oh, I see how it is,’ said Robertson, rising to depart; ‘that rogue
-Bob Cullen must have been with you.’ The Principal became at length
-accustomed to Bob’s tricks, which he would seem, from the following
-anecdote, to have regarded in a friendly spirit. Being attended
-during an illness by Dr Cullen, it was found necessary to administer
-a liberal dose of laudanum. The physician, however, asked him, in the
-first place, in what manner laudanum affected him. Having received his
-answer, Cullen remarked, with surprise, that he had never known any one
-affected in the same way by laudanum besides his son Bob. ‘Ah,’ said
-Robertson, ‘_does the rascal take me off there too_?’
-
-Mr Cullen entered at the Scottish bar in 1764, and, distinguishing
-himself highly as a lawyer, was raised to the bench in 1796, when he
-took the designation of Lord Cullen. He cultivated elegant literature,
-and contributed some papers of acknowledged merit to the _Mirror_ and
-_Lounger_; but it was in conversation that he chiefly shone.
-
-The close adjoining to the Mint contains several old-fashioned houses
-of a dignified appearance. In a floor of one bearing the date 1679,
-and having a little court in front, Alexander Wedderburn, Earl of
-Rosslyn and Lord Chancellor of England, resided while at the Scottish
-bar. This, as is well known, was a very brief interval; for a veteran
-barrister having one day used the term ‘presumptuous boy’ with
-reference to him, and his own caustic reply having drawn upon him a
-rebuke from the bench, he took off his gown, and making a bow, said
-he would never more plead where he was subjected to insult, but would
-seek a wider field for his exertions. His subsequent rapid rise at
-the English bar is matter of history. It is told that, returning to
-Edinburgh at the end of his life, after an absence of many years, he
-wished to see the house where he had lived while a Scotch advocate. Too
-infirm to walk, he was borne in a chair to the foot of the Mint Close
-to see this building. One thing he was particularly anxious about.
-While residing here, he had had five holes made in the little court to
-play at some bowling game of which he was fond. He wished, above all
-things, to see these holes once more, and when he found they were still
-there, he expressed much satisfaction. Churchill himself might have
-melted at such an anecdote of the old days of him who was
-
- ‘Pert at the bar, and in the senate loud.’
-
-About midway up the close is a turreted mansion, accessible from
-Hyndford’s Close, and having a tolerably good garden connected with it.
-This was, in 1742, the residence of the Earl of Selkirk; subsequently
-it was occupied by Dr Daniel Rutherford, professor of botany. Sir
-Walter Scott, who, being a nephew of that gentleman, was often in the
-house in his young days, communicated to me a curious circumstance
-connected with it. It appears that the house immediately adjacent was
-not furnished with a stair wide enough to allow of a coffin being
-carried down in decent fashion. It had, therefore, what the Scottish
-law calls a _servitude_ upon Dr Rutherford’s house, conferring the
-perpetual liberty of bringing the deceased inmates through a passage
-into that house and down _its_ stair into the lane.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[220] Now removed and the site built over. There was also a Cunyie
-House in Candlemaker Row, which was used as the Mint during the regency
-of Mary of Guise.
-
-
-
-
-MISS NICKY MURRAY.
-
-
-The dancing assemblies of Edinburgh were for many years, about the
-middle of the last century, under the direction and dictatorship of
-the Honourable Miss Nicky Murray, one of the sisters of the Earl of
-Mansfield. Much good sense, firmness, knowledge of the world and of
-the histories of individuals, as well as a due share of patience and
-benevolence, were required for this office of unrecognised though
-real power; and it was generally admitted that Miss Murray possessed
-the needful qualifications in a remarkable degree, though rather more
-marked by good manners than good-nature. She and her sisters lived for
-many years in a floor of a large building at the head of Bailie Fife’s
-Close—a now unhallowed locality, where, I believe, Francis Jeffrey
-attended his first school. In their narrow mansion, the Miss Murrays
-received flights of young lady-cousins from the country, to be finished
-in their manners and introduced into society. No light task must theirs
-have been, all things considered. I find a highly significant note on
-the subject inserted by an old gentleman in an interleaved copy of my
-first edition: ‘It was from Miss Nicky Murray’s—a relation of the Gray
-family—that my father ran off with my mother, then not sixteen years
-old.’
-
-The Assembly Room of that time was in the _close_ where the
-Commercial Bank was afterwards established.[221] First there
-was a lobby, where chairs were disburdened of their company,
-and where a reduced gentleman, with pretensions to the title of
-Lord Kirkcudbright—descendant of the once great Maclellans of
-Galloway—might have been seen selling gloves; this being the person
-alluded to in a letter written by Goldsmith while a student in
-Edinburgh: ‘One day, happening to slip into Lord Kilcobry’s—don’t be
-surprised, his lordship is only a glover!’ The dancing-room opened
-directly from the lobby, and above stairs was a tea-room. The
-former had a railed space in the centre, within which the dancers
-were arranged, while the spectators sat round on the outside; and no
-communication was allowed between the different sides of this sacred
-pale. The lady-directress had a high chair or throne at one end. Before
-Miss Nicky Murray, Lady Elliot of Minto and Mrs Brown of Coalstoun,
-wives of judges, had exercised this lofty authority, which was thought
-honourable on account of the charitable object of the assemblies.
-The arrangements were of a rigid character, and certainly tending to
-dullness. There being but one set allowed to dance at a time, it was
-seldom that any person was twice on the floor in one night. The most of
-the time was spent in acting the part of lookers-on, which threw great
-duties in the way of conversation upon the gentlemen. These had to
-settle with a partner for the year, and were upon no account permitted
-to change, even for a single night. The appointment took place at the
-beginning of the season, usually at some private party or ball given
-by a person of distinction, where the fans of the ladies were all put
-into a gentleman’s cocked hat; the gentlemen put in their hands and
-took a fan, and to whomsoever the fan belonged, that was to be his
-partner for the season. In the general rigours of this system, which
-sometimes produced ludicrous combinations, there was, however, one
-palliative—namely, the fans being all distinguishable from each other,
-and the gentleman being in general as well acquainted with the fan as
-the face of his mistress, and the hat being open, it was possible to
-peep in, and exercise, to a certain extent, a principle of selection,
-whereby he was perhaps successful in procuring an appointment to his
-mind. All this is spiritedly given in a poem of Sir Alexander Boswell:
-
- ‘Then were the days of modesty of mien!
- Stays for the fat, and quilting for the lean;
- The ribboned stomacher, in many a plait,
- Upheld the chest, and dignified the gait;
- Some Venus, brightest planet of the train,
- Moved in a lustering _halo_, propped with cane.
- Then the _Assembly Close_ received the fair—
- Order and elegance presided there—
- Each gay Right Honourable had her place,
- To walk a minuet with becoming grace.
- No racing to the dance, with rival hurry—
- Such was thy sway, O famed Miss Nicky Murray!
- Each lady’s fan a chosen Damon bore,
- With care selected many a day before;
- For, unprovided with a favourite beau,
- The nymph, chagrined, the ball must needs forego;
- But, previous matters to her taste arranged,
- _Certes_, the constant couple never changed;
- Through a long night, to watch fair Delia’s will,
- The same dull swain was at her elbow still.’
-
-A little before Miss Nicky’s time, it was customary for gentlemen to
-walk alongside the chairs of their partners, with their swords by their
-sides, and so escort them home. They called next afternoon upon their
-Dulcineas to inquire how they were and drink tea. The fashionable time
-for seeing company in those days was the evening, when people were
-all abroad upon the street, as in the forenoon now, making calls and
-_shopping_. The people who attended the assemblies were very _select_.
-Moreover, they were all known to each other; and the introduction of a
-stranger required nice preliminaries. It is said that Miss Murray, on
-hearing a young lady’s name pronounced for the first time, would say:
-‘Miss ——, of what?’ If no territorial addition could be made, she
-manifestly cooled. Upon one occasion, seeing a man at the assembly who
-was born in a low situation and raised to wealth in some humble trade,
-she went up to him, and, without the least deference to his fine-laced
-coat, taxed him with presumption in coming there, and turned him out of
-the room.
-
-Major Topham praises the regularity and propriety observed at the
-assemblies, though gently insinuating their heaviness. He says: ‘I was
-never at an assembly where the authority of the manager was so observed
-or respected. With the utmost politeness, affability, and good-humour,
-Miss Murray attends to every one. All petitions are heard, and demands
-granted, which appear reasonable. The company is so much the more
-obliged to Miss Murray, as the task is by no means to be envied.
-The crowd which immediately surrounds her on entering the room, the
-impetuous applications of _chaperons_, maiden-aunts, and the earnest
-entreaties of lovers to obtain a ticket in one of the first sets for
-the dear object, render the fatigue of the office of lady-directress
-almost intolerable.’[222]
-
-Early hours were kept in those days, and the stinted time was never
-exceeded. When the proper hour arrived for dissolving the party, and
-the young people would crowd round the throne to petition for one other
-set, up rose Miss Nicky in unrelenting rigidity of figure, and with one
-wave of her hand silenced the musicians:
-
- ‘Quick from the summit of the grove they fell,
- And left it inharmonious.’
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[221] The Assembly Room, afterwards occupied by the Commercial Bank,
-was in Bell’s Wynd, to which place it was removed in 1756 from the
-older room in Assembly Close. A scallop-shell above the entrance to
-Bell’s Wynd long commemorated the site of the Clamshell Turnpike,
-the lodging of the Earl of Home, to which Queen Mary, accompanied by
-Darnley, retreated on their return from Dunbar in 1566, rather than
-enter Holyrood so soon after the murder of Rizzio.
-
-[222] It must have been after Miss Nicky Murray’s day that an Edinburgh
-Writer to the Signet, describing the unruliness of an assembly, writes:
-‘I saw an English lady stand up at the head of a sett with a ticket
-No. 1 of that sett. By-and-bye my namesake, Miss Mary ——, came up,
-hauling after her a foolish-looking young man, who did as he was bid,
-and with all the ease in the world placed herself above the stranger,
-No. 1. The lady politely said there must be some mistake, for she had
-that place. “No,” said Miss Mary, “I can’t help your ticket, for I have
-the Lady Directress’s permission to lead down the sett!” The lady had
-spunk, and scolded, for which I liked her the better; only she dealt
-her sarcasms about Scotch politeness, Edinburgh manners, and so forth,
-rather too liberally and too loudly.’
-
-
-
-
-[THE BISHOP’S LAND.
-
-
-On the north side of the High Street, a hundred yards or so below the
-North Bridge, there existed previous to 1813 an unusually large and
-handsome old _land_ or building named the _Bishop’s Land_. It rested
-upon an arcade or _piazza_, as it is called, and the entry in the first
-floor bore the ordinary legend:
-
- BLISSIT BE ZE LORD FOR ALL HIS GIFTIS,
-
-together with the date 1578, and a shield impaled with two coats of
-arms. Along the front of this floor was a balcony composed of brass,
-a thing unique in the ancient city. The house had been the Edinburgh
-residence of Archbishop John Spottiswood. Most unfortunately the whole
-line of building towards the street was burned down in the year 1813.
-
-In the latter part of the last century the Bishop’s Land was regarded
-as a very handsome residence, and it was occupied accordingly by
-persons of consideration. The dictum of an old citizen to me many years
-ago was: ‘Nobody without livery-servants lived in the Bishop’s Land.’
-Sir Stuart Threipland of Fingask occupied the first floor. His estate,
-forfeited by his father in 1716, was purchased back by him, with money
-obtained through his wife, in 1784; and the title, which was always
-given to him by courtesy, was restored as a reality to his descendants
-by George IV. He had himself been engaged in the affair of 1745-6, and
-had accompanied ‘the Prince’ in some part of his wanderings. In the
-hands of this ‘fine old _Scottish_ gentleman,’ for such he was, his
-house in the Bishop’s Land was elegantly furnished, there being in
-particular some well-painted portraits of royal personages—_not of
-the reigning house_. These had all been sent to his father and himself
-by the persons represented in them, who thus showed their gratitude
-for efforts made and sufferings incurred in their behalf. There were
-five windows to the street, three of them lighting the drawing-room;
-the remaining two lighted the eldest son’s room. A dining-room, Sir
-Stuart’s bedroom, his sister Janet’s (who kept house for him) room,
-and other apartments were in the rear, some lighted from the adjacent
-close—and these still exist, having been spared by the fire. The
-kitchen and servants’ rooms were below.
-
-In the next floor above lived the Hamiltons of Pencaitland; in the next
-again, the Aytouns of Inchdairnie. Mrs Aytoun, who was a daughter of
-Lord Rollo, would sometimes come down the stair in a winter evening,
-lighting herself with a little wax-taper, to drink tea with _Mrs_
-Janet Threipland, for so she called herself, though unmarried. In the
-uppermost floor of all lived a reputable tailor and his family. All the
-various tenants, including the tailor, were on good neighbourly terms
-with each other; a pleasant thing to tell of this bit of the old world,
-which has left nothing of the same kind behind it in these later days,
-when we all live at a greater distance, physical and moral, from each
-other.]
-
-
-
-
-JOHN KNOX’S MANSE.
-
-
-The lower portion of the High Street, including _the Netherbow_, was,
-till a recent time, remarkable for the antiquity of the greater number
-of the buildings, insomuch that no equal portion of the city was more
-distinctly a memorial of the general appearance of the whole as it was
-in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. On the north side of the
-High Street, immediately adjacent to the Netherbow, there was a nest
-of tall wooden-fronted houses of one character, and the age of which
-generally might be guessed from the date existing upon one—1562. This
-formed a perfect example of the _High Gait_ as it appeared to Queen
-Mary, excepting that the open booths below had been converted into
-close shops. The _fore-stairs_—that is, outside stairs ascending to
-the _first floor_ (technically so called), from which the women of
-Edinburgh reviled the hapless queen as she rode along the street after
-her surrender at Carberry—were unchanged in this little district.
-
-The popular story regarding houses of this kind is that they took their
-origin in an inconvenience which was felt in having the Boroughmoor
-covered with wood, as it proved from that circumstance a harbour for
-robbers. To banish the robbers, it was necessary to extirpate the wood.
-To get this done, the magistrates granted leave to the citizens to
-project their house-fronts seven feet into the street, provided they
-should execute the work with timber cut from the Boroughmoor. Robert
-Fergusson follows up this story in a burlesque poem by relating how,
-consequently,
-
- ‘Edina’s mansions with lignarian art
- Were piled and fronted. Like an ark she seemed
- To lie on mountain’s top, with shapes replete,
- Clean and unclean——
- To Jove the Dryads prayed, nor prayed in vain,
- For vengeance on her sons. At midnight drear
- Black showers descend, and teeming myriads rise
- Of bugs abhorrent’——
-
-The only authentic information to be obtained on the point is presented
-by Maitland, when he tells us that the clearing of the Boroughmoor
-of timber took place in consequence of a charter from James IV.
-in 1508. He says nothing of robbers, but attributes the permission
-granted by the magistrates for the making of wooden projections merely
-to their desire of getting sale for their timber. After all, I am
-inclined to trace this fashion to taste. The wooden fronts appear to
-have originated in open galleries—an arrangement often spoken of
-in early writings. These, being closed up or formed into a range of
-windows, would produce the wooden-fronted house. It is remarkable
-that the wooden fronts do not in many instances bear the appearance
-of afterthoughts, as the stone structure within often shows such
-an arrangement of the fore wall as seems designed to connect the
-projecting part with the chambers within, or to give these chambers
-as much as possible of the borrowed light. At the same time, it
-is somewhat puzzling to find, in the closes below the buildings,
-gateways with hooks for hinges seven feet or so from the present
-street-front—an arrangement which does not appear necessary on the
-supposition that the houses were built designedly with a stone interior
-and a wooden projection.
-
-In the Netherbow the street receives a contraction from the advance of
-the houses on the north side, thus closing a species of parallelogram,
-of which the Luckenbooths formed the upper extremity—the market-place
-of our ancient city. The uppermost of the prominent houses—having of
-course two fronts meeting in a right angle, one fronting to the line
-of street, the other looking up the High Street—is pointed to by
-tradition as the residence or manse of John Knox during his incumbency
-as minister of Edinburgh, from 1560 till (with few interruptions) his
-death in 1572. It is a picturesque building of three above-ground
-floors, constructed of substantial ashlar masonry, but on a somewhat
-small scale, and terminating in curious gables and masses of chimneys.
-A narrow door, right in the angle, gives access to a small room,
-lighted by one long window presented to the westward, and apparently
-the _hall_ of the mansion in former times. Over the window and door is
-this legend, in an unusually old kind of lettering:
-
- LVFE·GOD·ABVFE·AL·AND·YI·NYCHTBOVR·[AS·]YI·SELF·
-
-The word ‘as’ is obliterated. The words are, in modern English,
-simply the well-known scriptural command: ‘Love God above all, and
-thy neighbour as thyself.’ Perched upon the corner above the door is
-a small effigy of the Reformer, preaching in a pulpit, and pointing
-with his right hand to a stone above his head in that direction, which
-presents in rude sculpture the sun bursting from clouds, with the name
-of the Deity inscribed on his disc in three languages:
-
- ΘΕΟΣ
- DEUS
- GOD
-
-Dr M’Crie, in his _Life of John Knox_, states that the Reformer, on
-commencing duty in Edinburgh at the conclusion of the struggles with
-the queen-regent, ‘lodged in the house of David Forrest, a burgess of
-Edinburgh, from which he removed to the lodging which had belonged to
-Durie, Abbot of Dunfermline.’ The magistrates acted liberally towards
-their minister, giving him a salary of two hundred pounds Scottish
-money, and paying his house-rent for him, at the rate of fifteen merks
-yearly. In October 1561 they ordained the Dean of Guild, ‘with al
-diligence, to mak ane warm studye of dailles to the minister, Johne
-Knox, within his hous, aboue the hall of the same, with lyht and
-wyndokis thereunto, and all uther necessaris.’ This study is generally
-supposed to have been a very small wooden projection, of the kind
-described a few pages back, still seen on the front of the _first
-floor_. Close to it is a window in the angle of the building, from
-which Knox is said by tradition to have occasionally held forth to
-multitudes below.
-
-The second floor, which is accessible by two narrow spiral stairs,
-one to the south, another to the west, contains a tolerably spacious
-room, with a ceiling ornamented by stucco mouldings, and a window
-presented to the westward. A partition has at one time divided this
-room from a narrow one towards the north, the ceiling of which is
-composed of the beams and flooring of the attic flat, all curiously
-painted with flower-work in an ancient taste. Two inferior rooms extend
-still farther to the northward. It is to be remarked that the wooden
-projection already spoken of extends up to this floor, so that there
-is here likewise a small room in front; it contains a fireplace, and a
-recess which might have been a cupboard or a library, besides two small
-windows. That this fireplace, this recess, and also the door by which
-the wooden chamber is entered from the decorated room should all be
-formed in the front wall of the house, and with a necessary relation to
-the wooden projection, strikes one as difficult to reconcile with the
-idea of that projection being an afterthought; the appearances rather
-indicate the whole having been formed at once, as parts of one design.
-The attic floor exhibits strong oaken beams, but the flooring is in bad
-order.
-
-In the lower part of the house there is a small room, said by tradition
-to have been used in times of difficulty for the purpose of baptising
-children; there is also a well to supply the house with water, besides
-a secret stair, represented as communicating subterraneously with a
-neighbouring alley.
-
-From the size of this house, and the variety of accesses to it, it
-becomes tolerably certain that Knox could have occupied only a portion
-of it. The question arises, which part did he occupy? Probability
-seems decidedly in favour of the _first floor_—that containing the
-window from which he is traditionally said to have preached, and where
-his effigy appears. An authentic fact in the Reformer’s life favours
-this supposition. When under danger from the hostility of the queen’s
-party in the castle—in the spring of 1571—‘one evening a musket-ball
-was fired in at his window, and lodged in the roof of the apartment
-in which he was sitting. It happened that he sat at the time in a
-different part of the room from that which he had been accustomed to
-occupy, otherwise the ball, from the direction it took, must have
-struck him’ (M’Crie). The second floor is too high to have admitted
-of a musket being fired in at one of the windows. A ball fired in at
-the ground-floor would not have struck the ceiling. The only feasible
-supposition in the case is that the Reformer dwelt in the _first
-floor_, which was not beyond an assassin’s aim, and yet at such a
-height that a ball fired from the street would hit the ceiling.[223]
-
-[Illustration: JOHN KNOX’S MANSE.
-
-PAGE 274.]
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[223] [The right of this house to be called ‘John Knox’s House’ has
-been strenuously disputed; several other houses in which Knox actually
-lived have been identified by Robert Miller, F.S.A. Scot., Lord Dean of
-Guild of Edinburgh, in _John Knox and the Town Council of Edinburgh,
-with a Chapter on the so-called ‘John Knox’s House’_ (1898). For the
-genuineness of the tradition, said not to be older than 1806, see Lord
-Guthrie’s _John Knox and John Knox’s House_ (1898).]
-
-
-
-
-HYNDFORD’S CLOSE.
-
-
-At the bottom of the High Street, on the south side, there is an
-uncommonly huge and dense mass of stone buildings or _lands_,
-penetrated only by a few narrow closes. One of these is Hyndford’s
-Close, a name indicating the noble family which once had lodgment
-in it. This was a Scotch peerage not without its glories—witness
-particularly the third earl, who acted as ambassador in succession to
-Prussia, to Russia, and to Vienna. It is now extinct: its _bijouterie_,
-its pictures, including portraits of Maria Theresa, and other royal and
-imperial personages, which had been presented as friendly memorials
-to the ambassador, have all been dispersed by the salesman’s hammer,
-and Hyndford’s Close, on my trying to get into it lately (1868), was
-inaccessible (literally) from filth.
-
-[Illustration: Hyndford’s Close.]
-
-The entry and stair at the head of the close on the west side was a
-favourite residence, on account of the ready access to it from the
-street. In the second floor of this house lived, about the beginning of
-the reign of George III., Lady Maxwell of Monreith, and there brought
-up her beautiful daughters, one of whom became Duchess of Gordon. The
-house had a dark passage, and the kitchen door was passed in going
-to the dining-room, according to an agreeable old practice in Scotch
-houses, which lets the guests know on entering what they have to
-expect. The fineries of Lady Maxwell’s daughters were usually hung up,
-after washing, on a screen in this passage to dry; while the coarser
-articles of dress, such as shifts and petticoats, were slung decently
-out of sight at the window, upon a projecting contrivance similar to a
-dyer’s pole, of which numerous specimens still exist at windows in the
-Old Town for the convenience of the poorer inhabitants.
-
-So easy and familiar were the manners of the great in those times,
-fabled to be so stiff and decorous, that Miss Eglintoune, afterwards
-Lady Wallace, used to be sent with the tea-kettle across the street
-to the Fountain Well for water to make tea. Lady Maxwell’s daughters
-were the wildest romps imaginable. An old gentleman, who was their
-relation, told me that the first time he saw these beautiful girls was
-in the High Street, where Miss Jane, afterwards Duchess of Gordon, was
-riding upon a sow, which Miss Eglintoune thumped lustily behind with
-a stick. It must be understood that in the middle of the eighteenth
-century vagrant swine went as commonly about the streets of Edinburgh
-as dogs do in our own day, and were more generally fondled as pets by
-the children of the last generation.[224] It may, however, be remarked
-that the sows upon which the Duchess of Gordon and her witty sister
-rode, when children, were not the common vagrants of the High Street,
-but belonged to Peter Ramsay, of the inn in St Mary’s Wynd, and were
-among the last that were permitted to roam abroad. The two romps used
-to watch the animals as they were let loose in the forenoon from the
-stable-yard (where they lived among the horse-litter), and get upon
-their backs the moment they issued from the close.
-
-The extraordinary cleverness, the genuine wit, and the delightful
-_abandon_ of Lady Wallace made an extraordinary impression on Scottish
-society in her day. It almost seemed as if some faculty divine had
-inspired her. A milliner bringing home a cap to her when she was just
-about to set off to the Leith races was so unlucky as to tear it
-against the buckle of a porter’s knee in the street. ‘No matter,’ said
-her ladyship; and instantly putting it on, restored all to grace by a
-single pin. The cap thus misarranged was found so perfectly exquisite
-that ladies tore their caps on nails, and pinned them on in the hope of
-imitating it. It was, however, a grace beyond the reach of art.
-
-Of the many _bon mots_ attributed to her, one alone seems worthy, from
-its being unhackneyed, of appearing here. The son of Mr Kincaid, king’s
-printer—a great Macaroni, as the phrase went; that is, dandy—was
-nicknamed, from his father’s lucrative patent, _Young Bibles_. This
-beau entering a ballroom one evening, some of the company asked who was
-that extraordinary-looking young man. ‘Only Young Bibles,’ quoth Lady
-Wallace, ‘bound in calf, and gilt, but not lettered!’
-
-[In the same stair in Hyndford’s Close lived another lady of rank,
-and one who, for several reasons, filled in her time a broad space
-in society. This was Anne, Countess of Balcarres, the progenitrix of
-perhaps as many persons as ever any woman was in the same space of
-time. Her eldest daughter, Anne, authoress of the ballad of _Auld
-Robin Gray_, was, of all her eleven children, the one whose name is
-most likely to continue in remembrance—yea, though another of them
-put down the Maroon war in the West Indies. When in Hyndford’s Close,
-Lady Balcarres had for a neighbour in the same alley Dr Rutherford,
-the uncle of Sir Walter Scott; and young Walter, often at his uncle’s,
-occasionally accompanied his aunt ‘Jeanie’ to Lady Balcarres’s.
-Forty years after, having occasion to correspond with Lady Anne
-Barnard, _née_ Lindsay, he told her: ‘I remember all the _locale_ of
-Hyndford’s Close perfectly, even to the Indian screen with Harlequin
-and Columbine, and the harpsichord, though I never had the pleasure of
-hearing Lady Anne play upon it. I suppose the close, once too clean to
-soil the hem of your ladyship’s garment, is now a resort for the lowest
-mechanics—and so wears the world away.... It is, to be sure, more
-picturesque to lament the desolation of towers on hills and haughs,
-than the degradation of an Edinburgh close; but I cannot help thinking
-on the simple and cosie retreats where worth and talent, and elegance
-to boot, were often nestled, and which now are the resort of misery,
-filth, poverty, and vice.’[225]
-
-The late Mrs Meetham, a younger sister of Miss Spence Yeaman, of
-Murie, in the Carse of Gowrie, had often heard her grand-aunt, Miss
-Molly Yeaman, describe, from her own recollection, the tea-drinkings
-of the Countess of Balcarres in Hyndford’s Close. The family was not
-rich, and it still retained something of its ancient Jacobitism. The
-tea-drinkings, as was not uncommon, took place in my lady’s bedroom.
-At the foot of a four-posted bed, exhibiting a finely worked coverlet,
-stood John, an elderly man-servant, and a _character_, in full
-Balcarres livery, an immense quantity of worsted lace on his coat.
-Resting with his arm round a bedpost, he was ready to hand the kettle
-when required. As the ladies went chattering on, there would sometimes
-occur a difficulty about a date or a point in genealogy, and then
-John was appealed to to settle the question. For example, it came to
-be debated how many of the Scotch baronetcies were real; for, as is
-still the case, many of them were known to be fictitious, or assumed
-without legal grounds. Here John was known to be not only learned, but
-eloquent. He began: ‘Sir James Kinloch, Sir Stuart Threipland, Sir
-John Wedderburn, Sir —— Ogilvy, Sir James Steuart of Coltness’ [all
-of them forfeited baronets, be it observed]: ‘these, leddies, are the
-only _real_ baronets. For the rest, I do believe, the Deil’——then a
-figurative declaration not fit for modern print, but which made the
-Balcarres party only laugh, and declare to John that they thought him
-not far wrong.]
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[224] The following advertisement, inserted in the _Edinburgh Courant_
-of August 1, 1754, illustrates the above in a striking manner: ‘If
-any person has lost a LARGE SOW, let them call at the house of Robert
-Fiddes, gardener to Lord Minto, over against the Earl of Galloway’s, in
-the Horse Wynd, where, upon proving the property, paying expenses and
-damages done by the said sow, they may have the same restored.’
-
-[225] Lord Lindsay’s _Lives of the Lindsays_, iii. 190.
-
-
-
-
-HOUSE OF THE MARQUISES OF TWEEDDALE—THE BEGBIE TRAGEDY.
-
-
-[Illustration: Tweeddale Court.]
-
-The town mansion of the Marquises of Tweeddale was one of large extent
-and dimensions, in a court which still bears the title of that family,
-nearly opposite to the mansion of John Knox.[226] When John, the
-fourth marquis, was Secretary of State for Scotland, in the reign of
-George II., this must have been a dwelling of considerable importance
-in the eyes of his countrymen. It had a good garden in the rear,
-with a yard and coach entry from the Cowgate. Now all the buildings
-and ‘pertinents’ are in the occupation of Messrs Oliver & Boyd, the
-well-known publishers.
-
-[Illustration: Scene of the Begbie Murder.]
-
-The passage from the street into Tweeddale Court is narrow and dark,
-and about fifteen yards in length. Here, in 1806, when the mansion was
-possessed as a banking-house by the British Linen Company, there took
-place an extraordinary tragedy. About five o’clock of the evening of
-the 13th of November, when the short midwinter day had just closed,
-a child, who lived in a house accessible from the close, was sent by
-her mother with a kettle to obtain a supply of water for tea from the
-neighbouring well. The little girl, stepping with the kettle in her
-hand out of the public stair into the close, stumbled in the dark over
-something which lay there, and which proved to be the body of a man
-just expiring. On an alarm being given, it was discovered that this
-was William Begbie, a porter connected with the bank, in whose heart
-a knife was stuck up to the haft, so that he bled to death before
-uttering a word which might tend to explain the dismal transaction. He
-was at the same time found to have been robbed of a package of notes to
-the value of above four thousand pounds, which he had been entrusted,
-in the course of his ordinary duty, to carry from the branch of the
-bank at Leith to the head-office.[227] The blow had been given with an
-accuracy and a calculation of consequences showing the most appalling
-deliberation in the assassin; for not only was the knife directed
-straight into the most vital part, but its handle had been muffled in a
-bunch of soft paper, so as to prevent, as was thought, any sprinkling
-of blood from reaching the person of the murderer, by which he might
-have been by some chance detected. The knife was one of those with
-broad thin blades and wooden handles which are used for cutting bread,
-and its rounded front had been ground to a point, apparently for the
-execution of this horrible deed. The unfortunate man left a wife and
-four children to bewail his loss.
-
-The singular nature and circumstances of Begbie’s murder occasioned
-much excitement in the public mind, and every effort was of course
-made to discover the guilty party. No house of a suspicious character
-in the city was left unsearched, and parties were despatched to watch
-and patrol all the various roads leading out into the country. The
-bank offered a reward of five hundred pounds for such information as
-might lead to the conviction of the offender or offenders; and the
-government further promised the king’s pardon to any except the actual
-murderer who, having been concerned in the deed, might discover their
-accomplices. The sheriff of Edinburgh, Mr Clerk Rattray, displayed the
-greatest zeal in his endeavours to ascertain the circumstances of the
-murder, and to detect and seize the murderer, but with surprisingly
-little success. All that could be ascertained was that Begbie, in
-proceeding up Leith Walk on his fatal mission, had been accompanied by
-‘a man;’ and that about the supposed time of the murder ‘a man’ had
-been seen by some children to run out of the close into the street
-and down Leith Wynd, a lane leading off from the Netherbow at a point
-nearly opposite to the close. There was also reason to believe that the
-knife had been bought in a shop about two o’clock on the day of the
-murder, and that it had been afterwards ground upon a grinding-stone
-and smoothed on a hone. A number of suspicious characters were
-apprehended and examined; but all, with one exception, produced
-satisfactory proofs of their innocence. The exception was a carrier
-between Perth and Edinburgh, a man of dissolute and irregular habits,
-of great bodily strength, and known to be a dangerous and desperate
-character. He was kept in custody for a considerable time on suspicion,
-having been seen in the Canongate, near the scene of the murder, a
-very short time after it was committed. It has since been ascertained
-that he was then going about a different business, the disclosure of
-which would have subjected him to a capital punishment. It was in
-consequence of the mystery he felt himself impelled to preserve on this
-subject that he was kept so long in custody; but at length facts and
-circumstances came out to warrant his discharge, and he was discharged
-accordingly.
-
-Months rolled on without eliciting any evidence respecting the murder,
-and, like other wonders, it had ceased in a great measure to engage
-public attention, when, on the 10th of August 1807, a journeyman mason,
-in company with two other men, passing through the Bellevue grounds in
-the neighbourhood of the city, found, in a hole in a stone enclosure
-by the side of a hedge, a parcel containing a large quantity of
-bank-notes, bearing the appearance of having been a good while exposed
-to the weather. After consulting a little, the men carried the package
-to the sheriff’s office, where it was found to contain about £3000 in
-large notes, being those which had been taken from Begbie. The British
-Linen Company rewarded the men with two hundred pounds for their
-honesty; but the circumstance passed without throwing any light on the
-murder itself.
-
-Up to the present day the murderer of Begbie has not been discovered;
-nor is it probable, after the space of time which has elapsed, that he
-will ever be so. It is most likely that the grave has long closed upon
-him. The only person on whom public suspicion alighted with any force
-during the sixteen years ensuing upon the transaction was a medical
-practitioner in Leith, a dissolute man and a gambler, who put an end to
-his own existence not long after the murder. But I am not acquainted
-with any particular circumstances on which this suspicion was grounded
-beyond the suicide, which might spring from other causes. It was not
-till 1822 that any further light was thrown on this mysterious case.
-In a work then published under the title of _The Life and Trial of
-James Mackoull_, there was included a paper by Mr Denovan, the Bow
-Street officer, the object of which was to prove that Mackoull was the
-murderer, and which contained at least one very curious statement.
-
-Mr Denovan had discovered in Leith a man, then acting as a teacher, but
-who in 1806 was a sailor-boy, and who had witnessed some circumstances
-immediately connected with the murder. The man’s statement was as
-follows: ‘I was at that time (November 1806) a boy of fourteen years
-of age. The vessel to which I belonged had made a voyage to Lisbon,
-and was then lying in Leith harbour. I had brought a small present
-from Portugal for my mother and sister, who resided in the Netherbow,
-Edinburgh, immediately opposite to Tweeddale’s Close, leading to the
-British Linen Company’s Bank. I left the vessel late in the afternoon,
-and as the articles I had brought were contraband, I put them under
-my jacket, and was proceeding up Leith Walk, when I perceived a tall
-man carrying a yellow-coloured parcel under his arm, and a genteel
-man, dressed in a black coat, dogging him. I was a little afraid: I
-conceived the man who carried the parcel to be a smuggler, and the
-gentleman who followed him to be a custom-house or excise officer. In
-dogging the man, the supposed officer went from one side of the Walk to
-the other [the Walk is a broad street], as if afraid of being noticed,
-but still kept about the same distance behind him. I was afraid of
-losing what I carried, and shortened sail a little, keeping my eyes
-fixed on the person I supposed to be an officer, until I came to the
-head of Leith Street, when I saw the smuggler take the North Bridge,
-and the custom-house officer go in front of the Register Office; here
-he looked round him, and imagining he was looking for me, I hove
-to, and watched him. He then looked up the North Bridge, and, as I
-conceive, followed the smuggler, for he went the same way. I stood a
-minute or two where I was, and then went forward, walking slowly up
-the North Bridge. I did not, however, see either of the men before me;
-and when I came to the south end or head of the Bridge, supposing that
-they might have gone up the High Street or along the South Bridge, I
-turned to the left, and reached the Netherbow, without again seeing
-either the smuggler or the officer. Just, however, as I came opposite
-to Tweeddale’s Close, _I saw the custom-house officer come running
-out of it with something under his coat_: I think he ran down the
-street. Being much alarmed, and supposing that the officer had also
-seen me and knew what I carried, I deposited my little present in my
-mother’s with all possible speed, and made the best of my way to Leith,
-without hearing anything of the murder of Begbie until next day. On
-coming on board the vessel, I told the mate what a narrow escape I
-conceived I had made: he seemed somewhat alarmed (having probably, like
-myself, smuggled some trifling article from Portugal), and told me
-in a peremptory tone that I should not go ashore again without first
-acquainting him. I certainly heard of the murder before I left Leith,
-and concluded that the man I saw was the murderer; but the idea of
-waiting on a magistrate and communicating what I had seen never struck
-me. We sailed in a few days thereafter from Leith; and the vessel to
-which I belonged having been captured by a privateer, I was carried
-to a French prison, and only regained my liberty at the last peace. I
-can now recollect distinctly the figure of the man I saw; he was well
-dressed, had a genteel appearance, and wore a black coat. I never saw
-his face properly, for he was before me the whole way up the Walk; I
-think, however, he was a stout big man, but not so tall as the man I
-then conceived to be a smuggler.’
-
-This description of the supposed custom-house officer coincides exactly
-with that of the appearance of Mackoull; and other circumstances are
-given which almost make it certain that he was the murderer. This
-Mackoull was a London rogue of unparalleled effrontery and dexterity,
-who for years haunted Scotland, and effected some daring robberies.
-He resided in Edinburgh from September 1805 till the close of 1806,
-and during that time frequented a coffee-house in the _Ship Tavern_ at
-Leith. He professed to be a merchant expelled by the threats of the
-French from Hamburg, and to live by a new mode of dyeing skins, but in
-reality he practised the arts of a gambler and a pickpocket. He had a
-mean lodging at the bottom of New Street in the Canongate, near the
-scene of the murder of Begbie, to which it is remarkable that _Leith
-Wynd_ was the readiest as well as most private access from that spot.
-No suspicion, however, fell upon Mackoull at this period, and he left
-the country for a number of years, at the end of which time he visited
-Glasgow, and there effected a robbery of one of the banks. For this
-crime he did not escape the law. He was brought to trial at Edinburgh
-in 1820, was condemned to be executed, but died in jail while under
-reprieve from his sentence.
-
-The most striking part of the evidence which Mr Denovan adduces against
-Mackoull is the report of a conversation which he had with that person
-in the condemned cell of the Edinburgh jail in July 1820, when Mackoull
-was very doubtful of being reprieved. To pursue his own narrative,
-which is in the third person: ‘He told Captain Sibbald [the superior of
-the prison] that he intended to ask Mackoull a single question relative
-to the murder of Begbie, but would first humour him by a few jokes,
-so as to throw him off his guard, and prevent him from thinking he
-had called for any particular purpose [it is to be observed that Mr
-Denovan had a professional acquaintance with the condemned man]; but
-desired Captain Sibbald to watch the features of the prisoner when he
-(Denovan) put his hand to his chin, for he would then put the question
-he meant. After talking some time on different topics, Mr Denovan put
-this very simple question to the prisoner: “By the way, Mackoull, if
-I am correct, you resided at the foot of New Street, Canongate, in
-November 1806—did you not?” He stared—he rolled his eyes, and, as if
-falling into a convulsion, threw himself back upon his bed. In this
-condition he continued for a few moments, when, as if recollecting
-himself, he started up, exclaiming wildly: “No, —— ——! I was then
-in the East Indies—in the West Indies. What do you mean?” “I mean no
-harm, Mackoull,” he replied; “I merely asked the question for my own
-curiosity; for I think when you left these lodgings you went to Dublin.
-Is it not so?” “Yes, yes, I went to Dublin,” he replied; “and I wish I
-had remained there still. I won £10,000 there at the tables, and never
-knew what it was to want cash, although you wished the folks here to
-believe that they locked me up in Old Start (Newgate), and brought down
-your friend Adkins to swear he saw me there: this was more than your
-duty.” He now seemed to rave, and lose all temper, and his visitor bade
-him good-night, and left him.’
-
-It appears extremely probable, from the strong circumstantial evidence
-which has been offered by Mr Denovan, that Mackoull was the murderer of
-Begbie.
-
-One remaining fact regarding the Netherbow will be listened to with
-some interest. It was the home—perhaps the native spot—of William
-Falconer, the author of _The Shipwreck_, whose father was a wigmaker in
-this street.[228]
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[226] ‘During this peaceable time [1668-1675], he [John, Earl of
-Tweeddale] built the park of Yester of stone and lime, near seven miles
-about, in seven years’ time, at the expense of 20,000 pound; bought
-a house in Edinburgh from Sir William Bruce for 1000 pound sterling,
-and ane other house within the same court, which, being rebuilt from
-the foundation, the price of it and reparations of both stood him
-1000 sterling.’—Father Hay’s _Genealogie of the Hayes of Tweeddale_
-(Edinburgh, 1835), p. 32.
-
-[227] The notes are thus described in the _Hue and Cry_: £1300 in
-twenty-pound notes of Sir W. Forbes and Company; £1000 in twenty-pound
-notes of the Leith Banking Company; £1400 in twenty, ten, and five
-pound notes of different banks; 240 guinea and 440 pound notes of
-different banks—in all, £4392.
-
-[228] It was in this part of the High Street also that Robert
-Lekprevick, the Scottish printer, lived before he removed to St Andrews
-in 1571.
-
-
-
-
-[THE LADIES OF TRAQUAIR.
-
-
-Lady Lovat was at the head of a genus of old ladies of quality, who,
-during the last century, resided in third and fourth _flats_ of Old
-Town houses, wore pattens when they went abroad, had miniatures of the
-Pretender next their hearts, and gave tea and card parties regularly
-every fortnight. Almost every generation of a Scottish family of rank,
-besides throwing off its swarm of male cadets, who went abroad in
-quest of fortune, used to produce a corresponding number of daughters,
-who stayed at home, and for the most part became old maids. These
-gentlewomen, after the death of their parents, when, of course, a
-brother or nephew succeeded to the family seat and estate, were
-compelled to leave home, and make room for the new laird to bring up
-a new generation, destined in time to experience the same fate. Many
-of these ladies, who in Catholic countries would have found protection
-in nunneries, resorted to Edinburgh, where, with the moderate family
-provision assigned them, they passed inoffensive and sometimes
-useful lives, the peace of which was seldom broken otherwise than by
-irruptions of their grand-nephews, who came with the hunger of High
-School boys, or by the more stately calls of their landed cousins and
-brothers, who rendered their visits the more auspicious by a pound of
-hyson for the caddy, or a replenishment of rappee for the snuff-box.
-The _leddies_, as they were called, were at once the terror and the
-admiration of their neighbours in the stair, who looked up to them as
-the patronesses of the _land_, and as shedding a light of gentility
-over the flats below.
-
-In the best days of the Old Town, people of all ranks lived very
-closely and cordially together, and the whole world were in a manner
-next-door neighbours. The population being dense, and the town small,
-the distance between the houses of friends was seldom considerable.
-When a hundred friends lived within the space of so many yards, the
-company was easily collected, and consequently meetings took place
-more frequently, and upon more trivial occasions, than in these latter
-days of stately dinners and fantastic balls. Tea—simple tea—was then
-almost the only meal to which invitations were given. Tea-parties,
-assembling at four o’clock, were resorted to by all who wished for
-elegant social intercourse. There was much careful ceremonial in the
-dispensation of those pretty, small china cups, individualised by the
-numbers marked on each of the miniature spoons which circulated with
-them, and of which four or five returns were not uncommon. The spoon
-in the saucer indicated a wish for more—in the cup the reverse. A few
-tunes on the spinnet, a Scotch song from some young lady (solo), and
-the unfailing whist-table furnished the entertainment. At eight o’clock
-to a minute would arrive the sedan, or the lass with the lantern and
-pattens, and the whole company would be at home before the eight
-o’clock drum of the Town-guard had ceased to beat.
-
-In a house at the head of the Canongate, but having its entrance from
-St Mary’s Wynd, and several stairs up, lived two old maiden ladies of
-the house of Traquair—the Ladies Barbara and Margaret Stuart. They
-were twins, the children of Charles, the fourth earl, and their birth
-on the 3rd of September, the anniversary of the death of Cromwell,
-brought a Latin epigram from Dr Pitcairn—of course previous to 1713,
-which was the year of his own death. The learned doctor anticipated for
-them ‘timid wooers,’ but they nevertheless came to old age unmarried.
-They drew out their innocent, retired lives in this place, where,
-latterly, one of their favourite amusements was to make dolls, and
-little beds for them to lie on—a practice not quite uncommon in days
-long gone by, being to some degree followed by Queen Mary.[229]
-
-I may give, in the words of a long-deceased correspondent, an anecdote
-of the ladies of Traquair, referring to the days when potatoes had as
-yet an equivocal reputation, and illustrative of the frugal scale by
-which our ‘leddies’ were in use to measure the luxuries of their table.
-‘Upon the return one day of their weekly ambassador to the market, and
-the anxious investigation by the old ladies of the contents of Jenny’s
-basket, the little morsel of mutton, with a portion of accompanying
-off-falls, was duly approved of. “But, Jenny, what’s this in the bottom
-of the basket?” “Oo, mem, just a dozen o’ ’taties that Lucky, the
-green-wife, wad ha’e me to tak’—they wad eat sae fine wi’ the mutton.”
-“Na, na, Jenny; tak’ back the ’taties—we need nae provocatives in this
-house.”’
-
-The latest survivor of these Traquair ladies died in 1794.]
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[229] ‘—— deliure a Jacques le tailleur deux chanteaux de damas gris
-broches dor pour faire vne robbe a vne poupine;’ also ‘trois quartz
-et demi de toille dargent et de soze blanche pour faire vne cotte et
-aultre chose a des poupines.’—_Catalogues of the Jewels, Dresses,
-Furniture, &c. of Mary Queen of Scots_, edited by Joseph Robertson.
-Edinburgh, 1863, p. 139.
-
-
-
-
-GREYFRIARS CHURCHYARD.
-
- SIGNING OF THE COVENANT—HENDERSON’S MONUMENT—BOTHWELL BRIDGE
- PRISONERS—A ROMANCE.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration: Henderson’s Monument, Greyfriars.]
-
-This old cemetery—the burial-place of Buchanan,[230] George Jameson
-the painter, Principal Robertson, Dr Blair, Allan Ramsay, Henry
-Mackenzie, and many other men of note—whose walls are a circle of
-aristocratic sepulchres, will ever be memorable as the scene of the
-Signing of the Covenant; the document having first been produced in the
-church, after a sermon by Alexander Henderson, and signed by all the
-congregation, from the Earl of Sutherland downward, after which it was
-handed out to the multitudes assembled in the kirkyard, and signed on
-the flat monuments, amidst tears, prayers, and aspirations which could
-find no words; some writing with their blood! Near by, resting well
-from all these struggles, lies the preacher under a square obelisk-like
-monument; near also rests, in equal peace, the Covenant’s enemy, Sir
-George Mackenzie. The inscriptions on Henderson’s stone were ordered
-by Parliament to be erased at the Restoration; and small depressions
-are pointed out in it as having been inflicted by bullets from the
-soldiery when executing this order. With the ’88 came a new order of
-things, and the inscriptions were then quietly reinstated.
-
-[Illustration: GREYFRIARS’ CHURCHYARD.
-
-PAGE 288.]
-
-
-BOTHWELL BRIDGE PRISONERS.
-
-As if there had been some destiny in the matter, the Greyfriars
-Churchyard became connected with another remarkable event in the
-religious troubles of the seventeenth century. At the south-west
-angle, accessible by an old gateway bearing emblems of mortality, and
-which is fitted with an iron-rail gate of very old workmanship, is a
-kind of supplement to the burying-ground—an oblong space, now having
-a line of sepulchral enclosures on each side, but formerly empty.
-On these enclosures the visitor may remark, as he passes, certain
-names venerable in the history of science and of letters; as, for
-instance, Joseph Black and Alexander Tytler. On one he sees the name of
-Gilbert Innes of Stow, who left a million, to take six feet of earth
-here. These, however, do not form the matter in point. Every lesser
-particular becomes trivial beside the extraordinary use to which the
-place was put by the Government in the year 1679. Several hundred of
-the prisoners taken at Bothwell Bridge were confined here in the open
-air, under circumstances of privation now scarcely credible. They had
-hardly anything either to lie upon or to cover them; their allowance of
-provision was four ounces of bread per day, with water derived from one
-of the city pipes, which passed near the place. They were guarded by
-day by eight and through the night by twenty-four men; and the soldiers
-were told that if any prisoner escaped, they should answer it life for
-life by cast of dice. If any prisoner rose from the ground by night, he
-was shot at. Women alone were permitted to commune with them, and bring
-them food or clothes; but these had often to stand at the entrance
-from morning till night without getting access, and were frequently
-insulted and maltreated by the soldiers, without the prisoners being
-able to protect them, although in many cases related by the most
-endearing ties. In the course of several weeks a considerable number
-of the prisoners had been liberated upon signing a bond, in which they
-promised never again to take up arms against the king or without his
-authority; but it appears that about four hundred, refusing mercy on
-such terms, were kept in this frightful bivouac for five months, being
-only allowed at the approach of winter to have shingle huts erected
-over them, which was boasted of as a great mercy. Finally, on the 15th
-of November, a remnant, numbering two hundred and fifty-seven, were put
-on board a ship to be sent to Barbadoes. The vessel was wrecked on one
-of the Orkney Islands, when only about forty came ashore alive.
-
-From the gloom of this sad history there is shed one ray of romance.
-Amongst the charitable women of Edinburgh who came to minister to
-the prisoners, there was one attended by a daughter—a young and, at
-least by right of romance, a fair girl. Every few days they approached
-this iron gate with food and clothes, either from their own stores
-or collected among neighbours. Between the young lady and one of the
-juvenile prisoners an attachment sprang up. Doubtless she loved him for
-the dangers he had passed in so good a cause, and he loved her because
-she pitied them. In happier days, long after, when their constancy had
-been well tried by an exile which he suffered in the plantations, this
-pair were married, and settled in Edinburgh, where they had sons and
-daughters. A respectable elderly citizen tells me he is descended from
-them.[231]
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[230] A skull represented as Buchanan’s has long been shown in the
-College of Edinburgh. It is extremely thin, and being long ago shown in
-company with that of a known idiot, which was, on the contrary, very
-thick, it seemed to form a commentary upon the popular expression which
-sets forth density of bone as an invariable accompaniment of paucity of
-brain. The author of a diatribe called _Scotland Characterised_, which
-was published in 1701, and may be found in the _Harleian Miscellany_,
-tells us that he had seen the skull in question, and that it bore ‘a
-very pretty distich upon it [the composition of Principal Adamson, who
-had caused the skull to be lifted]—the first line I have forgot, but
-the second was:
-
- “Et decus es tumulo jam, Buchanane, tuo.”’
-
-[231] [Dr David Hay Fleming has shown that the contemporary evidence is
-all in favour of the Covenant’s having been signed _in_ the Greyfriars’
-Church, and not in the churchyard; see a chapter by him in Mr Moir
-Bryce’s _Old Greyfriars’ Church, Edinburgh_ (1912). And in the same
-book Mr Moir Bryce has proved that the small strip of ground long
-erroneously believed to be the Covenanters’ prison was not separated
-off till 1703-4, and that the Covenanters were interned on a much
-larger area to the east, now built over.]
-
-
-
-
-STORY OF MRS MACFARLANE.
-
- ‘Let them say I am romantic; so is every one said to be that
- either admires a fine thing or does one. On my conscience, as
- the world goes, ’tis hardly worth anybody’s while to do one for
- the honour of it. Glory, the only pay of generous actions, is
- now as ill paid as other just debts; and neither Mrs Macfarlane
- for immolating her lover, nor you for constancy to your lord,
- must ever hope to be compared to Lucretia or Portia.’—_Pope to
- Lady Mary W. Montagu._
-
-
-Pope here alludes to a tragical incident which took place in Edinburgh
-on the 2nd of October 1716. The victim was a young Englishman, who had
-been sent down to Scotland as a Commissioner of Customs. It appears
-that Squire Cayley, or Captain Cayley, as he was alternatively called,
-had become the slave of a shameful passion towards Mrs Macfarlane,
-a woman of uncommon beauty, the wife of Mr John Macfarlane, Writer
-to the Signet in Edinburgh. One Saturday forenoon Mrs Macfarlane was
-exposed, by the treachery of Captain Cayley’s landlady, with whom she
-was acquainted, to an insult of the most atrocious kind on his part, in
-the house where he lodged, which seems to have been situated in a close
-in the Cowgate, opposite to what were called the Back Stairs.[232]
-Next Tuesday Mr Cayley waited upon Mrs Macfarlane at her own house,
-and was shown into the drawing-room. According to an account given out
-by his friends, he was anxious to apologise for his former rudeness.
-From another account, it would appear that he had circulated reports
-derogatory to the lady’s honour, which she was resolved to punish. A
-third story represents him as having repeated the insult which he had
-formerly offered; whereupon she went into another room, and presently
-came back with a pair of pistols in her hand. On her bidding him
-leave the house instantly, he said: ‘What, madam, d’ye design to act
-a comedy?’ To which she answered that ‘_he would find it a tragedy if
-he did not retire_.’ The infatuated man not obeying her command, she
-fired one of the pistols, which, however, only wounded him slightly
-in the left wrist, the bullet slanting down into the floor. The mere
-instinct, probably, of self-preservation caused him to draw his sword;
-but before he could use it she fired the other pistol, the shot of
-which penetrated his heart. ‘This dispute,’ says a letter of the day,
-‘was so close that Mr Cayley’s shirt was burnt at the sleeves with the
-fire of one of the pistols, and his cravat and the breast of his shirt
-with the fire of the other.’[233] Mrs Macfarlane immediately left the
-room, locking the door upon the dead body, and sent a servant for her
-husband, who was found at a neighbouring tavern. On his coming home
-about an hour after, she took him by the sleeve, and leading him into
-the room where the corpse lay, explained the circumstances which had
-led to the bloody act. Mr Macfarlane said: ‘Oh, woman! what have you
-done?’ But soon seeing the necessity for prompt measures, he went out
-again to consult with some of his friends. ‘They all advised,’ says the
-letter just quoted, ‘that he should convey his wife away privately, to
-prevent her lying in jail, till a precognition should be taken of the
-affair, and it should appear in its true light. Accordingly [about six
-o’clock], she walked down the High Street, followed by her husband at a
-little distance, and now absconds.
-
-‘The thing continued a profound secret to all except those concerned in
-the house till past ten at night, when Mr Macfarlane, having provided a
-safe retreat for his wife, returned and gave orders for discovering it
-to the magistrates, who went and viewed the body of the deceased, and
-secured the house and maid, and all else who may become evidence of the
-fact.’
-
-Another contemporary says: ‘I saw his [Cayley’s] corpse after he
-was cereclothed, and saw his blood where he lay on the floor for
-twenty-four hours after he died, just as he fell; so it was a
-difficulty to straight him.’
-
-A careful investigation was made into every circumstance connected
-with this fatal affair, but without demonstrating anything except the
-passionate rashness or magnanimity of the fair homicide. Mr Macfarlane
-was discharged upon his own affirmation that he knew nothing of the
-deed till after it had taken place. A pamphlet was published by Mrs
-Murray, Mr Cayley’s landlady, who seems to have kept a grocery shop
-in the Cowgate, vindicating herself from the imputation which Mrs
-Macfarlane’s tale had thrown upon her character; but to this there
-appeared an answer, from some friend of the other party, in which the
-imputation was fixed almost beyond the possibility of doubt. Mrs Murray
-denied that Mrs Macfarlane had been in her house on the Saturday before
-the murder; but evidence was given that she was seen issuing from
-the close in which Mrs Murray resided, and, after ascending the Back
-Stairs, was observed passing through the Parliament Square towards her
-own house.
-
-It will surprise every one to learn that this Scottish Lucrece was
-a woman of only nineteen or twenty years of age, and some months
-_enceinte_, at the time when she so boldly vindicated her honour. She
-was a person of respectable connections, being a daughter of Colonel
-Charles Straiton, ‘a gentleman of great honour,’ says one of the
-letters already quoted, and who further appears to have been entrusted
-with high negotiations by the Jacobites during the reign of Queen Anne.
-By her mother, she was granddaughter to Sir Andrew Forrester.
-
-Of the future history of Mrs Macfarlane we have but one glimpse, but
-it is of a romantic nature. Margaret Swinton, who was the aunt of Sir
-Walter Scott’s mother, and round whom he and his boy-brothers used
-to close to listen to her tales, remembered being one Sunday left by
-her parents at home in their house of Swinton in Berwickshire, while
-the rest of the family attended church. Tiring of the solitude of her
-little nursery, she stole quietly downstairs to the parlour, which
-she entered somewhat abruptly. There, to her surprise, she beheld the
-most beautiful woman she had ever seen, sitting at the breakfast-table
-making tea. She believed it could be no other than one of those
-enchanted queens whom she had heard of in fairy tales. The lady, after
-a pause of surprise, came up to her with a sweet smile, and conversed
-with her, concluding with a request that she would speak only to her
-mamma of the stranger whom she had seen. Presently after, little
-Margaret having turned her back for a few moments, the beautiful vision
-had vanished. The whole appeared like a dream. By-and-by the family
-returned, and Margaret took her mother aside that she might talk of
-this wonderful apparition. Mrs Swinton applauded her for thus observing
-the injunction which had been laid upon her. ‘Had you not,’ she added,
-‘it might have cost that lady her life.’ Subsequent explanations made
-Margaret aware that she had seen the unfortunate Mrs Macfarlane, who,
-having some claim of kindred upon the Swinton family, had been received
-by them, and kept in a secret room till such time as she could venture
-to make her way out of the country. On Margaret looking away for a
-moment, the lady had glided by a sliding panel into her Patmos behind
-the wainscot, and thus unwittingly increased the child’s apprehension
-of the whole being an event out of the course of nature.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[232] The Back Stairs, built on the site of St Giles’ Churchyard, gave
-direct communication between the Cowgate and Old Parliament Square. It
-was by this way that Robertson the smuggler escaped from the Tolbooth
-Church, where he and his accomplice Wilson had been taken, as was usual
-with condemned prisoners, the Sunday before their execution. It was
-Porteous’s behaviour at the execution of Wilson that led to the riot
-and his own death in the Grassmarket.
-
-[233] The pistols belonged to Mr Cayley himself, having been borrowed a
-few days before by Mr Macfarlane.
-
-
-
-
-THE CANONGATE.
-
- DISTINGUISHED INHABITANTS IN FORMER TIMES—STORY OF A
- BURNING—MOROCCO’S LAND—NEW STREET.
-
-
-The Canongate, which takes its name from the Augustine canons of
-Holyrood (who were permitted to build it by the charter of David I. in
-1128, and afterwards ruled it as a burgh of regality), was formerly
-the court end of the town. As the main avenue from the palace into
-the city, it has borne upon its pavement the burden of all that was
-beautiful, all that was gallant, all that has become historically
-interesting in Scotland for the last six or seven hundred years. It
-still presents an antique appearance, although many of the houses are
-modernised. There is one with a date from Queen Mary’s reign,[234] and
-many may be guessed, from their appearance, to be of even an earlier
-era. Previously to the Union, when the palace ceased to be occasionally
-inhabited, as it had formerly been, by at least the vicar of majesty in
-the person of the Commissioner to the Parliament, the place was densely
-inhabited by persons of distinction. Allan Ramsay, in lamenting the
-death of Lucky Wood, says:
-
- ‘Oh, Canigate, puir elrich hole,
- What loss, what crosses does thou thole!
- London and death gars thee look droll,
- And hing thy head;
- Wow but thou has e’en a cauld coal
- To blaw indeed;’
-
-and mentions in a note that this place was ‘the greatest sufferer by
-the loss of our members of parliament, which London now enjoys, many of
-them having had their houses there;’ a fact which Maitland confirms.
-Innumerable traces are to be found, in old songs and ballads, of the
-elegant population of the Canongate in a former day. In the piteous
-tale of Marie Hamilton—one of the Queen’s Maries—occurs this simple
-but picturesque stanza:
-
- ‘As she cam’ doun the Cannogait,
- The Cannogait sae free,
- Mony a lady looked owre her window,
- Weeping for this ladye.’
-
-An old popular rhyme expresses the hauteur of these Canongate dames
-towards their city neighbours of the male sex:
-
- ‘The lasses o’ the Canongate,
- Oh they are wondrous nice;
- They winna gi’e a single kiss
- But for a double price.
-
- Gar hang them, gar hang them,
- Hich upon a tree;
- For we’ll get better up the gate
- For a bawbee!’
-
-[Illustration: Weir’s Close, Canongate—wretchedly squalid.]
-
-Even in times comparatively modern, this faubourg was inhabited by
-persons of very great consideration.[235] Within the memory of a lady
-living in 1830, it used to be a common thing to hear, among other
-matters of gossip, ‘_that there was to be a braw flitting[236] in the
-Canongate to-morrow_;’ and parties of young people were made up to go
-and see the fine furniture brought out, sitting perhaps for hours in
-the windows of some friend on the opposite side of the street, while
-cart after cart was laden with magnificence.[237] Many of the houses
-to this day are fit for the residence of a first-rate family in every
-respect but _vicinage_ and _access_. The last grand blow was given to
-the place by the opening of the road along the Calton Hill in 1817,
-which rendered it no longer the avenue of approach to the city from
-the east. Instead of profiting by the comparative retirement which it
-acquired on that occasion, it seemed to become the more wretchedly
-squalid from its being the less under notice—as a gentleman dresses
-the least carefully when not expecting visitors. It is now a secluded
-and, in general, meanly inhabited suburb, only accessible by ways
-which, however lightly our fathers and grandfathers might regard them,
-are hardly now pervious to a lady or gentleman without shocking more
-of the senses than one, besides the difficulty of steering one’s way
-through the herds of the idle and the wretched who encumber the street.
-
-One of the houses near the head of the Canongate, on the north side
-of the street, was indicated to me by an old lady a few years ago as
-that which tradition in her young days pointed to in connection with a
-wild story related in the notes to _Rokeby_. She had often heard the
-tale told, nearly in the same manner as it has been given by Scott, and
-the site of the house concerned in the tragedy was pointed out to her
-by her seniors. Perhaps the reader will again excuse a quotation from
-the writings of our late gifted fellow-townsman: if to be related at
-all—and surely in a work devoted to Edinburgh popular legends it could
-not rightly be overlooked—it may as well be given in the language of
-the prince of modern _conteurs_:
-
-‘About the beginning of the eighteenth century, when the large castles
-of the Scottish nobles, and even the secluded hotels, like those
-of the French _noblesse_, which they possessed in Edinburgh, were
-sometimes the scenes of strange and mysterious transactions, a divine
-of singular sanctity was called up at midnight to pray with a person
-at the point of death. This was no unusual summons; but what followed
-was alarming. He was put into a sedan-chair, and after he had been
-transported to a remote part of the town, the bearers insisted upon
-his being blindfolded. The request was enforced by a cocked pistol,
-and submitted to; but in the course of the discussion, he conjectured,
-from the phrases employed by the chairmen, and from some part of their
-dress, not completely concealed by their cloaks, that they were greatly
-above the menial station they assumed. After many turns and windings,
-the chair was carried upstairs into a lodging, where his eyes were
-uncovered, and he was introduced into a bedroom, where he found a
-lady, newly delivered of an infant. He was commanded by his attendants
-to say such prayers by her bedside as were fitting for a person not
-expected to survive a mortal disorder. He ventured to remonstrate,
-and observe that her safe delivery warranted better hopes. But he was
-sternly commanded to obey the orders first given, and with difficulty
-recollected himself sufficiently to acquit himself of the task imposed
-on him. He was then again hurried into the chair; but as they conducted
-him downstairs he heard the report of a pistol. He was safely conducted
-home; a purse of gold was forced upon him; but he was warned, at the
-same time, that the least allusion to this dark transaction would cost
-him his life. He betook himself to rest, and after long and broken
-musing, fell into a deep sleep. From this he was awakened by his
-servant, with the dismal news that a fire of uncommon fury had broken
-out in the house of ——, near the head of the Canongate, and that it
-was totally consumed; with the shocking addition that the daughter of
-the proprietor, a young lady eminent for beauty and accomplishments,
-had perished in the flames. The clergyman had his suspicions, but to
-have made them public would have availed nothing. He was timid; the
-family was of the first distinction; above all, the deed was done,
-and could not be amended. Time wore away, however, and with it his
-terrors. He became unhappy at being the solitary depositary of this
-fearful mystery, and mentioned it to some of his brethren, through
-whom the anecdote acquired a sort of publicity. The divine, however,
-had been long dead, and the story in some degree forgotten, when a
-fire broke out again on the very same spot where the house of —— had
-formerly stood, and which was now occupied by buildings of an inferior
-description. When the flames were at their height, the tumult which
-usually attends such a scene was suddenly suspended by an unexpected
-apparition. A beautiful female, in a nightdress extremely rich, but at
-least half a century old, appeared in the very midst of the fire, and
-uttered these tremendous words in her vernacular idiom: “_Anes_ burned,
-_twice_ burned; the _third_ time I’ll scare you all!” The belief in
-this story was formerly so strong that on a fire breaking out, and
-seeming to approach the fatal spot, there was a good deal of anxiety
-testified, lest the apparition should make good her denunciation.’
-
-A little way farther down the Canongate, on the same side, is an
-old-fashioned house called _Morocco’s Land_, having an alley passing
-under it, over which is this inscription[238]—a strange cry of the
-spirit of man to be heard in a street:
-
- MISERERE MEI, DOMINE: A PECCATO, PROBRO,
- DEBITO, ET MORTE SUBITA, LIBERA ME.
-
-From whom this exclamation proceeded I have never learned; but the
-house, which is of more modern date than the legend, has a story
-connected with it. It is said that a young woman belonging to
-Edinburgh, having been taken upon a voyage by an African rover, was
-sold to the harem of the Emperor of Morocco, with whom she became a
-favourite. Mindful, like her countrymen in general, of her native land
-and her relations, she held such a correspondence with home as led to
-a brother of hers entering into merchandise, and conducting commercial
-transactions with Morocco. He was successful, and realised a little
-fortune, out of which he built this stately mansion. From gratitude,
-or out of a feeling of vanity regarding his imperial brother-in-law,
-he erected a statue of that personage in front of his house—a black,
-naked figure, with a turban and a necklace of beads; such being the
-notion which a Scottish artist of those days entertained of the
-personal aspect of the chief of one of the Mohammedan states of Africa.
-And this figure, perched in a little stone pulpit, still exists. As to
-the name bestowed upon the house, it would most probably arise from the
-man being in the first place called _Morocco_ by way of sobriquet, as
-is common when any one becomes possessed by a particular subject, and
-often speaks of it.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration: Morocco’s Land.]
-
-A little farther along is the opening of New Street, a modern offshoot
-of the ancient city, dating from a time immediately before the rise
-of the New Town. Many persons of consequence lived here: Lord Kames,
-in a neat house at the top, on the east side—an edifice once thought
-so fine that people used to bring their country cousins to see it;
-Lord Hailes, in a house more than half-way down, afterwards occupied
-by Mr Ruthven, mechanist; Sir Philip Ainslie, in another house in
-the same row. The passers-by were often arrested by the sight of Sir
-Philip’s preparations for a dinner-party through the open windows,
-the show of plate being particularly great. Now all these mansions
-are left to become workshops. _Sic transit._[239] Opposite to Kames’s
-house is a small circular arrangement of causeway, indicating where St
-John’s Cross formerly stood. Charles I., at his ceremonial entry into
-Edinburgh in 1633, knighted the provost at St John’s Cross.[240]
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[234] A little below the church.
-
-[235] Subjoined is a list of persons of note who lived in the Canongate
-in the early days of the late Mr Chalmers Izett, whose memory extended
-back to 1769:
-
- ‘DUKES.
-
- Hamilton.
- Queensberry.
-
- EARLS.
-
- Breadalbane.
- Hyndford.
- Wemyss.
- Balcarras.
- Moray.
- Dalhousie.
- Haddington.
- Mar.
- Srathmore.
- Traquair.
- Selkirk.
- Dundonald.
- Kintore.
- Dunmore.
- Seafield.
- Panmure.
-
- COUNTESSES.
-
- Tweeddale.
- Lothian.
-
- LORDS.
-
- Haddo.
- Colvill.
- Blantyre.
- Nairn.
- Semple.
- A. Gordon.
- Cranstoun.
-
- L. OF SESSION.
-
- Eskgrove.
- Hailes.
- Prestongrange.
- Kames.
- Milton.
- Montgomery.
- Bannatyne.
-
- BARONETS.
-
- Sir J. Grant.
- Sir J. Suttie.
- Sir J. Whiteford.
- Sir J. Stewart.
- Sir J. Stirling.
- Sir J. Sinclair, Glorat.
- Sir J. Halkett.
- Sir James Stirling.
- Sir D. Hay.
- Sir B. Dunbar.
- Sir J. Scott, Ancrum.
- Sir R. Anstruther.
- Sir J. Sinclair, Ulbster.
-
- COMMANDERS-IN-CHIEF.
-
- General Oughton.
- General Skene.
- Lord A. Gordon.
- Lord Moira.
-
- EMINENT MEN.
-
- Adam Smith.
- Dr Young.
- Dugald Stewart.
- Dr Gardner.
- Dr Gregory.
-
- BANK.
-
- Douglas, Heron, and Company.
-
- LADIES’ BOARDING-SCHOOL.
-
- Mrs Hamilton, Chessels’s Court.
-
- PRINCIPAL INNS.
-
- Ramsay’s, St Mary’s Wynd.
- Boyd’s, Head of Canongate.
-
-‘Two coaches went down the Canongate to Leith—one hour in going, and
-one hour in returning.’
-
-[236] Removal.
-
-[237] ‘At a former period, when the Canongate of Edinburgh was a more
-fashionable residence than at present, a lady of rank who lived in one
-of the closes, before going out to an evening-party, and at a time when
-hairdressers and peruke-makers were much in demand, requested a servant
-(newly come home) to tell Tam Tough the hairdresser to come to her
-immediately. The servant departed in quest of Puff, but had scarcely
-reached the street before she forgot the barber’s name. Meeting with a
-caddy, she asked him if he knew where the hairdresser lived. “Whatna
-hairdresser is ’t?” replied the caddy. “I ha’e forgot his name,”
-answered she. “What kind o’ name wus ’t?” responded Donald. “As near
-as I can mind,” said the girl, “it was a name that wad neither _rug_
-nor _rive_.” “The deil ’s in ’t,” answered Donald, “but that’s a tam’d
-tough name.” “Thank ye, Donald, that’s the man’s name I wanted—_Tam
-Tough_.”’—[_From an Edinburgh Newspaper._]
-
-[238] The inscription is now removed.
-
-[239] With the exception of Lord Kames’s house, all the others
-referred to have been swept away by the North British Railway and the
-Corporation Gasworks, which at one time occupied the eastern side of
-the street.
-
-[240] Although it was outside the wall, the city authorities
-claimed jurisdiction over the Canongate as far as St John’s Cross,
-notwithstanding that the Canongate was a separate burgh, which
-it continued to be till the middle of the nineteenth century.
-Proclamations were made at St John’s Cross as well as at the Mercat
-Cross in the High Street, and at it the Canongate burgh officials
-joined the city fathers when paying ceremonial visits to Holyrood.
-
-
-
-
-ST JOHN STREET.
-
- LORD MONBODDO’S SUPPERS—THE SISTER OF SMOLLETT—ANECDOTE OF
- HENRY DUNDAS.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-St John Street, so named with reference to St John’s Cross above
-mentioned, was one of the heralds of the New Town. In the latter
-half of the last century it was occupied solely by persons of
-distinction—nobles, judges, and country gentleman; now it is
-possessed as exclusively by persons of the middle rank. In No. 13 lived
-that eccentric genius, Lord Monboddo, whose supper-parties, conducted
-in classic taste, frequented by the _literati_, and for a time presided
-over by an angel in the form of a daughter of his lordship, were of
-immense attraction in their day. In a stair at the head of this street
-lived the sister of the author of _Roderick Random_.
-
-Smollett’s life as a literary adventurer in London, and the full
-participation he had in the woes of authors by profession, have
-perhaps conveyed an erroneous idea of his birth and connections. The
-Smolletts of Dumbartonshire were in reality what was called in Scotland
-a good old family. The novelist’s own grandfather had been one of the
-commissioners for the Union between England and Scotland. And it is an
-undoubted fact that Tobias himself, if he had lived two or three years
-longer, would have become the owner of the family estate, worth about
-a thousand a year. All this, to any one conversant with the condition
-of the Scottish gentry in the early part of the last century, will
-appear quite consistent with his having been brought up as a druggist’s
-apprentice in Glasgow—‘the bubbly-nosed callant, wi’ the stane in his
-pouch,’ as his master affectionately described him, with reference to
-his notorious qualities as a Pickle.
-
-The sister of Smollett—she who, failing him, did succeed to the family
-property—was a Mrs Telfer, domiciled as a gentle widow in a common
-stair at the head of St John Street (west side), first door up. She
-is described as a somewhat stern-looking specimen of her sex, with a
-high cast of features, but in reality a good-enough-natured woman, and
-extremely shrewd and intelligent. One passion of her genus possessed
-her—whist. A relative tells me that one of the city magistrates, who
-was a tallow-chandler, calling upon her one evening, she said: ‘Come
-awa, bailie, and take a trick at the cartes.’
-
-‘Troth, ma’am,’ said he, ‘I hav’na a bawbee in my pouch.’
-
-‘Tut, man, ne’er mind that,’ replied the lady; ‘let’s e’en play for a
-pund o’ candles!’
-
-During his last visit to Edinburgh (1766)—the visit which occasioned
-_Humphry Clinker_—Smollett lived in his sister’s house. A person who
-recollects seeing him there describes him as dressed in black clothes,
-tall, and extremely handsome, but quite unlike the portraits at the
-front of his works, all of which are disclaimed by his relations. The
-unfortunate truth appears to be that the world is in possession of no
-genuine likeness of Smollett! He was very peevish, on account of the
-ill-health to which he had been so long a martyr, and used to complain
-much of a severe ulcerous disorder in his arm.
-
-His wife, according to the same authority, was a Creole, with a dark
-complexion, though, upon the whole, rather pretty—a fine lady, but a
-silly woman. Yet she had been the Narcissa of _Roderick Random_.[241]
-
-In _Humphry Clinker_, Smollett works up many observations of things and
-persons which he had made in his recent visit to Scotland. His relative
-Commissary Smollett, and the family seat near Loch Lomond, receive
-ample notice. The story in the family is that while Matthew Bramble was
-undoubtedly himself, he meant in the gay and sprightly Jerry Melford
-to describe his sister’s son, Major Telfer, and in Liddy to depict his
-own daughter, who was destined to be the wife of the major, but, to
-the inexpressible and ineffaceable grief of her father, died before
-the scheme could be accomplished. Jerry, it will be recollected, ‘got
-some damage from the bright eyes of the charming Miss R——n, whom he
-had the honour to dance with at the ball.’ Liddy contracted an intimate
-friendship with the same person. This young beauty was Eleonora Renton,
-charming by the true right divine, for she was daughter of Mr Renton
-of Lamerton, by Lady Susan Montgomery, one of the fair offshoots of
-the house of Eglintoune, described in a preceding article. A sister
-of hers was married to Smollett’s eldest nephew, Telfer, who became
-inheritor of the family estate, and on account of it took the surname
-of Smollett: a large modern village in Dumbartonshire takes its name
-from this lady. It seems to have been this connection which brought
-the charming Eleonora under the novelist’s attention. She afterwards
-married Charles Sharpe of Hoddam, and became the mother of Charles
-Kirkpatrick Sharpe, the well-known antiquary. Strange to say, the lady
-whose bright eyes had flamed upon poor Smollett’s soul in the middle of
-the last century, was living so lately as 1836.
-
-[Illustration: ST JOHN’S CLOSE.
-Entrance to Canongate Kilwinning Mason Lodge.
-
-PAGE 305.]
-
-When Smollett was confined in the King’s Bench Prison for the libel
-upon Admiral Knowles, he formed an intimacy with the celebrated
-Tenducci. This melodious singing-bird had recently got his wings
-clipped by his creditors, and was mewed up in the same cage with the
-novelist. Smollett’s friendship proceeded to such a height that he paid
-the vocalist’s debts from his own purse, and procured him his liberty.
-Tenducci afterwards visited Scotland, and was one night singing in a
-private circle, when somebody told him that a lady present was a near
-relation of his benefactor; upon which the grateful Italian prostrated
-himself before her, kissed her hands, and acted so many fantastic
-extravagances, after the foreign fashion, that she was put extremely
-out of countenance.
-
-On the west side of the street, immediately to the south of the
-Canongate Kilwinning Mason Lodge, there is a neat self-contained house
-of old fashion, with a flower-plot in front. This was the residence
-of —— Anderson, merchant in Leith, the father of seven sons, all
-of whom attained respectable situations in life: one was the late Mr
-Samuel Anderson of St Germains, banker. They had been at school with Mr
-Henry Dundas (afterwards Lord Melville); and when he had risen to high
-office, he called one day on Mr Anderson, and expressed his earnest
-wish to have the pleasure of dining with his seven school companions,
-all of whom happened at that time to be at home. The meeting took place
-at Mr Dundas’s, and it was a happy one, particularly to the host, who,
-when the hour of parting arrived, filled a bumper in high elation to
-their healths, and mentioned that they were the only men who had ever
-dined with him since he became a public servant who had not asked some
-favour either for themselves or their friends.
-
-The house adjoining to the one last mentioned—having its gable to the
-street, and a garden to the south—was, about 1780, the residence of
-the Earl of Wemyss. A Lady Betty Charteris, of this family, occupied
-the one farthest to the south on that side of the street. She was a
-person of romantic history, for, being thwarted in an affair of the
-heart, she lay in bed for twenty-six years, till dismissed to the world
-where such troubles are unknown.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[241] Strap in _Roderick Random_ was supposed to represent one
-Hutchinson, a barber near Dunbar. The man encouraged the idea as much
-as possible. When Mr [Warren] Hastings (governor of India) and his wife
-visited Scotland, they sent for this man, and were so pleased with him
-that Mr Hastings afterwards sent him a couple of razors, mounted in
-gold, from London.
-
-
-
-
-MORAY HOUSE.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-In the Canongate there is a house which has had the fortune to be
-connected with more than one of the most interesting points in our
-history. It is usually styled Moray House, being the entailed property
-of the noble family of Moray. The large proportions and elegant
-appearance of this mansion distinguish it from all the surrounding
-buildings, and in the rear (1847) there is a fine garden, descending in
-the old fashion by a series of terraces. Though long deserted by the
-Earls of Moray, it has been till a recent time kept in the best order,
-being occupied by families of respectable character.[242]
-
-This house was built in the early part of the reign of Charles I.
-(about 1628) by Mary, Countess of Home, then a widow. Her ladyship’s
-initials, M. H., appear, in cipher fashion, underneath her coronet upon
-various parts of the exterior; and over one of the principal windows
-towards the street there is a lozenge shield, containing the two lions
-rampant which form the coat armorial of the Home family. Lady Home was
-an English lady, being the daughter of Edward Sutton, Lord Dudley.
-She seems to have been unusually wealthy for the dowager of a Scottish
-earl, for in 1644 the English Parliament repaid seventy thousand
-pounds which she had lent to the Scottish Covenanting Government; and
-she is found in the same year lending seven thousand to aid in paying
-the detachment of troops which that Government had sent to Ireland.
-She was also a sufferer, however, by the civil war, in as far as
-Dunglass House, which was blown up in 1640, by accident, when in the
-hands of the Covenanters, belonged to her in liferent. To her affluent
-circumstances, and the taste which she probably brought with her from
-her native country, may be ascribed the superior style of this mansion,
-which not only displays in the outside many traces of the elegant
-architecture which prevailed in England in the reign of James I., but
-contains two state apartments, decorated in the most elaborate manner,
-both in the walls and ceilings, with the favourite stucco-work of
-that reign. On the death of Lady Home the house passed (her ladyship
-having no surviving male issue) to her daughters and co-heiresses,
-Margaret, Countess of Moray, and Anne, Countess (afterwards Duchess)
-of Lauderdale, between whom the entire property of their father, the
-first Earl of Home, appears to have been divided, his title going into
-another line. By an arrangement between the two sisters, the house
-became, in 1645, the property of the Countess of Moray and her son
-James, Lord Doune.
-
-It stood in this condition as to ownership, though still popularly
-called ‘Lady Home’s Lodging,’ when, in the summer of 1648, Oliver
-Cromwell paid his first visit to Edinburgh. Cromwell had then just
-completed the overthrow of the army of the _Engagement_—a gallant
-body of troops which had been sent into England by the more Cavalier
-party of the Scottish Covenanters, in the hope of rescuing the king
-from the hands of the sectaries. The victorious general, with his
-companion Lambert, took up his quarters in this house, and here
-received the visits of some of the leaders of the less loyal party of
-the Covenanters—the Marquis of Argyll, the Chancellor Loudoun, the
-Earl of Lothian, the Lords Arbuthnot, Elcho, and Burleigh, and the
-Reverend Messrs David Dickson, Robert Blair, and James Guthrie. ‘What
-passed among them,’ says Bishop Henry Guthrie in his _Memoirs_, ‘came
-not to be known infallibly; but it was talked very loud that he did
-communicate to them his design in reference to the king, and had their
-assent thereto.’ It is scarcely necessary to remark that this was
-probably no more than a piece of Cavalier scandal, for there is no
-reason to believe that Cromwell, if he yet contemplated the death of
-the king, would have disclosed his views to men still so far tinctured
-with loyalty as those enumerated. Cromwell’s object in visiting
-Edinburgh on this occasion and in holding these conferences, was
-probably limited to the reinstatement of the ultra-Presbyterian party
-in the government, from which the Duke of Hamilton and other loyalists
-had lately displaced it.
-
-When, in 1650, the Lord Lorn, eldest son of the Marquis of Argyll, was
-married to Lady Mary Stuart, eldest daughter of the Earl of Moray, the
-wedding feast ‘stood,’ as contemporary writers express it, at the Earl
-of Moray’s house in the Canongate. The event so auspicious to these
-great families was signalised by a circumstance of a very remarkable
-kind. A whole week had been passed in festivity by the wedded pair
-and their relations, when, on Saturday the 18th of May, the Marquis
-of Montrose was brought to Edinburgh, an excommunicated and already
-condemned captive, having been taken in the north in an unsuccessful
-attempt to raise a Cavalier party for his young and exiled prince.
-When the former relative circumstances of Argyll and Montrose are
-called to mind—when it is recollected that they had some years before
-struggled for an ascendancy in the civil affairs of Scotland, that
-Montrose had afterwards chased Argyll round and round the Highlands,
-burned and plundered his country undisturbed, and on one occasion
-overthrown his forces in a sanguinary action, while Argyll looked on
-from a safe distance at sea—the present relative circumstances of
-the two chiefs become a striking illustration of the vicissitudes in
-personal fortune that characterise a time of civil commotion. Montrose,
-after riding from Leith on a sorry horse, was led into the Canongate by
-the Watergate, and there placed upon a low cart, driven by the common
-executioner. In this ignominious fashion he was conducted up the street
-towards the prison, in which he was to have only two days to live, and
-in passing along was necessarily brought under the walls and windows of
-Moray House. On his approach to that mansion, the Marquis of Argyll,
-his lady, and children, together with the whole of the marriage-party,
-left their banqueting, and stepping out to a balcony which overhangs
-the street, there planted themselves to gaze on the prostrated enemy of
-their house and cause. Here, indeed, they had the pleasure of seeing
-Montrose in all external circumstances reduced beneath their feet; but
-they had not calculated on the strength of nature which enabled that
-extraordinary man to overcome so much of the bitterness of humiliation
-and of death. He is said to have gazed upon them with so much serenity
-that they shrank back with some degree of discomposure, though not till
-the marchioness had expressed her spite at the fallen hero by spitting
-at him—an act which in the present age will scarcely be credible,
-though any one well acquainted with the history of the seventeenth
-century will have too little reason to doubt it.
-
-In a Latin manuscript of this period, the gardens connected with the
-house of the Earl of Moray are spoken of as ‘of such elegance, and
-cultivated with so much care, as to vie with those of warmer countries,
-and perhaps even of England itself. And here,’ pursues the writer, ‘you
-may see how much the art and industry of man may avail in supplying the
-defects of nature. Scarcely any one would believe it possible to give
-so much beauty to a garden in this frigid clime.’ One reason for the
-excellence of the garden may have been its southern exposure. On the
-uppermost of its terraces there is a large and beautiful thorn, with
-pensile leaves; on the second there are some fruit-trees, the branches
-of which have been caused to spread out in a particular way, so as to
-form a kind of cup, possibly for the reception of a pleasure-party,
-for such fantastic twistings of nature were not uncommon among our
-ancestors. In the lowest level of the garden there is a little
-receptacle for water, beside which is the statue of a fishing-boy,
-having a basket of fish at his feet, and a _clam-shell_ inverted
-upon his head.[243] Here is also a small building, surmounted by two
-lions holding female shields, and which may therefore be supposed
-contemporaneous with the house: this was formerly a summer-house,
-but has latterly been expanded into the character of a conservatory.
-Tradition vaguely reports it as the place where the Union between
-England and Scotland was signed; though there is also a popular story
-of that fact having been accomplished in a _laigh shop_ of the High
-Street (marked No. 117), at one time a tavern, and known as the _Union
-Cellar_.[244] Probably the rumour, in at least the first instance,
-refers only to private arrangements connected with the passing of
-the celebrated statute in question. The Chancellor Earl of Seafield
-inhabited Moray House at that time on lease, and nothing could be more
-likely than that he should there have after-dinner consultations on the
-pending measure, which might in the evening be adjourned to this garden
-retreat.
-
-It would appear that about this period the garden attached to the house
-was a sort of a public promenade or lounging-place; as was also the
-garden connected with Heriot’s Hospital. In this character it forms a
-scene in the licentious play called _The Assembly_, written in 1692
-by Dr Pitcairn. _Will_, ‘a discreet smart gentleman,’ as he is termed
-in the prefixed list of _dramatis personæ_, but in reality a perfect
-debauchee, first makes an appointment with Violetta, his mistress, to
-meet her in this place; and as she is under the charge of a sourly
-devout aunt, he has to propound the matter in metaphorical language.
-Pretending to expound a particular passage in the Song of Solomon for
-the benefit of the dame, he thus gives the hint to her young protégée:
-
-‘_Will._ “Come, my beloved, let us walk in the fields, let us lodge in
-the villages.” The same metaphor still. The kirk not having the liberty
-of bringing her servant to her mother’s house, resolveth to meet him in
-the villages, such as the Canongate, in respect of Edinburgh; and the
-vineyard, such as _my Lady Murray’s Yards_, to use a homely comparison.
-
-‘_Old Lady._ A wondrous young man this!
-
- * * * * *
-
-‘_Will._ The eighth chapter towards the close: “Thou that dwellest in
-the gardens, cause me to hear thy voice.”
-
-‘_Violetta._ That’s still alluding to the metaphor of a gallant, who,
-by some signs, warns his mistress to make haste—a whistle or so. The
-same with early in the former chapter; that is to say, to-morrow by six
-o’clock. Make haste to accomplish our loves.
-
-‘_Old L._ Thou art a hopeful girl; I hope God has blest my pains on
-thee.’
-
-In terms of this curious assignation, the third act opens in a walk in
-Lady Murray’s Yards, where Will meets his beloved Violetta. After a
-great deal of badinage, in the style of Dryden’s comedies, which were
-probably Dr Pitcairn’s favourite models, the dialogue proceeds in the
-following style:
-
-‘_Will._ I’ll marry you at the rights, if you can find in your heart to
-give yourself to an honest fellow of no great fortune.
-
-‘_Vio._ In truth, sir, methinks it were fully as much for my future
-comfort to bestow myself, and any little fortune I have, upon you, as
-some reverend spark in a band and short cloak, with the patrimony of a
-good gift of prayer, and as little sense as his father, who was hanged
-in the Grassmarket for murdering the king’s officers, had of honesty.
-
-‘_Will._ Then I must acknowledge, my dear madam, I am most damnably
-in love with you, and must have you by foul or fair means; choose you
-whether.
-
-‘_Vio._ I’ll give you fair-play in an honest way.
-
-‘_Will._ Then, madam, I can command a parson when I please; and if you
-be half so kind as I could wish, we’ll take a hackney, and trot up to
-some honest curate’s house: besides, a guinea or so will be a charity
-to him perhaps.
-
-‘_Vio._ Hold a little; I am hardly ready for that yet,’ &c.
-
-After the departure of this hopeful couple, Lord Huffy and Lord
-Whigriddin, who are understood to have been intended for Lord Leven
-(son of the Earl of Melville) and the Earl of Crawford, enter the
-gardens, and hold some discourse of a different kind.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[242] For many years the Practising School for Teachers under the
-management of the Free Church of Scotland, now the Training College for
-Teachers under the Provincial Council of Education.
-
-[243] The terraces have long since been deprived of their last
-semblance of the old gardens; but while recent excavations were being
-made for an extension of the educational buildings, the statue of the
-boy was discovered underground in the lowest terrace. The statue is
-preserved, and forms a connecting link between ‘My Lady Murray’s Yards’
-and the ‘Yards’ of the modern school.
-
-[244] On the north side of the High Street, opposite the Tron Church.
-The site is now covered by the opening of Cockburn Street.
-
-
-
-
-THE SPEAKING HOUSE.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The mansion on which I venture to confer this title is an old one of
-imposing appearance, a little below Moray House. It is conspicuous
-by three gables presented to the street, and by the unusual space of
-linear ground which it occupies. Originally, it has had no door to
-the street. A _porte-cochère_ gives admittance to a close behind,
-from which every part of the house had been admissible, and when this
-gateway was closed the inhabitants would be in a tolerably defensible
-position. In this feature the house gives a striking idea of the
-insecurity which marked the domestic life of three hundred years ago.
-
-[Illustration: BAKEHOUSE CLOSE.
-Back of ‘Speaking House.’
-
-PAGE 313.]
-
-It was built in the year of the assassination of the Regent Moray,
-and one is somewhat surprised to think that, at so dark a crisis of
-our national history, a mansion of so costly a character should have
-taken its rise. The owner, whatever grade he held, seems to have felt
-an apprehension of the popular talk on the subject of his raising
-so elegant a mansion; and he took a curious mode of deprecating its
-expression. On a tablet over the ground-floor he inscribes: HODIE MIHI:
-CRAS TIBI. CUR IGITUR CURAS? along with the year of the erection,
-1570. This is as much as to say: ‘I am the happy man to-day; your turn
-may come to-morrow. Why, then, should you repine?’ One can imagine
-from a second tablet, a little way farther along the front, that as
-the building proceeded, the storm of public remark and outcry had come
-to be more and more bitter, so that the soul of the owner got stirred
-up into a firm and defying anger. He exclaims (for, though a lettered
-inscription, one feels it as an exclamation): UT TU LINGUÆ TUÆ, SIC
-EGO MEAR. AURIUM, DOMINUS SUM (‘As thou of thy tongue, so I of my
-ears, am lord’); thus quoting, in his rage on this petty occasion, an
-expression said to have been used in the Roman senate by Titus Tacitus
-when repelling the charges of Lucius Metellus.[245] Afterwards he
-seems to have cooled into a religious view of the predicament, and in
-a third legend along the front he tells the world: CONSTANTI PECTORI
-RES MORTALIUM UMBRA; ending a little farther on with an emblem of the
-Christian hope of the Resurrection, ears of wheat springing from a
-handful of bones. It is a great pity that we should not know who was
-the builder and owner of this house, since he has amused us so much
-with the history of his feelings during the process of its erection. A
-friend at my elbow suggests—a schoolmaster! But who ever heard of a
-schoolmaster so handsomely remunerated by his profession as to be able
-to build a house?
-
-Nothing else is known of the early history of this house beyond the
-fact of the Canongate magistrates granting a charter for it to the
-Hammermen of that burgh, September 10, 1647.[246] It was, however,
-in 1753 occupied by a person of no less distinction than the Dowager
-Duchess of Gordon.[247]
-
-In the alley passing under this mansion there is a goodly building of
-more modern structure, forming two sides of a quadrangle, with a small
-court in front divided from the lane by a wall in which there is a
-large gateway. Amidst filthiness indescribable, one discerns traces of
-former elegance: a crest over the doorway—namely, a cock mounted on
-a trumpet, with the motto ‘VIGILANTIBUS,’ and the date 1633; over two
-upper windows, the letters ‘S. A. A.’ and ‘D. M. H.’ These memorials,
-with certain references in the charter before mentioned, leave no
-room for doubt that this was the house of Sir Archibald Acheson of
-Abercairny, Secretary of State for Scotland in the reign of Charles I.,
-and ancestor to the Earl of Gosford in Ireland, who to this day bears
-the same crest and motto. The letters are the initials of Sir Archibald
-and his wife, Dame Margaret Hamilton. Here of course was the _court_
-of Scotland for a certain time, the Secretary of State being the grand
-dispenser of patronage in our country at that period—_here_, where
-nothing but the extremest wretchedness is now to be seen! That boastful
-bird, too, still seeming to assert the family dignity, two hundred
-years after it ceased to have any connection with the spot! Verily
-there are some moral preachments in these dark old closes if modern
-refinement could go to hear the sermon!
-
-[Illustration: Acheson House.]
-
-Sir Archibald Acheson acquired extensive lands in Ireland,[248]
-which have ever since been in the possession of his family. It was a
-descendant of his, and of the same name, who had the gratification of
-becoming the landlord of Swift at Market-hill, and whom the dean was
-consequently led to celebrate in many of his poems. Swift seems to have
-been on the most familiar terms with this worthy knight and his lady;
-the latter he was accustomed to call _Skinnibonia_, _Lean_, or _Snipe_,
-as the humour inclined him. The inimitable comic painting of her
-ladyship’s maid Hannah, in the debate whether Hamilton’s Bawn should
-be turned into a malt-house or a barrack, can never perish from our
-literature. In like humour, the dean asserts the superiority of himself
-and his brother-tenant Colonel Leslie, who had served much in Spain,
-over the knight:
-
- ‘Proud baronet of Nova Scotia,
- The dean and Spaniard much reproach ye.
- Of their two fames the world enough rings;
- Where are thy services and sufferings?
- What if for nothing once you kissed,
- Against the grain, a monarch’s fist?
- What if among the courtly tribe,
- You lost a place and saved a bribe?
- And then in surly mood came here
- To fifteen hundred pounds a year,
- And fierce against the Whigs harangued?
- You never ventured to be hanged.
- How dare you treat your betters thus?
- Are you to be compared to us?’
-
-Speaking also of a celebrated thorn at Market-hill, which had long been
-a resort of merry-making parties, he reverts to the Scottish Secretary
-of former days:
-
- ‘Sir Archibald, that valorous knight,
- The lord of all the fruitful plain,
- Would come and listen with delight,
- For he was fond of rural strain:
-
- Sir Archibald, whose favourite name
- Shall stand for ages on record,
- By Scottish bards of highest fame,
- Wise Hawthornden and Stirling’s lord.’
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The following letter to Sir Archibald from his friend Sir James
-Balfour, Lord Lyon, occurs amongst the manuscript stores of the latter
-gentleman in the Advocates’ Library:
-
- ‘To Sir ARCHIBALD ACHESONE,
- one of the Secretaries of Staite.
-
- ‘WORTHY SIR—Your letters, full of Spartanical brevity to the
- first view, bot, againe overlooked, Demosthenicall longe;
- stuffed full of exaggerations and complaints; the yeast of your
- enteirest affections, sent to quicken a slumbring friend as you
- imagine, quho nevertheless remains vigilant of you and of the
- smallest matters, which may aney wayes adde the least rill of
- content to the ocean of your happiness; quherfor you may show
- your comerad, and intreat him from me, as from one that trewly
- loves and honors his best pairts, that now he vold refraine,
- both his tonge and pen, from these quhirkis and obloquies,
- quherwith he so often uses to stain the name of grate
- personages, for hardly can he live so reteiredly, in so voluble
- ane age, without becoming at one tyme or uther obnoxious to the
- blow of some courtier. So begging God to bless you, I am your—
-
- JA. BALFOUR.
- ‘_LONDON, 9 Apryll 1631._’
-
-Twenty years before the Duchess of Gordon lived in the venerable house
-at the head of the close, a preceding dowager resided in another part
-of the town. This was the distinguished Lady Elizabeth Howard (daughter
-of the Duke of Norfolk, by Lady Anne Somerset, daughter of the Marquis
-of Worcester), who occasioned so much disturbance in the end of Queen
-Anne’s reign by the Jacobite medal which she sent to the Faculty of
-Advocates. Her grace lived in a house at the Abbeyhill, where, as we
-are informed by Wodrow, in a tone of pious horror,[249] she openly
-kept a kind of college for instructing young people in Jesuitism and
-Jacobitism together. In this labour she seems to have been assisted
-by the Duchess of Perth, a kindred soul, whose enthusiasm afterwards
-caused the ruin of her family, by sending her son into the insurrection
-of 1745.[250] The Duchess of Gordon died here in 1732. I should suppose
-the house to have been that respectable old villa, at the extremity of
-the suburb of Abbeyhill, in which the late Baron Norton, of the Court
-of Exchequer, lived for many years. It was formerly possessed by Baron
-Mure, who, during the administration of the Earl of Bute, exercised the
-duties and dispensed the patronage of the _sous-ministre_ for Scotland,
-under the Hon. Stuart Mackenzie, younger brother of the Premier.
-This was of course in its turn the _court_ of Scotland; and from the
-description of a gentleman old enough to remember attending the levees
-(Sir W. M. Bannatyne), I should suppose that it was as much haunted by
-suitors of all kinds as ever were the more elegant halls of Holyrood
-House. Baron Mure, who was the personal friend of Earl Bute, died in
-1774.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[245] I was indebted to my friend Dr John Brown (_Horæ Subsecivæ_, p.
-42) for drawing my attention to a quotation of Seneca by Beyerlinck
-(_Magn. Theatr. Vit. Human._, tom. vi. p. 60), involving this fine
-expression. Some one, however, has searched all over the writings of
-Seneca for it in vain.
-
-[246] The close entering by the archway at the east end of the house,
-now called ‘Bakehouse Close,’ was formerly ‘Hammermen’s Close.’
-
-[247] ‘The Speaking House’ is now recognised as a town mansion of the
-Huntly family. It is said to be associated with the first marquis, who
-killed the ‘Bonnie Earl of Moray’ at Donibristle, and died in 1636 at
-Dundee on his way north to Aberdeenshire. His son, the second marquis,
-who was beheaded in 1649, was residing in this house ten years prior
-to his execution, and in it his daughter Lady Ann was married to Lord
-Drummond, third Earl of Perth.
-
-[248] Which he named Gosford, after the estate in East Lothian, which
-was acquired by Sir Archibald’s ancestor, a wealthy burgess in the
-reign of Queen Mary. The Viscounts Gosford take their title from the
-Irish estate.
-
-[249] In his MS. Diaries in the Advocates’ Library.
-
-[250] In an advertisement in a Jacobite newspaper, called _The
-Thistle_, which rose and sank in 1734, the house is advertised as
-having lately been occupied by the Duchesses of Gordon and Perth.
-[1868. It is in the course of being taken down to make way for a
-railway.]
-
-
-
-
-PANMURE HOUSE—ADAM SMITH.
-
-
-At the bottom of a close a little way below the Canongate Church,
-there is a house which a few years ago bore the appearance of one of
-those small semi-quadrangular manor-houses which were prevalent in
-the country about the middle of the seventeenth century. It is now
-altered, and brought into juxtaposition with the coarse details of
-an ironfoundry, yet still is not without some traits of its original
-style. The name of Panmure House takes the mind back to the Earls of
-Panmure, the fourth of whom lost title and estates for his concern in
-the affair of 1715; but I am not certain of any earlier proprietor of
-this family than William Maule, nephew of the attainted earl, created
-Earl of Panmure as an Irish title in 1743. _He_ possessed the house in
-the middle of the last century.
-
-[Illustration: Back of Canongate Tolbooth—Tolbooth Wynd.]
-
-All reference to rank in connection with this house appears trivial
-in comparison with the fact that it was the residence of Adam Smith
-from 1778, when he came to live in Edinburgh as a commissioner of the
-customs, till his death in 1790, when he was interred in a somewhat
-obscure situation at the back of the Canongate Tolbooth. In his time
-the house must have seen the most intellectual company to be had in
-Scotland; but it had not the honour of being the birthplace of any
-of Smith’s great works. His last and greatest—the book which has
-undoubtedly done more for the good of the community than any other
-ever produced in Scotland—was the work of ten quiet, studious years
-previous to 1778, during which the philosopher lived in his mother’s
-house in Kirkcaldy.
-
-The gentle, virtuous character of Smith has left little for the
-anecdotist. The utmost simplicity marked the externals of the man. He
-said very truly (being in possession of a handsome library) that ‘he
-was only a beau in his books.’ Leading an abstracted, scholarly life,
-he was ill-fitted for common worldly affairs. Some one remarked to a
-friend of mine while Smith still lived: ‘How strange to think of one
-who has written so well on the principles of exchange and barter—he
-is obliged to get a friend to buy his horse-corn for him!’ The author
-of the _Wealth of Nations_ never thought of marrying. His household
-affairs were managed to his perfect contentment by a female cousin, a
-Miss Jeanie Douglas, who almost necessarily acquired a great control
-over him. It is said that the amiable philosopher, being fond of a bit
-sugar, and chid by her for taking it, would sometimes, in sauntering
-backwards and forwards along the parlour, watch till Miss Jeanie’s
-back was turned in order to supply himself with his favourite morsel.
-Such things are not derogatory to greatness like Smith’s: they link
-it to human nature, and secure for it the love, as it had previously
-possessed the admiration, of common men.
-
-The one personal circumstance regarding Smith which has made the
-greatest impression on his fellow-citizens is the rather too well-known
-anecdote of the two fishwomen. He was walking along the streets one
-day, deeply abstracted, and speaking in a low tone to himself, when he
-caught the attention of two of these many-petticoated ladies, engaged
-in selling their fish. They exchanged significant looks, bearing strong
-reference to the restraints of a well-managed lunatic asylum, and then
-sighed one to the other: ‘Aih, sirs; and he’s weel put on too!’—that
-is, well dressed; his gentleman-like condition making the case appear
-so much the more piteous.
-
-
-
-
-JOHN PATERSON THE GOLFER.
-
-
-In the Canongate, nearly opposite to Queensberry House, is a narrow,
-old-fashioned mansion, of peculiar form, having a coat-armorial
-conspicuously placed at the top, and a plain slab over the doorway
-containing the following inscriptions:
-
- ‘Cum victor ludo, Scotis qui proprius, esset,
- Ter tres victores post redimitus avos,
- Patersonus, humo tunc educebat in altum
- Hanc, quæ victores tot tulit una, domum.’
-
- ‘I hate no person.’
-
-It appears that this quatrain was the production of Dr Pitcairn, while
-the sentence below is an anagram upon the name of JOHN PATERSONE. The
-stanza expresses that ‘when Paterson had been crowned victor in a
-game peculiar to Scotland, in which his ancestors had also been often
-victorious, he then built this mansion, which one conquest raised
-him above all his predecessors.’ We must resort to tradition for an
-explanation of this obscure hint.
-
-[Illustration: Golfers’ Land.]
-
-Till a recent period, golfing had long been conducted upon the Links of
-Leith.[251] It had even been the sport of princes on that field. We
-are told by Mr William Tytler of Woodhouselee that Charles I. and the
-Duke of York (afterwards James II.) played at golf on Leith Links, in
-succession, during the brief periods of their residence in Holyrood.
-Though there is an improbability in this tale as far as Charles is
-concerned, seeing that he spent too short a time in Edinburgh to
-have been able to play at a game notorious for the time necessary in
-acquiring it, I may quote the anecdote related by Mr Tytler: ‘That
-while he was engaged in a party at golf on the green or Links of Leith,
-a letter was delivered into his hands, which gave him the first account
-of the insurrection and rebellion in Ireland; on reading which, he
-suddenly called for his coach, and leaning on one of his attendants,
-and in great agitation, drove to the palace of Holyrood House, from
-whence next day he set out for London.’ Mr Tytler says, regarding the
-Duke of York, that he ‘was frequently seen in a party at golf on the
-Links of Leith with some of the nobility and gentry. I remember in my
-youth to have often conversed with an old man named Andrew Dickson, a
-golf-club maker, who said that, when a boy, he used to carry the duke’s
-golf-clubs, and run before him, and announce where the balls fell.’[252]
-
-[Illustration: GOLFERS ON LEITH LINKS.
-
-PAGE 320.]
-
-Tradition reports that when the duke lived in Holyrood House he had on
-one occasion a discussion with two English noblemen as to the native
-country of golf; his Royal Highness asserting that it was peculiar to
-Scotland, while they as pertinaciously insisted that it was an English
-game as well. Assuredly, whatever may have been the case in those days,
-it is not now an English game in the proper sense of the words, seeing
-that it is only played to the south of the Tweed by a few fraternities
-of Scotsmen, who have acquired it in their own country in youth.
-However this may be, the two English nobles proposed, good-humouredly,
-to prove its English character by taking up the duke in a match to be
-played on Leith Links. James, glad of an opportunity to make popularity
-in Scotland, in however small a way, accepted the challenge, and sought
-for the best partner he could find. By an association not at this day
-surprising to those who practise the game, the heir-presumptive of
-the British throne played in concert with a poor shoemaker named John
-Paterson, the worthy descendant of a long line of illustrious golfers.
-If the two southrons were, as might be expected, inexperienced in the
-game, they had no chance against a pair, one member of which was a
-good player. So the duke got the best of the practical argument; and
-Paterson’s merits were rewarded by a gift of the sum played for. The
-story goes on to say that John was thus enabled to build a somewhat
-stylish house for himself in the Canongate, on the top of which, being
-a Scotsman, and having of course a pedigree, he clapped the Paterson
-arms—three pelicans vulned; on a chief three mullets; crest, a dexter
-hand grasping a golf-club; together with the motto—dear to all
-golfers—FAR AND SURE.
-
-It must be admitted there is some uncertainty about this tale. The
-house, the inscriptions, and arms only indicate that Paterson built
-the house after being a victor at golf, and that Pitcairn had a hand
-in decorating it. One might even see, in the fact of the epigram, as
-if a gentleman wit were indulging in a jest at the expense of some
-simple plebeian, who held all notoriety honourable. It might have
-been expected that if Paterson had been enriched by a match in which
-he was connected with the Duke of York, a Jacobite like Pitcairn
-would have made distinct allusion to the circumstance. The tradition,
-nevertheless, seems too curious to be entirely overlooked, and the
-reader may therefore take it at its worth.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[251] In 1864 this favourite Scottish pastime was resuscitated on Leith
-Links, and is now enjoyed with a relish as keen as ever.
-
-[252] _Archæologia Scotica_, i.
-
-
-
-
-[LOTHIAN HUT.
-
-
-The noble family of Lothian had a mansion in Edinburgh, though of but
-a moderate dignity. It was a small house situated in a spare piece of
-ground at the bottom of the Canongate, on the south side. Latterly it
-was leased to Professor Dugald Stewart, who, about the end of the last
-century, here entertained several English pupils of noble rank—among
-others, the Hon. the Henry Temple, afterwards Lord Palmerston.[253]
-About 1825 building was taken down to make room for a brewery.
-
-About the middle of the last century, Lothian Hut was occupied by the
-wife of the fourth marquis, a lady of great lineage, being the only
-daughter of Robert, Earl of Holderness, and great-granddaughter of
-Charles Louis, Elector Palatine. Her ladyship was a person of grand
-character, while yet admittedly very amiable. As a piece of very old
-gossip, the Lady Marchioness, on first coming to live in the Hut,
-found herself in want of a few trifling articles from a milliner,
-and sent for one who was reputed to be the first of the class then
-in Edinburgh—namely, Miss Ramsay. But there were two Miss Ramsays.
-They had a shop on the east side of the Old Lyon Close, on the south
-side of the High Street, and there made ultimately a little fortune,
-which enabled them to build the villa of Marionville, near Restalrig
-(called _Lappet Hall_ by the vulgar). The Misses Ramsay, receiving a
-message from so grand a lady, instead of obeying the order implicitly,
-came together, dressed out in a very splendid style, and told the
-marchioness that every article they wore was ‘at the very top of the
-fashion.’ The marchioness, disgusted with their forwardness and
-affectation, said she would take their specimens into consideration,
-and wished them a good-morning. According to our gossiping authority,
-she then sent for Mrs Sellar, who carried on the millinery business
-in a less pretentious style at a place in the Lawnmarket where Bank
-Street now stands. (I like the localities, for they bring the Old Town
-of a past age so clearly before us.) Mrs Sellar made her appearance at
-Lothian Hut in a plain, decorous manner. Her head-dress consisted of a
-mob-cap of the finest lawn, tied under her chin; over which there was
-a hood of the same stuff. She wore a cloak of plain black silk without
-any lace, and had no bonnet, the use of which was supplied by the hood.
-Mrs Sellar’s manners were elegant and pleasing. When she entered, the
-marchioness rose to receive her. On being asked for her patterns, she
-stepped to the door and brought in two large boxes, which had been
-carried behind her by two women. The articles, being produced, gave
-great satisfaction, and her ladyship never afterwards employed any
-other milliner. So the story ends, in the manner of the good-boy books,
-in establishing that milliners ought not to be too prone to exhibit
-their patterns upon their own persons.]
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[253] A newspaper, giving an account of Lord Palmerston’s visit to
-Edinburgh in 1865, mentions that his lordship, during his stay in
-the city, was made aware that an aged woman of the name of Peggie
-Forbes, who had been a servant with Dugald Stewart, well remembered
-his lordship when under the professor’s roof in early days. Interested
-in the circumstance, Lord Palmerston took occasion to pay her a visit
-at her dwelling, No. 1 Rankeillor Street, and expressed his pleasure
-at renewing the acquaintance of the old domestic. Dr John Brown had
-discovered the existence of this old association, and with it a box of
-tools which were the property of ‘young Maister Henry’ of those days.
-The sight of them called up within the breast of the Premier further
-associations of days long bygone.
-
-
-
-
-HENRY PRENTICE AND POTATOES.
-
-
-No doubt is entertained on any hand that the field-culture of the
-potato was first practised in Scotland by a man of humble condition,
-originally a pedlar, by name Henry Prentice. He was an eccentric
-person, as many have been who stepped out of the common walk to do
-things afterwards discovered to be great. A story is told that while
-the potatoes were growing in certain little fields which he leased near
-our city, Lord Minto came from time to time to inquire about the crop.
-Prentice at length told his lordship that the experiment was entirely
-successful, and all he wanted was a horse and cart to drive his
-potatoes to Edinburgh that they might be sold. ‘I’ll give you a horse
-and cart,’ said his lordship. Prentice then took his crop to market,
-cart by cart, till it was all sold, after which he disposed of _the
-horse and cart_, which he affected to believe Lord Minto had given him
-as a present.
-
-Having towards the close of his days realised a small sum of money, he
-sunk £140 in the hands of the Canongate magistrates, as managers of the
-poorhouse of that parish, receiving in return seven shillings a week,
-upon which he lived for several years. Occasionally he made little
-donations to the charity. During his last years he was an object of no
-small curiosity in Edinburgh, partly on account of his connection with
-potato culture and partly by reason of his oddities. It was said of him
-that he would never shake hands with any human being above two years of
-age. In his bargain with the Canongate dignitaries, it was agreed that
-he should have a _good grave_ in their churchyard, and one was selected
-according to his own choice. Over this, thinking it as well, perhaps,
-that he should enjoy a little quasi-posthumous notoriety during his
-life, he caused a monument to be erected, bearing this inscription:
-
- ‘Be not anxious to know how I lived,
- But rather how you yourself should die.’
-
-He also had a coffin prepared at the price of two guineas, taking
-the undertaker bound to screw it down gratis with his own hands. In
-addition to all this, his friends the magistrates were under covenant
-to bury him with a hearse and four coaches. But even the designs of
-mortals respecting the grave itself are liable to disappointment. Owing
-to the mischief done by the boys to the premature monument, Prentice
-saw fit to have it removed to a quieter cemetery, that of Restalrig,
-where, at his death in 1788, he was accordingly interred.
-
-Such was the originator of that extensive culture of the potato which
-has since borne so conspicuous a place in the economics of our country,
-for good and for evil.
-
-It is curious that this plant, although the sole support of millions of
-our population, should now again (1846) have fallen under suspicion.
-At its first introduction, and for several ages thereafter, it was
-regarded as a vegetable of by no means good character, though for a
-totally different reason from any which affect its reputation in our
-day. Its supposed tendency to inflame some of the sensual feelings
-of human nature is frequently adverted to by Shakespeare and his
-contemporaries; and this long remained a popular impression in the
-north.[254]
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[254] Robertson, in his _Rural Recollections_ (Irvine, 1829), says:
-‘The earliest evidence that I have met with of potatoes in Scotland
-is an old household book of the Eglintoune family in 1733, in which
-potatoes appear at different times as a dish at supper.’ They appear
-earlier than this—namely, in 1701—in the household book of the
-Duchess of Buccleuch and Monmouth, where the price per peck is
-intimated at 2s. 6d.—See Arnot’s _History of Edinburgh_, 4to, p. 201.
-
-
-
-
-THE DUCHESS OF BUCCLEUCH AND MONMOUTH.
-
-
-It is rather curious that one of my informants in this article should
-have dined with a lady who had dined with a peeress married in the year
-1662.
-
-This peeress was Anne, Duchess of Buccleuch and Monmouth, the wife of
-the unfortunate son of Charles II. As is well known, she was early
-deserted by her husband, who represented, not without justice, that a
-marriage into which he had been tempted for reasons of policy by his
-relations, when he was only thirteen years of age, could hardly be
-binding.
-
-The young duchess, naturally plain in features, was so unfortunate
-in early womanhood as to become lame in consequence of some feats in
-dancing. For her want of personal graces there is negative evidence in
-a dedication of Dryden, where he speaks abundantly of her wit, but not
-a word of beauty, which shows that the case must have been desperate.
-[This, by the way, was the remark made to me on the subject by Sir
-Walter Scott, who, in the _Lay of the Last Minstrel_, has done what
-Dryden could not do—flattered the duchess:
-
- ‘She had known adversity,
- Though born in such a high degree;
- In pride of power and _beauty’s bloom_,
- Had wept o’er Monmouth’s bloody tomb.’]
-
-Were any further proof wanting, it might be found in the regard in
-which she was held by James II., who, as is well known, had such a
-tendency to plain women as induced a suspicion in his witty brother
-that they were prescribed to him by his confessor by way of penance.
-This friendship, in which there was nothing improper, was the means of
-saving her grace’s estates at the tragical close of her husband’s life.
-
-It is curious to learn that the duchess, notwithstanding the terms
-on which she had been with her husband, and the sad stamp put upon
-his pretensions to legitimacy, acted throughout the remainder of her
-somewhat protracted life as if she had been the widow of a true prince
-of the blood-royal. In her state-rooms she had a canopy erected,
-beneath which was the only seat in the apartment, everybody standing
-besides herself. When Lady Margaret Montgomery, one of the beautiful
-Countess of Eglintoune’s daughters, was at a boarding-school near
-London—previous to the year _Thirty_—she was frequently invited by
-the duchess to her house; and because her great-grandmother, Lady
-Mary Leslie, was sister to her grace’s mother, _she_ was allowed a
-chair; but this was an extraordinary mark of grace. The duchess was
-the last person of quality in Scotland who kept _pages_, in the proper
-acceptation of the term—that is, young gentlemen of good birth, who
-acquired manners and knowledge of the world in attending upon persons
-of exalted rank. The last of her grace’s pages rose to be a general.
-When a letter was brought for the duchess, the domestic gave it to the
-page, the page to the waiting-gentlewoman (always a person of birth
-also), and she at length to her grace. The duchess kept a tight hand
-over her clan and tenants, but was upon the whole beloved.
-
-She was buried (1732) on the same day with the too-much-celebrated
-Colonel Charteris. At the funeral of Henry, Duke of Buccleuch, in the
-year 1812, in the aisle of the church at Dalkeith, my informant (Sir
-Walter Scott) was shown an old man who had been at the funeral of both
-her grace and Colonel Charteris. He said that the day was dreadfully
-stormy, which all the world agreed was owing to the devil carrying
-off Charteris. The mob broke in upon the mourners who followed this
-personage to the grave, and threw cats, dogs, and a pack of cards upon
-the coffin; whereupon the gentlemen drew their swords, and cut away
-among the rioters. In the confusion one little old man was pushed
-into the grave; and the sextons, somewhat prompt in the discharge of
-their duty, began to shovel in the earth upon the quick and the dead.
-The grandfather of my informant (Dr Rutherford), who was one of the
-mourners, was much hurt in the affray; and my informant has heard his
-mother describe the terror of the family on his coming home with his
-clothes bloody and his sword broken.
-
-As to pages—a custom existed among old ladies till a later day of
-keeping such attendants, rather superior to the little polybuttoned
-personages who are now so universal. It was not, however, to be
-expected that a pranksome youth would behave with consistent respect
-to an aged female of the stiff manners then prevalent. Accordingly,
-ridiculous circumstances took place. An old lady of the name of
-Plenderleith, of very stately aspect and grave carriage, used to walk
-to Leith by the Easter Road with her little foot-page behind her. For
-the whole way, the young rogue would be seen projecting burs at her
-dress, laughing immoderately, but silently, when one stuck. An old
-lady and her sequel of a page was very much like a tragedy followed by
-a farce. The keeping of the rascals in order at home used also to be
-a sad problem to a quiet old lady. The only expedient which Miss ——
-could hit upon to preserve her page from the corruption of the streets
-was, in her own phrase, to _lock up his breeks_, which she did almost
-every evening. The youth, being then only presentable at a window,
-had to content himself with such chat as he could indulge in with his
-companions and such mischief as he could execute from that loophole of
-retreat. So much for the parade of keeping pages.
-
-
-
-
-CLAUDERO.
-
-
-Edinburgh, which now smiles complacently upon the gravities of her
-reviews and the flippancies of her magazines, formerly laughed outright
-at the coarse lampoons of her favourite poet and pamphleteer, Claudero.
-The distinct publications of this witty and eccentric personage (whose
-real name was James Wilson) are well known to collectors; and his
-occasional pieces must be fresh in the remembrance of those who, forty
-or fifty years ago (1824), were in the habit of perusing the _Scots
-Magazine_, amidst the general gravity of which they appeared, like the
-bright and giddy eyes of a satyr, staring through the sere leaves of a
-sober forest scene.
-
-Claudero was a native of Cumbernauld, in Dumbartonshire, and at an
-early period of his life showed such marks of a mischief-loving
-disposition as procured him general odium. The occasion of his lameness
-was a pebble thrown from a tree at the minister, who, having been
-previously exasperated by his tricks, chased him to the end of a
-closed lane, and with his cane inflicted such personal chastisement as
-rendered him a cripple, and a hater of the clergy, for the rest of his
-life.
-
-In Edinburgh, where he lived for upwards of thirty years previous to
-his death in 1789, his livelihood was at first ostensibly gained by
-keeping a little school, latterly by celebrating what were called
-_half-mark marriages_—a business resembling that of the Gretna
-blacksmith. It is said that he, who made himself the terror of so
-many by his wit, was in his turn held in fear by his wife, who was as
-complete a shrew as ever fell to the lot of poet or philosopher.
-
-He was a satirist by profession; and when any person wished to have
-a squib played off upon his neighbours, he had nothing to do but
-call upon Claudero, who, for half a crown, would produce the desired
-effusion, composed, and copied off in a fair hand, in a given time. He
-liked this species of employment better than writing upon speculation,
-the profit being more certain and immediate. When in want of money, it
-was his custom to write a sly satire on some opulent public personage,
-upon whom he called with it, desiring to have his opinion of the work,
-and his countenance in favour of a subscription for its publication.
-The object of his ridicule, conscious-struck by his own portrait, would
-wince and be civil, advise him to give up thoughts of publishing so
-hasty a production, and conclude by offering a guinea or two to keep
-the poet alive till better times should come round. At that time there
-lived in Edinburgh a number of rich old men who had made fortunes in
-questionable ways abroad, and whose characters, labouring under strange
-suspicions, were wonderfully susceptible of Claudero’s satire. These
-the wag used to bleed profusely and frequently by working upon their
-fears of public notice.
-
-In 1766 appeared _Miscellanies in Prose and Verse, by Claudero, Son
-of Nimrod the Mighty Hunter, &c., &c._, opening with this preface:
-‘Christian Reader—The following miscellany is published at the
-desire of many gentlemen, who have all been my very good friends;
-if there be anything in it amusing or entertaining, I shall be very
-glad I have contributed to your diversion, and will laugh as heartily
-at your money as you do at my works. Several of my pieces may need
-explanation; but I am too cunning for that: what is not understood,
-like Presbyterian preaching, will at least be admired. I am regardless
-of critics; perhaps some of my lines want a foot; but then, if the
-critic look sharp out, he will find that loss sufficiently supplied
-in other places, where they have a foot too much: and besides, men’s
-works generally resemble themselves; if the poems are lame, so is the
-author—CLAUDERO.’
-
-The most remarkable poems in this volume are: ‘The Echo of the Royal
-Porch of the Palace of Holyrood House, which fell under Military
-Execution, anno 1753;’ ‘The Last Speech and Dying Words of the Cross,
-which was Hanged, Drawn, and Quartered on Monday the 15th of March
-1756, for the horrid crime of being an Incumbrance to the Street;’
-‘Scotland in Tears for the horrid Treatment of the Kings’ Sepulchres;’
-‘An Elegy on the much-lamented Death of Quaker Erskine;’[255] ‘A Sermon
-on the Condemnation of the Netherbow;’ ‘Humphry Colquhoun’s Last
-Farewell,’ &c. Claudero seems to have been the only man of his time who
-remonstrated against the destruction of the venerable edifices then
-removed from the streets which they ornamented, to the disappointment
-and indignation of all future antiquaries. There is much wit in his
-sermon upon the destruction of the Netherbow. ‘What was too hard,’ he
-says, ‘for the great ones of the earth, yea, even queens, to effect,
-is now accomplished. No patriot duke opposeth the scheme, as did the
-great Argyll in the grand senate of our nation; therefore the project
-shall go into execution, and down shall Edina’s lofty porches be hurled
-with a vengeance. Streets shall be extended to the east, regular and
-beautiful, as far as the Frigate Whins; and Portobello[256] shall be a
-lodge for the captors of tea and brandy. The city shall be joined to
-Leith on the north, and a procession of wise masons shall there lay
-the foundations of a spacious harbour. Pequin or Nanquin shall not be
-able to compare with Edinburgh for magnificence. Our city shall be the
-greatest wonder of the world, and the fame of its glory shall reach the
-distant ends of the earth.[257] But lament, O thou descendant of the
-royal Dane, and chief of the tribe of Wilson; for thy shop, contiguous
-to the porch, shall be dashed to pieces, and its place will know thee
-no more! No more shall the melodious voice of the loyalist Grant[258]
-be heard in the morning, nor shall he any more shake the bending wand
-towards the triumphal arch. Let all who angle in deep waters lament,
-for Tom had not his equal. The Netherbow Coffee-house of the loyal
-Smeiton can now no longer enjoy its ancient name with propriety; and
-from henceforth _The Revolution Coffee-house_ shall its name be called.
-Our gates must be extended wide for accommodating the gilded chariots,
-which, from the luxury of the age, are become numerous. With an
-impetuous career, they jostle against one another in our streets, and
-the unwary foot-passenger is in danger of being crushed to pieces. The
-loaded cart itself cannot withstand their fury, and the hideous yells
-of _Coal Johnie_ resound through the vaulted sky. The sour-milk barrels
-are overturned, and deluges of Corstorphin cream run down our strands,
-while the poor unhappy milkmaid wrings her hands with sorrow.’ To the
-sermon are appended the ‘Last Speech and Dying Words of the Netherbow,’
-in which the following laughable declaration occurs: ‘May my clock be
-struck dumb in the other world, if I lie in this! and may MACK, the
-reformer of Edina’s lofty spires, never bestride my weathercock on
-high, if I deviate from truth in these my last words! Though my fabric
-shall be levelled with the dust of the earth, yet I fall in hope that
-my weathercock shall be exalted on some more modern dome, where it
-shall shine like the burnished gold, reflecting the rays of the sun to
-the eye of ages unborn. The daring Mack shall yet look down from my
-cock, high in the airy region, to the brandy-shops below, where large
-graybeards shall appear to him no bigger than mutchkin-bottles, and
-mutchkin-bottles shall be in his sight like the spark of a diamond.’
-One of Claudero’s versified compositions, ‘Humphry Colquhoun’s
-Farewell,’ is remarkable as a kind of coarse prototype of the beautiful
-lyric entitled ‘Mary,’ sung in _The Pirate_ by Claud Halcro. One
-wonders to find the genius of Scott refining upon such materials:
-
- ‘Farewell to Auld Reekie,
- Farewell to lewd Kate,
- Farewell to each ——,
- And farewell to cursed debt;
- With light heart and thin breeches,
- Humph crosses the main;
- All worn out to stitches,
- He’ll ne’er come again.
-
- Farewell to old Dido,
- Who sold him good ale;
- Her charms, like her drink,
- For poor Humph were too stale;
- Though closely she urged him
- To marry and stay,
- Her Trojan, quite cloyed,
- From her sailed away.
-
- Farewell to James Campbell,
- Who played many tricks;
- Humph’s ghost and Lochmoidart’s[259]
- Will chase him to Styx;
- Where in Charon’s wherry
- He’ll be ferried o’er
- To Pluto’s dominions,
- ’Mongst rascals great store.
-
- Farewell, pot-companions,
- Farewell, all good fellows;
- Farewell to my anvil,
- Files, pliers, and bellows;
- Sails, fly to Jamaica,
- Where I mean long to dwell,
- Change manners with climate—
- Dear Drummond, farewell.’
-
-[Illustration: Netherbow.]
-
-It is not unworthy of notice that the publication of Dr Blair’s
-_Lectures on Rhetoric and the Belles-lettres_ was hastened by Claudero,
-who, having procured notes taken by some of the students, avowed an
-intention of giving these to the world. The reverend author states in
-his preface that he was induced to publish the lectures in consequence
-of some surreptitious and incorrect copies finding their way to the
-public; but it has not hitherto been told that this doggerel-monger was
-the person chiefly concerned in bringing about that result.
-
-Claudero occasionally dealt in whitewash as well as blackball, and
-sometimes wrote regular panegyrics. An address of this kind to a
-_writer_ named Walter Fergusson, who built St James’s Square, concludes
-with a strange association of ideas:
-
- ‘May Pentland Hills pour forth their springs,
- To water all thy square!
- May Fergussons still bless the place,
- Both gay and debonnair!’
-
-When the said square was in progress, however, the water seemed in no
-hurry to obey the bard’s invocation; and an attempt was made to procure
-this useful element by sinking wells for it, despite the elevation
-of the ground. Mr Walter Scott, W.S., happened one day to pass when
-Captain Fergusson of the Royal Navy—a good officer, but a sort of
-Commodore Trunnion in his manners—was sinking a well of vast depth.
-Upon Mr Scott expressing a doubt if water could be got there, ‘I will
-get it,’ quoth the captain, ‘though I sink to hell for it!’ ‘A bad
-place for water,’ was the dry remark of the doubter.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[255] A noted brewer, much given to preaching. Of him Claudero says:
-
- ‘Our souls with gospel he did cheer,
- Our bodies, too, with ale and beer;
- _Gratis_ he gospel got and gave away;
- For ale and beer he only made us pay.’
-
-[256] This thriving parliamentary burgh originated in a cottage built,
-and long inhabited, by a retired seaman of Admiral Vernon’s squadron,
-who gave it this name in commemoration of the triumph which his
-commander there gained over the Spaniards in 1739. There must have been
-various houses at the spot in 1753, when we find one ‘George Hamilton,
-in Portobello,’ advertising in the _Edinburgh Courant_ that he would
-give a reward of three pounds to any one who should discover the author
-of a scandalous report, which represented him as harbouring robbers
-in his house. The waste upon which Portobello is now partly founded
-was dreadfully infested at this time with robbers, and resorted to
-by smugglers; see _Courant_. [Portobello, while remaining one of the
-‘Leith burghs’ for parliamentary purposes, was municipally incorporated
-with Edinburgh in 1896. Claudero’s ‘Frigate Whins’ are better known as
-the ‘Figgate Whins.’]
-
-[257] Claudero could have little serious expectation that several of
-these predictions would come to pass before he had been forty years in
-his grave.
-
-[258] A celebrated and much-esteemed fishing-rod maker, who afterwards
-flourished in the old wooden _land_ at the head of Blackfriars Wynd.
-He survived to recent times, and was distinguished for his adherence
-to the cocked hat, wrist ruffles, and buckles of his youth. He was a
-short, neat man, very well bred, a great angler, intimate with the
-great, a Jacobite, and lived to near a century. He had fished in almost
-every trouting stream in the three kingdoms, and was seen skating on
-Lochend at the age of eighty-five.
-
-[259] This seems to bear some reference to the seizure of young
-Macdonald of Kinlochmoidart at Lesmahagow in 1745.
-
-
-
-
-QUEENSBERRY HOUSE.
-
-
-In the Canongate, on the south side, is a large, gloomy building,
-enclosed in a court, and now used as a refuge for destitute persons.
-This was formerly the town mansion of the Dukes of Queensberry, and
-a scene, of course, of stately life and high political affairs. It
-was built by the first duke, the willing minister of the last two
-Stuarts—he who also built Drumlanrig Castle in Dumfriesshire, which he
-never slept in but one night, and with regard to which it is told that
-he left the accounts for the building tied up with this inscription:
-‘The deil pyke out his een that looks herein!’ Duke William was a noted
-money-maker and land-acquirer. No little laird of his neighbourhood
-had any chance with him for the retention of his family property.
-He was something still worse in the eyes of the common people—a
-_persecutor_; that is, one siding against the Presbyterian cause.
-There is a story in one of their favourite books of his having died
-of the _morbus pediculosus_, by way of a judgment upon him for his
-wickedness. In reality, he died of some ordinary fever. It is also
-stated, from the same authority, that about the time when his grace
-died, a Scotch skipper, being in Sicily, saw one day a coach-and-six
-driving to Mount Etna, while a diabolic voice exclaimed: ‘Open to the
-Duke of Drumlanrig!’—‘which proves, by the way,’ says Mr Sharpe, ‘that
-the devil’s porter is no herald. In fact,’ adds this acute critic,
-‘the legend is borrowed from the story of Antonio the Rich, in George
-Sandys’s _Travels_.’[260]
-
-It appears, from family letters, that the first duchess often resided
-in the Canongate mansion, while her husband occupied Sanquhar Castle.
-The lady was unfortunately given to drink, and there is a letter of
-hers in which she pathetically describes her situation to a country
-friend, left alone in Queensberry House with only a few bottles of
-wine, one of which, having been drawn, had turned out sour. Sour wine
-being prejudicial to her health, it was fearful to think of what might
-prove the quality of the remaining bottles.
-
-The son of this couple, James, second duke, must ever be memorable as
-the main instrument in carrying through the Union. His character has
-been variously depicted. By Defoe, in his _History of the Union_, it is
-liberally panegyrised. ‘I think I have,’ says he, ‘given demonstrations
-to the world that I will flatter no man.’ Yet he could not refrain from
-extolling the ‘prudence, calmness, and temper’ which the duke showed
-during that difficult crisis. Unfortunately the author of _Robinson
-Crusoe_, though not a flatterer, could not insure himself against the
-usual prepossessions of a partisan. Boldness the duke must certainly
-have possessed, for during the ferments attending the parliamentary
-proceedings on that occasion, he continued daily to drive between his
-lodgings in Holyrood and the Parliament House, notwithstanding several
-intimations that his life was threatened. His grace’s eldest son,
-James, was an idiot of the most unhappy sort—rabid and gluttonous,
-and early grew to an immense height, which is testified by his coffin
-in the family vault at Durisdeer, still to be seen, of great length
-and unornamented with the heraldic follies which bedizen the violated
-remains of his relatives. A tale of mystery and horror is preserved by
-tradition respecting this monstrous being. While the family resided in
-Edinburgh, he was always kept confined in a ground apartment, in the
-western wing of the house, upon the windows of which, till within these
-few years, the boards still remained by which the dreadful receptacle
-was darkened to prevent the idiot from looking out or being seen. On
-the day the Union was passed, all Edinburgh crowded to the Parliament
-Close to await the issue of the debate, and to mob the chief promoters
-of the detested measure on their leaving the House. The whole household
-of the commissioner went _en masse_, with perhaps a somewhat different
-object, and among the rest was the man whose duty it was to watch and
-attend Lord Drumlanrig. Two members of the family alone were left
-behind—the madman himself, and a little kitchen-boy who turned the
-spit. The insane being, hearing everything unusually still around, the
-house being deserted, and the Canongate like a city of the dead, and
-observing his keeper to be absent, broke loose from his confinement,
-and roamed wildly through the house. It is supposed that the savoury
-odour of the preparations for dinner led him to the kitchen, where he
-found the little turnspit quietly seated by the fire. He seized the
-boy, killed him, took the meat from the fire, and spitted the body of
-his victim, which he half-roasted, and was found devouring when the
-duke, with his domestics, returned from his triumph. The idiot survived
-his father many years, though he did not succeed him upon his death
-in 1711, when the titles devolved upon Charles, the younger brother.
-He is known to have died in England. This horrid act of his child was,
-according to the common sort of people, the judgment of God upon him
-for his wicked concern in the Union—the greatest blessing, as it has
-happened, that ever was conferred upon Scotland by any statesman.
-
-[Illustration: Allan Ramsay’s Shop, High Street.]
-
-Charles, third Duke of Queensberry, who was born in Queensberry House,
-resided occasionally in it when he visited Scotland; but as he was
-much engaged in attending the court during the earlier part of his
-life, his stay here was seldom of long continuance. After his grace
-and the duchess embroiled themselves with the court (1729), on account
-of the support which they gave to the poet Gay, they came to Scotland,
-and resided for some time here. The author of the _Beggar’s Opera_
-accompanied them, and remained about a month, part of which was given
-to Dumfriesshire. Tradition in Edinburgh used to point out an attic in
-an old house opposite to Queensberry House, where, as an appropriate
-abode for a poet, his patrons are said to have stowed him. It was said
-he wrote the _Beggar’s Opera_ there—an entirely gratuitous assumption.
-In the progress of the history of his writings, nothing of consequence
-occurs at this time. He had finished the second part of the opera a
-short while before. After his return to the south, he is found engaged
-in ‘new writing a damned play, which he wrote several years before,
-called _The Wife of Bath_; a task which he accomplished while living
-with the Duke of Queensberry in Oxfordshire, during the ensuing months
-of August, September, and October.’[261] It is known, however, that
-while in Edinburgh, he haunted the shop of Allan Ramsay, in the
-Luckenbooths—the flat above that well-remembered and classical shop
-so long kept by Mr Creech, from which issued the _Mirror_, _Lounger_,
-and other works of name, and where for a long course of years all the
-_literati_ of Edinburgh used to assemble every day, like merchants at
-an Exchange. Here Ramsay amused Gay by pointing out to him the chief
-public characters of the city as they met in the forenoon at the Cross.
-Here, too, Gay read the _Gentle Shepherd_, and studied the Scottish
-language, so that upon his return to England he was enabled to make
-Pope appreciate the beauties of that delightful pastoral. He is said
-also to have spent some of his time with the sons of mirth and humour
-in an alehouse opposite to Queensberry House, kept by one Janet Hall.
-_Jenny Ha’s_, as the place was called, was a noted house for drinking
-claret from the butt within the recollection of old gentlemen living in
-my time.
-
-[Illustration: Jenny Ha’s Ale-House.]
-
-While Gay was at Drumlanrig, he employed himself in picking out a great
-number of the best books from the library, which were sent to England,
-whether for his own use or the duke’s is not known.
-
-Duchess Catherine was a most extraordinary lady, eccentric to a degree
-undoubtedly bordering on madness. Her beauty has been celebrated by
-Pope not in very elegant terms:
-
- ‘Since Queensberry to strip there’s no compelling,
- ’Tis from a handmaid we must take a Helen.’
-
-Prior had, at an early period of her life, depainted her irrepressible
-temper:
-
- ‘Thus Kitty, beautiful and young,
- And wild as colt untamed,
- Bespoke the fair from whom she sprang,
- By little rage inflamed;
- Inflamed with rage at sad restraint,
- Which wise mamma ordained;
- And sorely vexed to play the saint,
- Whilst wit and beauty reigned.
-
- “Shall I thumb holy books, confined
- With Abigails forsaken?
- Kitty’s for other things designed,
- Or I am much mistaken.
- Must Lady Jenny frisk about,
- And visit with her cousins?
- At balls must she make all the rout,
- And bring home hearts by dozens?
-
- What has she better, pray, than I?
- What hidden charms to boast,
- That all mankind for her should die,
- Whilst I am scarce a toast?
- Dearest mamma, for once let me,
- Unchained, my fortune try;
- I’ll have my earl as well as she,
- Or know the reason why.
-
- I’ll soon with Jenny’s pride quit score,
- Make all her lovers fall;
- They’ll grieve I was not loosed before,
- She, I was loosed at all.”
- Fondness prevailed, mamma gave way;
- Kitty, at heart’s desire,
- Obtained the chariot for a day,
- And set the world on fire!’
-
-It is an undoubted fact that, before her marriage, she had been
-confined in a _strait-jacket_ on account of mental derangement; and
-her conduct in married life was frequently such as to entitle her to a
-repetition of the same treatment. She was, in reality, at all times to
-a certain extent insane, though the politeness of fashionable society
-and the flattery of her poetical friends seem to have succeeded in
-passing off her extravagances as owing to an agreeable freedom of
-carriage and vivacity of mind. Her brother was as clever and as mad as
-herself, and used to amuse himself by hiding a book in his library, and
-hunting for it after he had forgot where it was deposited.
-
-Her grace was no admirer of Scottish manners. One of their habits she
-particularly detested—the custom of eating off the end of a knife.
-When people dined with her at Drumlanrig, and began to lift their food
-in this manner, she used to scream out and beseech them not to cut
-their throats; and then she would confound the offending persons by
-sending them a silver spoon or fork upon a salver.[262]
-
-When in Scotland her grace always dressed herself in the garb of a
-peasant-girl. Her object seems to have been to ridicule and put out
-of countenance the stately dresses and demeanour of the Scottish
-gentlewomen who visited her. One evening some country ladies paid her
-a visit, dressed in their best brocades, as for some state occasion.
-Her grace proposed a walk, and they were of course under the necessity
-of trooping off, to the utter discomfiture of their starched-up frills
-and flounces. Her grace at last pretended to be tired, sat down upon
-the dirtiest dunghill she could find, at the end of a farmhouse,
-and saying, ‘Pray, ladies, be seated,’ invited her poor draggled
-companions to plant themselves round about her. They stood so much in
-awe of her that they durst not refuse; and of course her grace had the
-satisfaction of afterwards laughing at the destruction of their silks.
-
-When she went out to an evening entertainment, and found a tea-equipage
-paraded which she thought too fine for the rank of the owner, she
-would contrive to overset the table and break the china. The forced
-politeness of her hosts on such occasions, and the assurances which
-they made her grace that no harm was done, &c., delighted her
-exceedingly.
-
-Her custom of dressing like a _paysanne_ once occasioned her grace a
-disagreeable adventure at a review. On her attempting to approach the
-duke, the guard, not knowing her rank or relation to him, pushed her
-rudely back. This threw her into such a passion that she could not be
-appeased till his grace assured her that the men had all been soundly
-flogged for their insolence.
-
-An anecdote scarcely less laughable is told of her grace as occurring
-at court, where she carried to the same extreme her attachment to
-plain-dealing and plain-dressing. An edict had been issued forbidding
-the ladies to appear at the drawing-room in aprons. This was
-disregarded by the duchess, whose rustic costume would not have been
-complete without that piece of dress. On approaching the door she was
-stopped by the lord in waiting, who told her that he could not possibly
-give her grace admission in that guise, when she, without a moment’s
-hesitation, stripped off her apron, threw it in his lordship’s face,
-and walked on, in her brown gown and petticoat, into the brilliant
-circle!
-
-Her caprices were endless. At one time when a ball had been announced
-at Drumlanrig, after the company were all assembled her grace took a
-headache, declared that she could bear no noise, and sat in a chair
-in the dancing-room, uttering a thousand peevish complaints. Lord
-Drumlanrig, who understood her humour, said: ‘Madam, I know how to
-cure you;’ and taking hold of her immense elbow-chair, which moved on
-castors, rolled her several times backwards and forwards across the
-saloon, till she began to laugh heartily—after which the festivities
-were allowed to commence.
-
-The duchess certainly, both in her conversation and letters, displayed
-a great degree of wit and quickness of mind. Yet nobody perhaps, saving
-Gay, ever loved her. She seems to have been one of those beings who are
-too much feared, admired, or envied, to be loved.
-
-The duke, on the contrary, who was a man of ordinary mind, had the
-affection and esteem of all. His temper and dispositions were sweet
-and amiable in the extreme. His benevolence, extending beyond his
-fellow-creatures, was exercised even upon his old horses, none of which
-he would ever permit to be killed or sold. He allowed the veterans of
-his stud free range in some parks near Drumlanrig, where, retired from
-active life, they got leave to die decent and natural deaths. Upon his
-grace’s decease, however, in 1778, these luckless pensioners were all
-put up to sale by his heartless successor; and it was a painful sight
-to see the feeble and pampered animals forced by their new masters to
-drag carts, &c., till they broke down and died on the roads and in the
-ditches.
-
-Duke Charles’s eldest son, Lord Drumlanrig, was altogether mad. He had
-contracted himself to one lady when he married another. The lady who
-became his wife was a daughter of the Earl of Hopetoun, and a most
-amiable woman. He loved her tenderly, as she deserved; but owing to
-the unfortunate contract which he had engaged in, they were never
-happy. They were often observed in the beautiful pleasure-grounds at
-Drumlanrig weeping bitterly together. These hapless circumstances had
-such a fatal effect upon him that during a journey to London in 1754
-he rode on before the coach in which the duchess travelled, and shot
-himself with one of his own pistols. It was given out that the pistol
-had gone off by chance.
-
-There is just one other tradition of Drumlanrig to be noticed. The
-castle, being a very large and roomy mansion, had of course a ghost,
-said to be the spirit of a Lady Anne Douglas. This unhappy phantom used
-to walk about the house, terrifying everybody, with her head in one
-hand and her fan in the other—are we to suppose, fanning her face?
-
-On the death of the Good Duke, as he was called, in 1778, the title and
-estates devolved on his cousin, the Earl of March, so well remembered
-as a sporting character and debauchee of the old school by the name of
-_Old Q._ In his time Queensberry House was occupied by other persons,
-for he had little inclination to spend his time in Scotland. And this
-brings to mind an anecdote highly illustrative of the wretchedness of
-such a life as his. When professing, towards the close of his days,
-to be eaten up with ennui, and incapable of any longer taking an
-interest in anything, it was suggested that he might go down to his
-Scotch estates and live among his tenantry. ‘I’ve tried that,’ said the
-_blasé_ aristocrat; ‘it is not amusing.’ In 1801 he caused Queensberry
-House to be stripped of its ornaments and sold. With fifty-eight
-fire-rooms, and a gallery seventy feet long, besides a garden, it was
-offered at the surprisingly low upset price of £900. The Government
-purchased it for a barrack. Thus has passed away the [home of the]
-Douglas of Queensberry from its old place in Edinburgh, where doubtless
-the money-making duke thought it would stand for ever.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[260] Introduction to Law’s _Memorials_, p. lxxx.
-
-[261] See letters of Gay, Swift, Pope, and Arbuthnot, in Scott’s
-edition of Swift.
-
-[262] In a letter from Gay to Swift, dated February 15, 1727-8, we find
-the subject illustrated as follows: ‘As to my favours from great men,
-I am in the same state you left me; but I am a great deal happier, as
-I have expectations. The Duchess of Queensberry has signalised her
-friendship to me upon this occasion [the bringing out of the _Beggar’s
-Opera_] in such a conspicuous manner, that I hope (for her sake) you
-will take care to put your fork to all its proper uses, and suffer
-nobody for the future to put their knives in their mouth.’
-
-In the _P.S._ to a letter from Gay to Swift, dated Middleton Stoney,
-November 9, 1729, Gay says: ‘To the lady I live with I owe my life and
-fortune. Think of her with respect—value and esteem her as I do—and
-never more despise a fork with three prongs. I wish, too, you would not
-eat from the point of your knife. She has so much goodness, virtue, and
-generosity, that if you knew her, you would have a pleasure in obeying
-her as I do. She often wishes she had known you.’
-
-
-
-
-TENNIS COURT.
-
- EARLY THEATRICALS—THE CANONGATE THEATRE—DIGGES AND MRS
- BELLAMY—A THEATRICAL RIOT.
-
-
-‘Just without the Water-gate,’ says Maitland, ‘on the eastern side of
-the street, was the Royal Tennis Court, anciently called the Catchpel
-[from Cache, a game since called _Fives_, and a favourite amusement
-in Scotland so early as the reign of James IV.].’ The house—a long,
-narrow building with a court—was burned down in modern times, and
-rebuilt for workshops. Yet the place continues to possess some interest
-as connected with the early and obscure history of the stage in
-Scotland, not to speak of the tennis itself, which was a fashionable
-amusement in Scotland in the seventeenth century, and here played by
-the Duke of York, Law the financial schemer, and other remarkable
-persons.
-
-The first known appearance of the post-reformation theatre in Edinburgh
-was in the reign of King James VI., when several companies came from
-London, chiefly for the amusement of the Court, including one to which
-Shakespeare is known to have belonged, though his personal attendance
-cannot be substantiated. There was no such thing, probably, as a play
-acted in Edinburgh from the departure of James in 1603 till the arrival
-of his grandson, the Duke of York, in 1680.
-
-Threatened by the Whig party in the House of Commons with an exclusion
-from the throne of England on account of his adherence to popery, this
-prince made use of his exile in Scotland to conciliate the nobles, and
-attach them to his person. His beautiful young wife, Mary of Modena,
-and his second daughter, the _Lady Anne_, assisted by giving parties
-at the palace—where, by the bye, tea was now first introduced into
-Scotland. Easy and obliging in their manners, these ladies revived
-the entertainment of the masque, and took parts themselves in the
-performance. At length, for his own amusement and that of his friends,
-James had some of his own company of players brought down to Holyrood
-and established in a little theatre, which was fitted up in the Tennis
-Court. On this occasion the remainder of the company playing at Oxford
-apologised for the diminution of their strength in the following lines
-written by Dryden:
-
- ‘Discord and plots, which have undone our age,
- With the same ruin have o’erwhelmed the stage.
- Our house has suffered in the common woe;
- We have been troubled with Scots rebels too.
- Our brethren have from Thames to Tweed departed,
- And of our sisters, all the kinder-hearted
- To Edinburgh gone, or coached or carted.
- With bonny _Blew cap_ there they act all night,
- For Scotch half-crowns—in English threepence hight.
- One nymph to whom fat Sir John Falstaff’s lean,
- There, with her single person, fills the scene.
- Another, with long use and age decayed,
- Died here old woman, and there rose a maid.
- Our trusty door-keeper, of former time,
- There struts and swaggers in heroic rhyme.
- Tack but a copper lace to drugget suit,
- And there’s a hero made without dispute;
- And that which was a capon’s tail before,
- Becomes a plume for Indian emperor.
- But all his subjects, to express the care
- Of imitation, go like Indians bare.
- Laced linen there would be a dangerous thing,
- It might perhaps a new rebellion bring;
- The Scot who wore it would be chosen king.’
-
-We learn from Fountainhall’s _Diary_ that on the celebration of the
-king’s birthday, 1681, the duke honoured the magistrates of the city
-with his presence in the theatre—namely, this theatre in the Tennis
-Court.
-
-No further glimpse of our city’s theatrical history is obtained till
-1705, when we find a Mr Abel announcing a concert in the Tennis Court,
-under the patronage of the Duke of Argyll, then acting as the queen’s
-commissioner to the Parliament. It is probable that the concert was
-only a cloak to some theatrical representation. This is the more
-likely from a tradition already mentioned of some old members of the
-Spendthrift Club who once frequented the tavern of a Mrs Hamilton,
-whose husband recollected having attended the theatre in the Tennis
-Court at Holyrood House, when the play was _The Spanish Friar_, and
-many members of the Union Parliament were present in the house.
-
-Theatrical amusements appear to have been continued at the Tennis Court
-in the year 1710, if we are to place any reliance upon the following
-anecdote: When Mrs Siddons came to Edinburgh in 1784, the late Mr
-Alexander Campbell, author of the _History of Scottish Poetry_, asked
-Miss Pitcairn, daughter of Dr Pitcairn, to accompany him to one of the
-representations. The old lady refused, saying with coquettish vivacity:
-‘Laddie, wad ye ha’e an auld lass like me to be running after the
-play-actors—me that hasna been at a theatre since I gaed wi’ papa
-to the Canongate in the year _ten_?’ The theatre was in those days
-encouraged chiefly by such Jacobites as Dr Pitcairn. It was denounced
-by the clergy as a hotbed of vice and profanity.
-
-After this we hear no more of the theatre in the Tennis Court. The next
-place where the drama set up its head was in a house in Carrubber’s
-Close, under the management of an Italian lady styled Signora Violante,
-who paid two visits to Edinburgh. After her came, in 1726, one Tony
-Alston, who set up his scenes in the same house, and whose first
-prologue was written by Ramsay: it may be found in the works of that
-poet. In 1727 the Society of High Constables, of which Ramsay was then
-a member, endeavoured to ‘suppress the abominable stage-plays lately
-set up by Anthony Alston.’[263] Mr Alston played for a season or two,
-under the fulminations of the clergy and a prosecution on their part in
-the Court of Session.
-
-
-CANONGATE THEATRE.
-
-From a period subsequent to 1727 till after the year 1753, the
-Tailors’ Hall in the Cowgate[264] was used as a theatre by itinerating
-companies, who met with some success notwithstanding the incessant
-hostility of the clergy.[265] It was a house which in theatrical
-phrase, could hold from £40 to £45. A split in the company here
-concerned led to the erection, in 1746-7, of a theatre at the bottom
-of a close in the Canongate, nearly opposite to the head of New
-Street. This house, capable of holding about £70—the boxes being
-half-a-crown and pit one and sixpence—was for several years the
-scene of good acting under Lee, Digges, Mrs Bellamy, and Mrs Ward. We
-learn from Henry Mackenzie that the tragedy of _Douglas_, which first
-appeared here in 1756, was most respectably acted—the two ladies above
-mentioned playing respectively Young Norval and Lady Randolph.[266] The
-personal elegance of Digges—understood to be the natural son of a man
-of rank—and the beauty of Mrs Bellamy were a theme of interest amongst
-old people fifty years ago; but their scandalous life was of course
-regarded with horror by the mass of respectable society. They lived in
-a small country-house at Bonnington, between Edinburgh and Leith. It is
-remembered that Mrs Bellamy was extremely fond of singing-birds, and
-kept many about her. When emigrating to Glasgow, she had her feathered
-favourites carried by a porter all the way that they might not suffer
-from the jolting of a carriage. Scotch people wondered to hear of ten
-guineas being expended on this occasion. Persons under the social ban
-for their irregular lives often win the love of individuals by their
-benevolence and sweetness of disposition—qualities, it is remarked,
-not unlikely to have been partly concerned in their first trespasses.
-This was the case with Mrs Bellamy. Her waiting-maid, Annie Waterstone,
-who is mentioned in her _Memoirs_, lived many years after in Edinburgh,
-and continued to the last to adore the memory of her mistress. Nay,
-she was, from this cause, a zealous friend of all kinds of players,
-and never would allow a slighting remark upon them to pass unreproved.
-It was curious to find in a poor old Scotchwoman of the humbler class
-such a sympathy with the follies and eccentricities of the children of
-Thespis.
-
-[Illustration: Tailors’ Hall, Cowgate.]
-
-While under the temporary management of two Edinburgh citizens
-extremely ill-qualified for the charge—one of them, by the bye, a Mr
-David Beatt, who had read the rebel proclamations from the Cross in
-1745—a sad accident befell the Canongate playhouse. Dissensions of
-a dire kind had broken out in the company. The public, as usual, was
-divided between them. Two classes of persons—the gentlemen of the
-bar and the students of the university[267]—were especially zealous
-as partisans. Things were at that pass when a trivial incident will
-precipitate them to the most fearful conclusion. One night, when
-_Hamlet_ was the play, a riot took place of so desperate a description
-that at length the house was set on fire. It being now necessary for
-the authorities to interfere, the Town-guard was called forth, and
-marched to the scene of disturbance; but though many of that veteran
-corps had faced the worst at Blenheim and Dettingen, they felt it as a
-totally different thing to be brought to action in a place which they
-regarded as a peculiar domain of the Father of Evil. When ordered,
-therefore, by their commander to advance into the house and across
-the stage, the poor fellows fairly stopped short amidst the scenes,
-the glaring colours of which at once surprised and terrified them.
-Indignant at their pusillanimity, the bold captain seized a musket,
-and placing himself in an attitude equal to anything that had ever
-appeared on those boards, exclaimed: ‘Now, my lads, follow _me_!’
-But just at the moment that he was going to rush on and charge the
-rioters, a trap-door on which he trod gave way, and in an instant the
-heroic leader had sunk out of sight, as if by magic. This was too much
-for the excited nerves of the guard; they immediately vacated the
-house, leaving the devil to make his own of it; and accordingly it
-was completely destroyed. It is added that when the captain by-and-by
-reappeared, they received him in the quality of a gentleman from the
-other world; nor could they all at once be undeceived, even when he
-cursed them in vigorous Gaelic for a pack of cowardly scoundrels.
-
-[Illustration: Old Playhouse Close.]
-
-The Canongate theatre revived for a short time, and had the honour
-to be the first house in our city in which the drama was acted with
-a license. It was opened with this privilege by Mr Ross on the 9th
-December 1767, when the play was _The Earl of Essex_, and a general
-prologue was spoken, the composition of James Boswell. Soon after,
-being deserted for the present building in the New Town,[268] it fell
-into ruin; in which state it formed the subject of a mock elegy to the
-muse of Robert Fergusson. The reader will perhaps be amused with the
-following extract from that poem:
-
- ‘Can I contemplate on those dreary scenes
- Of mouldering desolation, and forbid
- The voice elegiac, and the falling tear!
- No more from box to box the basket, piled
- With oranges as radiant as the spheres,
- Shall with their luscious virtues charm the sense
- Of taste or smell. No more the gaudy beau,
- With handkerchief in lavender well drenched,
- Or bergamot, or [in] rose-waters pure,
- With flavoriferous sweets shall chase away
- The pestilential fumes of vulgar cits,
- Who, in impatience for the curtain’s rise,
- Amused the lingering moments, and applied
- Thirst-quenching porter to their parched lips.
- Alas! how sadly altered is the scene!
- For lo! those sacred walls, that late were brushed
- By rustling silks and waving capuchines,
- Are now become the sport of wrinkled Time!
- Those walls that late have echoed to the voice
- Of stern King Richard, to the seat transformed
- Of crawling spiders and detested moths,
- Who in the lonely crevices reside,
- Or gender in the beams, that have upheld
- Gods, demigods, and all the joyous crew
- Of thunderers in the galleries above.’
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[263] Record of that Society.
-
-[264] The date over the exterior gateway of the Tailors’ Hall, towards
-the Cowgate, is 1644; but it is ascertained that the corporation had
-its hall at this place at an earlier period. An assembly of between
-two and three hundred clergymen was held here on Tuesday the 27th of
-February 1638 in order to consider the National Covenant, which was
-presented to the public next day in the Greyfriars Church. We are
-informed by the Earl of Rothes, in his _Relations_ of the transactions
-of this period, in which he bore so distinguished a part, that some few
-objected to certain points in it; but being taken aside into the garden
-attached to this hall, and there lectured on the necessity of mutual
-concession for the sake of the general cause, they were soon brought to
-give their entire assent.
-
-[265] The announcements of entertainments given at this fashionable
-place of amusement in the eighteenth century make amusing reading
-to-day. ‘February 17, 1743. We hear that on Monday 21st instant, at the
-Tailors’ Hall, Cowgate, at the desire of several ladies of distinction,
-will be performed a concert of vocal and instrumental music. After
-which will be given gratis _Richard the Third_, containing several
-historical passages. To which will be added gratis “The Mock Lawyer.”
-Tickets for the Concert (on which _are_ [sic] printed a new device
-called Apology and Evasion) to be had at the Exchange and John’s
-Coffee-houses, and at Mr Este’s lodgings at Mr Monro’s, musician in the
-Cowgate, near Tailors’ Hall. As Mrs Este’s present condition will not
-admit a personal application, she hopes the ladies notwithstanding will
-grace her concert.’
-
-[266] Among the audience on the first night of the performance of
-_Douglas_ were the two daughters of John and Lady Susan Renton, one of
-whom, Eleanor, was the mother of Charles Kirkpatrick Sharpe, to whom
-the author in his ‘Introductory Notice’ expresses his indebtedness
-for assistance on the first appearance of this work. And it was for
-attending one of the performances that the minister of Liberton
-Church brought himself under sentence of six weeks’ suspension by the
-Presbytery of Edinburgh—a sentence modified in consideration of his
-plea that though he attended the play, ‘he concealed himself as well as
-he could to avoid giving offence.’
-
-[267] Maitland, in his _History of Edinburgh_, 1753, says that the
-encouragement given to the diversions at the house ‘is so very great,
-’tis to be feared it will terminate in the _destruction of the
-university_. Such diversions,’ he adds, ‘are noways becoming a seat of
-the Muses.’
-
-[268] The Theatre Royal in Shakespeare Square, where the General Post
-Office now stands.
-
-
-
-
-MARIONVILLE—STORY OF CAPTAIN MACRAE.
-
-
-[Illustration: Marionville.]
-
-Between the eastern suburbs of Edinburgh and the village of Restalrig
-stands a solitary house named Marionville, enclosed in a shrubbery
-of no great extent, surrounded by high walls. Whether it be that the
-place has become dismal in consequence of the rise of a noxious fen
-in its neighbourhood, or that the tale connected with it acts upon
-the imagination, I cannot pretend to decide, but unquestionably there
-is about the house an air of depression and melancholy such as could
-scarcely fail to strike the most unobservant passenger. Yet, in 1790,
-this mansion was the abode of a gay and fashionable family, who,
-amongst other amusements, indulged in that of private theatricals,
-and in this line were so highly successful that admission to the
-Marionville theatre became a privilege for which the highest in the
-land would contend. Mr Macrae, the head of this family, was a man of
-good fortune, being the proprietor of an estate in Dumfriesshire, and
-also of good connections—the Earl of Glencairn, whom Burns has so
-much celebrated, being his cousin, while by his mother he was nearly
-related to Viscount Fermoy and the celebrated Sir Boyle Roche. He had
-been for some years retired from the Irish Carabiniers, and being still
-in the prime of life, he was thinking of again entering the army, when
-the incident which I am about to relate took place. He was a man of
-gentlemanlike accomplishments and manners, of a generous and friendly
-disposition, but marked by a keen and imperious sense of the deference
-due to a gentleman, and a heat of temper which was apt to make him
-commit actions of which he afterwards bitterly repented. After the
-unfortunate affair which ended his career in Scotland, the public,
-who never make nice distinctions as to the character of individuals,
-adopted the idea that he was as inhumane as rash, and he was reported
-to be an experienced duellist. But here he was greatly misrepresented.
-Mr Macrae would have shrunk from a deliberate act of cruelty; and the
-only connection he had ever had with single combat was in the way of
-endeavouring to reconcile friends who had quarrelled—an object in
-which he was successful on several memorable occasions. But the same
-man—whom all that really knew him allowed to be a delightful companion
-and kind-hearted man—was liable to be transported beyond the bounds of
-reason by casual and trivial occurrences. A messenger of the law having
-arrested the Rev. Mr Cunningham, brother of the Earl of Glencairn,
-for debt, as he was passing with a party from the drawing-room to the
-dining-room at Drumsheugh House, Mr Macrae threw the man over the
-stair. He was prompted to this act by indignation at the affront which
-he conceived his cousin, as a gentleman, had received from a common
-man. But soon after, when it was represented to him that every other
-means of inducing Mr Cunningham to settle his debt had failed, and when
-he learned that the messenger had suffered severe injury, he went to
-him, made him a hearty apology, and agreed to pay three hundred guineas
-by way of compensation. He had himself allowed a debt due to a tailor
-to remain too long unpaid, and the consequence was that he received
-a summons for it before the sheriff-court. With this document in his
-hand, he called, in a state of great excitement, upon his law-agent, to
-whom he began to read: ‘Archibald Cockburn of Cockpen, sheriff-depute,’
-&c., till he came to a passage which declared that ‘he, the said James
-Macrae, had been oft and diverse times desired and required,’ &c. ‘The
-greatest lie ever uttered!’ he exclaimed. ‘He had never heard a word
-of it before; he would instantly go to the sheriff and horsewhip him.’
-The agent had at the time letters of _horning_ against a very worthy
-baronet lying upon his table—that is to say, a document in which the
-baronet was denounced as a rebel to the king, according to a form of
-the law of Scotland, for failing to pay his debt. The agent took up
-this, and coolly began to read: ‘George III. by the grace of God,’ &c.
-Macrae at once saw the application, and fell a-laughing at his own
-folly, saying he would go directly and give the sheriff tickets for
-the play at Marionville, which he and his family requested. It will be
-seen that the fault of this unfortunate gentleman was heat of temper,
-not a savage disposition; but what fault can be more fatal than heat of
-temper?
-
-Mr Macrae was married to an accomplished lady, Maria Cecilia le Maitre,
-daughter of the Baroness Nolken, wife of the Swedish ambassador.
-They occasionally resided in Paris, with Mrs Macrae’s relations,
-particularly with her cousin, Madame de la Briche, whose private
-theatricals in her elegant house at the Marais were the models of those
-afterwards instituted at Marionville. It may not be unworthy of notice
-that amongst their fellow-performers at Madame de la Briche’s was
-the celebrated Abbé Sieyès. When Mr Macrae and his lady set up their
-theatre at Marionville, they both took characters, he appearing to
-advantage in such parts as that of Dionysius in the _Grecian Daughter_,
-and she in the first line of female parts in genteel comedy. Sir David
-Kinloch and a Mr Justice were their best male associates; and the
-chief female performer, after Mrs Macrae herself, was Mrs Carruthers
-of Dormont, a daughter of the celebrated artist Paul Sandby. When all
-due deduction is made for the effects of complaisance, there seems to
-remain undoubted testimony that these performances involved no small
-amount of talent.
-
-In Mr and Mrs Macrae’s circle of visiting acquaintance, and frequent
-spectators of the Marionville theatricals, were Sir George Ramsay of
-Bamff and his lady. Sir George had recently returned, with an addition
-to his fortune, from India, and was now settling himself down for
-the remainder of life in his native country. I have seen original
-letters between the two families, showing that they lived on the most
-friendly terms and entertained the highest esteem for each other. One
-written by Lady Ramsay to Mrs Macrae, from Sir George’s country-seat in
-Perthshire, commences thus: ‘My dear friend, I have just time to write
-you a few lines to say how much I long to hear from you, and to assure
-you how sincerely I love you.’ Her ladyship adds: ‘I am now enjoying
-rural retirement with Sir George, who is really so good and indulgent,
-that I am as happy as the gayest scenes could make me. He joins me in
-kind compliments to you and Mr Macrae,’ &c. How deplorable that social
-affections, which contribute so much to make life pass agreeably,
-should be liable to a wild upbreak from perhaps some trivial cause, not
-in itself worthy of a moment’s regard, and only rendered of consequence
-by the sensitiveness of pride and a deference to false and worldly
-maxims!
-
-The source of the quarrel between Mr Macrae and Sir George was of a
-kind almost too mean and ridiculous to be spoken of. On the evening
-of the 7th April 1790, the former gentleman handed a lady out of the
-Edinburgh theatre, and endeavoured to get a chair for her, in which
-she might be conveyed home. Seeing two men approaching through the
-crowd with one, he called to ask if it was disengaged, to which the
-men replied with a distinct affirmative. As Mr Macrae handed the lady
-forward to put her into it, a footman, in a violent manner, seized hold
-of one of the poles, and insisted that it was engaged for his mistress.
-The man seemed disordered by liquor, and it was afterwards distinctly
-made manifest that he was acting without the guidance of reason. His
-lady had gone home some time before, while he was out of the way. He
-was not aware of this, and, under a confused sense of duty, he was now
-eager to obtain a chair for her, but in reality had not bespoken that
-upon which he laid hold. Mr Macrae, annoyed at the man’s pertinacity
-at such a moment, rapped him over the knuckles with a short cane to
-make him give way; on which the servant called him a scoundrel, and
-gave him a push on the breast. Incensed overmuch by this conduct, Mr
-Macrae struck him smartly over the head with his cane, on which the
-man cried out worse than before, and moved off. Mr Macrae, following
-him, repeated his blows two or three times, but only with that degree
-of force which he thought needful for a chastisement. In the meantime
-the lady whom Mr Macrae had handed out got into a different chair, and
-was carried off. Some of the bystanders, seeing a gentleman beating a
-servant, cried shame, and showed a disposition to take part with the
-latter; but there were individuals present who had observed all the
-circumstances, and who felt differently. One gentleman afterwards gave
-evidence that he had been insulted by the servant, at an earlier period
-of the evening, in precisely the same manner as Mr Macrae, and that
-the man’s conduct had throughout been rude and insolent, a consequence
-apparently of drunkenness.
-
-Learning that the servant was in the employment of Lady Ramsay,
-Mr Macrae came into town next day, full of anxiety to obviate any
-unpleasant impression which the incident might have made upon her mind.
-Meeting Sir George in the street, he expressed to him his concern
-on the subject, when Sir George said lightly that the man being his
-lady’s footman, he did not feel any concern in the matter. Mr Macrae
-then went to apologise to Lady Ramsay, whom he found sitting for her
-portrait in the lodgings of the young artist Raeburn, afterwards so
-highly distinguished. It has been said that he fell on his knees before
-the lady to entreat her pardon for what he had done to her servant.
-Certainly he left her with the impression that he had no reason to
-expect a quarrel between himself and Sir George on account of what had
-taken place.
-
-James Merry—this was the servant’s name—had been wounded in the
-head, but not severely. The injuries which he had sustained—though
-nothing can justify the violence which inflicted them—were only of
-such a nature as a few days of confinement would have healed. Such,
-indeed, was the express testimony given by his medical attendant,
-Mr Benjamin Bell. There was, however, a strong feeling amongst his
-class against Macrae, who was informed, in an anonymous letter,
-that a hundred and seven men-servants had agreed to have some
-revenge upon him. Merry himself had determined to institute legal
-proceedings against Mr Macrae for the recovery of damages. A process
-was commenced by the issue of a summons, which Mr Macrae received
-on the 12th. Wounded to the quick by this procedure, and smarting
-under the insolence of the anonymous letter, Mr Macrae wrote next day
-a note to Sir George Ramsay, in which, addressing him without any
-term of friendly regard, he demanded that either Merry should drop
-the prosecution or that his master should turn him off. Sir George
-temperately replied ‘that he had only now heard of the prosecution for
-the first time; that the man met with no encouragement from him; and
-that he hoped that Mr Macrae, on further consideration, would not think
-it incumbent on him to interfere, especially as the man was at present
-far from being well.’
-
-On the same evening Mr Amory, a military friend of Mr Macrae, called
-upon Sir George with a second note from that gentleman, once more
-insisting on the man being turned off, and stating that in the event
-of his refusal Mr Amory was empowered to communicate his opinion of
-his conduct. Sir George did refuse, on the plea that he had yet seen
-no good reason for his discharging the servant; and Mr Amory then said
-it was his duty to convey Mr Macrae’s opinion, which was ‘that Sir
-George’s conduct had not been that of a gentleman.’ Sir George then
-said that further conversation was unnecessary; all that remained was
-to agree upon a place of meeting. They met again that evening at a
-tavern, where Mr Amory informed Sir George that it was Mr Macrae’s wish
-that they should meet, properly attended, next day at twelve o’clock at
-Ward’s Inn, on the borders of Musselburgh Links.
-
-The parties met there accordingly, Mr Macrae being attended by Captain
-Amory, and Sir George Ramsay by Sir William Maxwell; Mr Benjamin
-Bell, the surgeon, being also of the party. Mr Macrae had brought an
-additional friend, a Captain Haig, to favour them with his advice, but
-not to act formally as a second. The two parties being in different
-rooms, Sir William Maxwell came into that occupied by Mr Macrae, and
-proposed that if Mr Macrae would apologise for the intemperate style of
-his letters demanding the discharge of the servant, Sir George would
-grant his request, and the affair would end. Mr Macrae answered that he
-would be most happy to comply with this proposal if his friends thought
-it proper; but he must abide by their decision. The question being put
-to Captain Haig, he answered, in a deliberate manner: ‘It is altogether
-impossible; Sir George must, in the first place, turn off his servant,
-and Mr Macrae will then apologise.’ Hearing this speech, equally marked
-by wrong judgment and wrong feeling, Macrae, according to the testimony
-of Mr Bell, shed tears of anguish. The parties then walked to the
-beach, and took their places in the usual manner. On the word being
-given, Sir George took deliberate aim at Macrae, the neck of whose coat
-was grazed by his bullet. Macrae had, if his own solemn asseveration
-is to be believed, intended to fire in the air; but when he found Sir
-George aiming thus at his life, he altered his resolution, and brought
-his antagonist to the ground with a mortal wound in the body.
-
-There was the usual consternation and unspeakable distress. Mr Macrae
-went up to Sir George and ‘told him that he was sincerely afflicted at
-seeing him in that situation.’[269] It was with difficulty, and only at
-the urgent request of Sir William Maxwell, that he could be induced to
-quit the field. Sir George lingered for two days. The event occasioned
-a great sensation in the public mind, and a very unfavourable view was
-generally taken of Mr Macrae’s conduct. It was given out that during a
-considerable interval, while in expectation of the duel taking place,
-he had practised pistol-shooting in his garden at a barber’s block;
-and he was also said to have been provided with a pair of pistols
-of a singularly apt and deadly character; the truth being that the
-interval was a brief one, his hand totally unskilled in shooting, and
-the pistols a bad brass-mounted pair, hastily furnished by Amory. We
-have Amory’s testimony that as they were pursuing their journey to
-another country, he was constantly bewailing the fate of Sir George
-Ramsay, remarking how unfortunate it was that he took so obstinate a
-view about the servant’s case. The demand, he said, was one which he
-would have thought it necessary to comply with. He had asked Sir George
-nothing but what he would have done had it been his own case. This is
-so consonant with what appears otherwise respecting his character that
-we cannot doubt it. It is only to be lamented that he should not have
-made the demand in terms more calculated to lead to compliance.
-
-The death of an amiable man under such deplorable circumstances
-roused the most zealous vigilance on the part of the law
-authorities; but Mr Macrae and his second succeeded in reaching
-France. A summons was issued for his trial, but he was advised
-not to appear, and accordingly sentence of outlawry was passed
-against him. The servant’s prosecution meanwhile went on, and
-was ultimately decided against Mr Macrae, although, on a cool
-perusal of the evidence on both sides, there appears to me the
-clearest proof of Merry having been the first aggressor. Mr
-Macrae lived in France till the progress of the Revolution forced
-him to go to Altona. When time seemed to have a little softened
-matters against him, he took steps to ascertain if he could safely
-return to his native country. It was decided by counsel that he
-could not. They held that his case entirely wanted the extenuating
-circumstance which was necessary—his having to contemplate
-degradation if he did not challenge. He was under no such
-danger; so that, from his letters to Sir George Ramsay, he
-appeared to have forced on the duel purely for revenge. He came
-to see the case in this light himself, and was obliged to make up
-his mind to perpetual self-banishment. He survived thirty years.
-A gentleman of my acquaintance, who had known him in early life in
-Scotland, was surprised to meet him one day in a Parisian coffee-house
-after the peace of 1814—the wreck or ghost of the handsome,
-sprightly man he had once been. The comfort of his home,
-his country, and friends, the use of his talents to all these, had
-been lost, and himself obliged to lead the life of a condemned
-Cain, all through the one fault of a fiery temper.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[269] Letter of Captain Amory, MS.
-
-
-
-
-ALISON SQUARE.
-
-
-This is a large mass of building between Nicolson Square and the
-Potterrow, in the south side of the town. It was built about the middle
-of the eighteenth century, upon venture, by one Colin Alison, a joiner,
-who in after-life was much reduced in his circumstances, not improbably
-in consequence of this large speculation. In his last days he spent
-some of his few remaining shillings in the erection of two boards, at
-different parts of his buildings, whereon was represented a globe in
-the act of falling, with this inscription:
-
- ‘If Fortune smile, be not puffed up,
- And if it frown, be not dismayed;
- For Providence governeth all,
- Although the world’s turned upside down.’
-
-Alison Square[270] has enjoyed some little connection with the Scottish
-muses. It was in the house of a Miss Nimmo in this place that Burns met
-Clarinda. It would amuse the reader of the ardent letters which passed
-between these two kindred souls to visit the plain, small, dusky house
-in which the lady lived at that time, and where she received several
-visits of the poet. It is situated in the adjacent humble street called
-the Potterrow, the first floor over the passage into General’s Entry,
-accessible by a narrow spiral stair from the court. A little parlour, a
-bedroom, and a kitchen constituted the accommodations of Mrs M’Lehose;
-now the residence of two, if not three, families in the extreme of
-humble life. Here she lived with a couple of infant children, a young
-and beautiful woman, blighted in her prospects in consequence of an
-unhappy marriage (her husband having deserted her, after using her
-barbarously), yet cheerful and buoyant, through constitutional good
-spirits and a rational piety. To understand her friendship with Burns
-and the meaning of their correspondence, it was almost necessary to
-have known the woman. Seeing her and hearing her converse, even in
-advanced life, one could penetrate the whole mystery very readily,
-in appreciating a spirit unusually gay, frank, and emotional. The
-perfect innocence of the woman’s nature was evident at once; and by her
-friends it was never doubted.
-
-[Illustration: ALISON SQUARE.
-
-PAGE 358.]
-
-In Alison Square Thomas Campbell lived while composing his _Pleasures
-of Hope_. The place where any deathless composition took its shape
-from the author’s brain is worthy of a place in the chart. A lady, the
-early friend of Campbell and his family, indicates their residence at
-that time as being the second door in the stair, entered from the east
-side, on the north side of the arch, the windows looking partly into
-Nicolson Square and partly to the Potterrow. The same authority states
-that much of the poem was written in the middle of the night, and from
-a sad cause. The poet’s mother, it seems, was of a temper so extremely
-irritable that her family had no rest till she retired for the night.
-It was only at that season that the young poet could command repose of
-mind for his task.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[270] The north and south sides only of this square now remain. The
-west was removed to make a thoroughfare—Marshall Street, connecting
-Nicolson Square and Potterrow.
-
-
-
-
-LEITH WALK.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Up to the period of the building of the North Bridge, which connects
-the Old with the New Town of Edinburgh, the Easter Road was the
-principal passage to Leith. The origin of Leith Walk was accidental. At
-the approach of Cromwell to Edinburgh, immediately before the battle of
-Dunbar, Leslie, the Covenanting general, arranged the Scottish troops
-in a line, the right wing of which rested upon the Calton Hill, and
-the left upon Leith, being designed for the defence of these towns. A
-battery was erected at each extremity, and the line was itself defended
-by a trench and a mound, the latter composed of the earth dug from the
-former. Leslie himself took up his head-quarters at Broughton, whence
-some of his despatches are dated. When the war was shifted to another
-quarter, this mound became a footway between the two towns. It is thus
-described in a book published in 1748: ‘A very handsome gravel walk,
-twenty feet broad, which is kept in good repair at the public charge,
-and no horses suffered to come upon it.’ When Provost Drummond built
-the North Bridge in 1769, he contemplated that it should become an
-access to Leith as well as to the projected New Town. Indeed, he seems
-to have been obliged to make it pass altogether under that semblance
-in order to conciliate the people; for upon the plate sunk under
-the foundations of the bridge it is solely described as the opening
-of a road to Leith. At that time the idea of a New Town seemed so
-chimerical that he scarcely dared to avow his patriotic intentions.
-After the opening of the bridge, the _Walk_ seems to have become used
-by carriages, but without any regard being paid to its condition or
-any system established for keeping it in repair. It consequently fell
-into a state of disorder, from which it was not rescued till after
-the commencement of the present century, when a splendid causeway was
-formed at a great expense by the city of Edinburgh, and a toll erected
-for its payment.
-
-One terrible peculiarity attended Leith Walk in its former condition.
-It was overhung by a gibbet, from which were suspended all culprits
-whose bodies at condemnation were sentenced to be hung in chains. The
-place where this gibbet stood, called the Gallow Lee, is now a good
-deal altered in appearance. It was a slight rising ground immediately
-above the site of the toll[271] and on the west side of the road, being
-now partly enclosed by the precincts of a villa, where the beautiful
-Duchess of Gordon once lived. The greater part of the Gallow Lee now
-exists in the shape of mortar in the walls of the houses of the New
-Town. At the time when that elegant city was built, the proprietor of
-this redoubtable piece of ground, finding it composed of excellent
-sand, sold it all away to the builders, to be converted into mortar, so
-that it soon, from a rising ground, became a deep hollow. An amusing
-anecdote is told in connection with this fact. The honest man, it
-seems, was himself fully as much of a sand-bed as his property. He was
-a big, voluminous man, one of those persons upon whom drink never seems
-to have any effect. It is related that every day, while the carts were
-taking away his sand, he stood regularly at the place receiving the
-money in return, and every little sum he got was immediately converted
-into liquor and applied to the comfort of his inner man. A public-house
-was at length erected at the spot for his particular behoof; and,
-assuredly, as long as the Gallow Lee lasted this house did not want
-custom. Perhaps, familiar as the reader may be with stories of sots who
-have drunk away their last acre, he never before heard of the thing
-being done in so literal a manner.
-
-If my reader be an inhabitant of Edinburgh of any standing, he must
-have many delightful associations of Leith Walk in connection with his
-childhood. Of all the streets in Edinburgh or Leith, the _Walk_ in
-former times was certainly the street for boys and girls. From top to
-bottom, it was a scene of wonders and enjoyments peculiarly devoted
-to children. Besides the panoramas and caravan-shows, which were
-comparatively transient spectacles, there were several shows upon Leith
-Walk, which might be considered as regular fixtures and part of the
-_country-cousin sights_ of Edinburgh. Who can forget the waxworks of
-‘Mrs Sands, widow of the late G. Sands,’ which occupied a _laigh_ shop
-opposite to the present Haddington Place, and at the door of which,
-besides various parrots and sundry birds of Paradise, sat the wax
-figure of a little man in the dress of a French courtier of the _ancien
-régime_, reading one eternal copy of the _Edinburgh Advertiser_? The
-very outsides of these wonder-shops was an immense treat; all along
-the Walk it was one delicious scene of squirrels hung out at doors,
-and monkeys dressed like soldiers and sailors, with holes behind where
-their tails came through. Even the half-penniless boy might here get
-his appetite for wonders to some extent gratified.
-
-Besides being of old the chosen place for shows, Leith Walk was the
-Rialto of _objects_. This word requires explanation. It is applied by
-the people of Scotland to persons who have been born with or overtaken
-by some miserable personal evil. From one end to the other, Leith
-Walk was garrisoned by poor creatures under these circumstances, who,
-from handbarrows, wheelbarrows, or iron legs, if peradventure they
-possessed such adjuncts, entreated the passengers for charity—some by
-voices of song, some by speech, some by driddling, as Burns calls it,
-on fiddles or grinding on hand-organs—indeed, a complete continuous
-ambuscade against the pocket. Shows and _objects_ have now alike
-vanished from Leith Walk. It is now a plain street, composed of little
-shops of the usual suburban appearance, and characterised by nothing
-peculiar, except perhaps a certain air of pretension, which is in some
-cases abundantly ludicrous. A great number, be it observed, are mere
-tiled cottages, which contrive, by means of lofty fictitious fronts,
-plastered and painted in a showy manner, to make up a good appearance
-towards the street. If there be a school in one of those receptacles,
-it is entitled an _academy_; if an artisan’s workshop, however
-humble, it is a _manufactory_. Everything about it is still showy
-and unsubstantial; it is still, in some measure, the type of what it
-formerly was.
-
-Near the bottom of Leith Walk is a row of somewhat old-fashioned
-houses bearing the name of Springfield. A large one, the second from
-the top, was, ninety years ago, the residence of Mr M’Culloch of
-Ardwell, a commissioner of customs, and noted as a man of pleasantry
-and wit. Here, in some of the last years of his life, did Samuel
-Foote occasionally appear as Mr M’Culloch’s guest—_Arcades ambo et
-respondere parati_. But the history of their intimacy is worthy of
-being particularly told; so I transcribe it from the recollection of a
-gentleman whose advanced age and family connections could alone have
-made us faithfully acquainted with circumstances so remote from our
-time.
-
-In the winter of 1775-6 [more probably that of 1774-5], Mr M’Culloch
-visited his country mansion in the stewartry of Kirkcudbright, in
-company of a friend named Mouat, in order to be present at an election.
-Mr M’Culloch was a man of joyous temperament and a good deal of wit,
-and used to amuse his friends by spouting half-random verses. He and
-his friend spent a week or two very pleasantly in the country, and
-then set out on their return to Leith; Mr M’Culloch carrying with him
-his infant son David, familiarly called _Wee Davie_, for the purpose
-of commencing his education in Edinburgh. To pursue the narrative of
-my correspondent: ‘The two travellers got on pretty well as far as
-Dumfries; but it was with difficulty, occasioned by a snowstorm, that
-they reached Moffat, where they tarried for the night.
-
-‘Early on a January morning, the snow having fallen heavily during
-the preceding night, they set off in a post-chaise and four horses
-to proceed on their perilous journey. Two gentlemen in their own
-carriage left the _King’s Arms Inn_ (then kept by James Little) at the
-same time. With difficulty the first pair of travellers reached the
-top of Erickstane, but farther they could not go. The parties came
-out of their carriages, and, aided by their postillions, they held
-a consultation as to the prudence of attempting to proceed down the
-vale of Tweed. This was considered as a vain and dangerous attempt,
-and it was therefore determined on to return to Moffat. The turning
-of the carriages having become a dangerous undertaking, Wee Davie
-had to be taken out of the chaise and laid on the snow, wrapped in a
-blanket, until the business was accomplished. The parties then went
-back to Moffat, arriving there between nine and ten in the morning. Mr
-M’Culloch and his friend then learned that, of the two strangers who
-had left the inn at the same time, and had since returned, one was the
-celebrated Foote, and the other either Ross or Souter, but which of the
-two favourite sons of Thalia I cannot remember at this distant period
-of time. Let it be kept in mind that Foote had lost a leg, and walked
-with difficulty.
-
-‘Immediately on returning Foote had entered the inn, not in
-good-humour, to order breakfast. His carriage stood opposite the inn
-door, in order to get the luggage taken off. While this was going
-on a paper was placarded on one of the panels. The wit came out to
-see how all matters were going on, when, observing the paper, he in
-wrath exclaimed: “What rascal has been placarding his ribaldry on my
-carriage?” He had patience, however, to pause and read the following
-lines:
-
- “While Boreas his flaky storm did guide,
- Deep covering every hill, o’er Tweed and Clyde,
- The north-wind god spied travellers seeking way;
- Sternly he cried: ‘Retrace your steps, I say;
- Let not _one foot_, ’tis my behest, profane
- The sacred snows which lie on Erickstane.’”
-
-The countenance of our wit now brightened, as he called out, with an
-exclamation of surprise: “I should like to know the fellow who wrote
-that; for, be he who he may, he’s no mean hand at an epigram.” Mrs
-Little, the good but eccentric landlady, now stepped forward and spoke
-thus: “Trouth, Maister Fut, it’s mair than likely that it was our
-_frien’_ Maister M’Culloch of Ardwell that did it; it’s weel kent that
-he’s a poyet; he’s a guid eneugh sort o’ man, but he never comes here
-without poyet-teasing mysel’ or the guidman, or some are or other about
-the house. It wud be weel dune if ye wud speak to him.” Ardwell now
-came forward, muttering some sort of apology, which Foote instantly
-stopped by saying: “My dear sir, an apology is not necessary; I am fair
-game for every one, for I take any one for game when it suits me. You
-and I must become acquainted, for I find that we are brother-poets,
-and that we were this morning companions in misfortune on ‘the sacred
-snows of Erickstane.’” Thus began an intimacy which the sequel will
-show turned out to be a lasting one. The two parties now joined at the
-breakfast-table, as they did at every other meal for the next twenty
-days.
-
-[Illustration: DYERS’ CLOSE.
-
-Old houses being demolished to make room for extension of Heriot Watt
-College.
-
-PAGE 364.]
-
-‘Foote remained quiet for a few hours after breakfast, until he had
-beat about for game, as he termed it, and he first fixed on worthy
-Mrs Little, his hostess. By some occult means he had managed to get
-hold of some of the old lady’s habiliments, particularly a favourite
-night-cap—provincially, a _mutch_. After attiring himself _à la_ Mrs
-Little, he went into the kitchen and through the house, mimicking the
-garrulous landlady so very exactly in giving orders, scolding, &c.
-that no servant doubted as to its being the mistress _in propriâ
-personâ_. This kind of amusement went on for several days for the
-benefit of the people in Moffat. By-and-by the snow allowed the united
-parties to advance as far as the Crook, upon Tweed, and here they were
-again storm-stayed for ten days. Nevertheless, Foote and his companion,
-who was well qualified to support him, never for a moment flagged in
-creating merriment or affording the party amusement of some sort. The
-snow-cleared away at last, so as to enable the travellers to reach
-Edinburgh, and there to end their journey. The intimacy of Foote and
-Ardwell did not end here, but continued until the death of Foote.
-
-‘After this period Foote several times visited Scotland: he always in
-his writings showed himself partial to Scotland and to the Scotch.
-On every visit which he afterwards made to the northern metropolis,
-he set apart a night or two for a social meeting with his friend
-Ardwell, whose family lived in the second house from the head of that
-pretty row of houses more than half-way down Leith Walk, still called
-Springfield. In the parlour, on the right-hand side in entering that
-house, the largest of the row, Foote, the celebrated wit of the day,
-has frequently been associated with many of the Edinburgh and Leith
-worthies, when and where he was wont to keep the table in a roar.
-
-‘The biography of Foote is well known. However, I may add that Mr Mouat
-and Mr M’Culloch died much lamented in the year 1793. David M’Culloch
-(Wee Davie) died in the year 1824, at Cheltenham, much regretted.
-For many years he had resided in India. In consequence of family
-connection, he became a familiar visitor at Abbotsford, and a favourite
-acquaintance of Sir Walter Scott.[272] Mr Lockhart tells us that, next
-to Tom Moore, Sir Walter thought him the finest warbler he had ever
-heard. He was certainly an exquisitely fine singer of Scotch songs. Sir
-Walter Scott never heard him sing until he was far advanced in life, or
-until his voice had given way to a long residence in India. Mr Lockhart
-also tells us that David M’Culloch in his youth was an intimate and
-favourite companion of Burns, and that the poet hardly ventured to
-publish many of his songs until he heard them sung by his friend. I
-will only add that the writer of this has more than once heard Burns
-say that he never fully knew the beauty of his songs until he heard
-them sung by David M’Culloch.’
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[271] The site was midway between Edinburgh and Leith, now represented
-by Shrub Place.
-
-[272] Sir Walter’s brother Thomas was married to a sister of Mr
-M’Culloch.
-
-
-
-
-[GABRIEL’S ROAD.
-
-
-Previous to 1767 the eye of a person perched in a favourable situation
-in the Old Town surveyed the whole ground on which the New Town was
-afterwards built. Immediately beyond the North Loch was a range of
-grass fields called Bearford’s Parks, from the name of the proprietor,
-Hepburn of Bearford in East Lothian. Bounding these on the north, in
-the line of the subsequent Princes Street, was a road enclosed by two
-dry-stone walls, thence called the Lang Dykes; it was the line by which
-the Viscount Dundee rode with his small troop of adherents when he had
-ascertained that the Convention was determined to settle the crown upon
-the Prince of Orange, and he saw that the only duty that remained for
-him was to raise the Highland clans for King James.[273] The main mass
-of ground, originally rough with whins and broom, but latterly forming
-what was called Wood’s Farm, was crossed obliquely by a road extending
-between Silvermills, a rural hamlet on the mill-course of the Leith,
-and the passage into the Old Town obtained by the dam of the North Loch
-at the bottom of Halkerston’s Wynd. There are still some traces of
-this road. You see it leave Silvermills behind West Cumberland Street.
-Behind Duke Street, on the west side, the boundary-wall of the Queen
-Street Garden is oblique in consequence of its having passed that way.
-Finally it terminates in a short, oblique passage behind the Register
-House, wherein stood till lately a tall building containing a famous
-house of resort, Ambrose’s Tavern. This short passage bore the name
-of Gabriel’s Road, and it was supposed to do so in connection with a
-remarkable murder, of which it was the scene.
-
-The murderer in the case was in truth a man named Robert Irvine. He was
-tutor to two boys, sons of Mr Gordon of Ellon. In consequence of the
-children having reported some liberties they saw him take with their
-mother’s maid, he conceived the horrible design of murdering them,
-and did so one day as he was leading them for a walk along the rough
-ground where the New Town is now situated. The frightful transaction
-was beheld from the Castle-hill; he was pursued, taken, and next day
-but one hanged by the baron of Broughton, after having his hands hacked
-off by the knife with which he had committed the deed. The date of
-this off-hand execution was 30th April 1717. Both the date and the
-murderer’s name have several times been misstated.[274]
-
-Adjacent to this road, about the spot now occupied by the Royal Bank,
-stood a small group of houses called Mutrie’s Hill, some of which
-professed to furnish curds and cream and fruits in their seasons, and
-were on these accounts resorted to by citizens and their families on
-summer evenings. One in particular bore the name of ‘Peace and Plenty.’
-
-The village of Silvermills, for the sake of which, as an access to the
-city, Gabriel’s Road existed, still maintains its place amidst the
-streets and crescents of the New Town. It contains a few houses of a
-superior cast; but it is a place sadly in want of the _sacer vates_.
-No notice has ever been taken of it in any of the books regarding
-Edinburgh, nor has any attempt ever been made to account for its
-somewhat piquant name. I shall endeavour to do so.
-
-In 1607 silver was found in considerable abundance at Hilderstone,
-in Linlithgowshire, on the property of the gentleman who figures in
-another part of this volume as Tam o’ the Cowgate. Thirty-eight barrels
-of ore were sent to the Mint in the Tower of London to be tried,
-and were found to give about twenty-four ounces of silver for every
-hundredweight. Expert persons were placed upon the mine, and mills
-were erected on the Water of Leith for the melting and fining of the
-ore. The sagacious owner gave the mine the name of _God’s Blessing_.
-By-and-by the king heard of it, and thinking it improper that any
-such fountain of wealth should belong to a private person, purchased
-God’s Blessing for £5000, that it might be worked upon a larger scale
-for the benefit of the public. But somehow, from the time it left the
-hands of the original owner, God’s Blessing ceased to be anything like
-so fertile as it had been, and in time the king withdrew from the
-enterprise a great loser. The Silvermills I conceive to have been a
-part of the abandoned plant.[275]]
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-[273] It was also along this road that the anxious citizens, watching
-on the Castle esplanade, saw the royalist cavalry retiring at full
-gallop from Coltbridge on the approach of Prince Charlie and his
-Highland army.
-
-[274] In Mr Lockhart’s clever book, _Peter’s Letters to his Kinsfolk_,
-the murderer is called Gabriel. A work called _Celebrated Trials_ (6
-vols. 1825) gives an erroneous account of the murder, styling the
-murderer as the Rev. Thomas Hunter.
-
-[275] See _Domestic Annals of Scotland_, i. 407.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX.
-
-
-Abbey Chapel, 206.
-
-Abbey Hill, 10, 316.
-
-Abbey Zett (Yett, Gate), 257.
-
-Abbotsford, 25, 83.
-
-Aberuchil, Lord, 72.
-
-Acheson House, 313.
-
-Acheson, Sir Archibald, of Abercairny, 314.
-
-Actors, Canongate Theatre, 346.
-
-Adam Street, 187.
-
-_Advertiser, Edinburgh_, 5, 49.
-
-Advocates’ Library, 113.
-
-Ainslie, Sir Philip, 300.
-
-Airth, Laird of, 38.
-
-Aitchinsoune, Thomas (Cunyie House), 260.
-
-Aldridge, Robert, dancing-master, 151, 153.
-
-Alesse, Alexander, 240.
-
-Alison Square, 358, 359.
-
-Aloetic medicine, an, 27.
-
-Alston, Tony, 346.
-
-Alva, Lord Justice-clerk, 204-208.
-
-Ambrose’s Tavern, 366.
-
-Amory, Captain, 355.
-
-Anchor Close, 162.
-
-Anderson, Samuel, anecdote of, 305.
-
-Anderson’s pills, 27.
-
-Angus, Earl of, 241.
-
-Antemanum Club, 149.
-
-Arbuthnot, Lord, 307.
-
-Ardwell, residence of M’Culloch of, 362.
-
-Argyll, 15, 51, 156, 175, 234, 307, 308, 345.
-
-Arnot, Hugo, 4, 12, 36, 46, 49, 171.
-
-Arran, Earl of, 241.
-
-Arrot, Dr, 10.
-
-Assemblies, 3, 14, 44, 265.
-
-Assembly Close, 59.
-
-Assembly Rooms, 43, 46, 195, 233, 253, 265.
-
-_Assembly, The_, a play by Dr Pitcairn, 310.
-
-Auchans House, Dr Johnson at, 197.
-
-Auld Reekie, 138, 152.
-
-_Auld Robin Gray_, author of, 277.
-
-Aytoun of Inchdairnie, 123, 270.
-
-
-Back Stairs, the, 291.
-
-Baijen-hole, 112.
-
-Baillie, Alexander, of Dochfour, 235.
-
-Baird, Mr, of Newbyth, 20.
-
-Baird’s Close, Castlehill, 58.
-
-Baird, Sir David, 20.
-
-Balcarres, Countess of, 277.
-
-Balfour, James, accountant (‘Singing Jamie’), 141-143.
-
-Balfour, Sir James (Lord Lyon), 315, 316.
-
-Ballantyne, printer, 143.
-
-Bank Close, Old, 70, 94.
-
-Bank of Scotland, 70.
-
-Bankton House, oratory at, 29.
-
-Bannatyne Club, 73.
-
-Bannatyne, Sir William Macleod, 10, 129, 317.
-
-Banquet at Mint House to Danish lords, 260.
-
-Barnard, Mr, violinist, 253.
-
-Bassentyne’s house, 257.
-
-Bearford’s Parks, 366.
-
-Beatoun, Archbishop, 117.
-
-Begbie’s murder, 36, 280.
-
-Beith’s or Bess Wynd, 93, 113.
-
-Bellamy, Mrs, 347-350.
-
-Bell, Benjamin, surgeon, 355.
-
-Bell’s Wynd, 46.
-
-Bethune, Archbishop, 228, 241.
-
-Bethune, Cardinal, 228.
-
-Bickers (street fights of boys), 189, 245.
-
-Birrel, the chronicler, 38.
-
-Bishop’s Land, 269.
-
-Black, Alexander, of Balbirney, 211.
-
-Blackbird, a Jacobite, 30.
-
-Blackfriars’ Monastery, 242.
-
-Blackfriars Wynd, 10, 38, 223, 228, 234, 237, 238, 241, 257.
-
-Black, Joseph, Professor, 242, 289.
-
-Black Wigs Club, 155.
-
-Blair, Dr, 56, 136, 288, 334.
-
-Blair, Hugh, merchant, 72.
-
-Blair, Rev. Robert, 307.
-
-Blair’s Close, 18.
-
-Blue Blanket, 183.
-
-Blue-gowns—their annual assembly, 102.
-
-Bluidy Mackenzie, 224.
-
-Blyth’s Close, 22.
-
-Boar Club, 151, 153.
-
-Boarding-schools of last century, 230.
-
-Bonnet Lairds’ Club, 155.
-
-Bonnington, 348.
-
-Booths, 3, 110.
-
-Boroughmoor, 271.
-
-Boswell, James, 16, 55, 60, 172, 197.
-
-Boswell, James, advocate, 125.
-
-Boswell, Sir Alexander, 126, _n._, 146, 266.
-
-Bothwell, Adam, Bishop of Orkney, Commendator of Holyrood, 71, 97.
-
-Bothwell, Anne, her _Lines_, 97.
-
-Bothwell Bridge, 289.
-
-Bothwell, Earl of, 38, 83, 121, 256.
-
-Bow, angle of, 46.
-
-‘Bowed Joseph,’ a general of mobs, 184-188.
-
-Bowfoot, 50.
-
-Bowhead, 27, 41.
-
-Bowhead Saints, 30.
-
-Bowling-greens, 247.
-
-Bow, the West, 26, 53, 133.
-
-Boyd, James, White Horse Inn, 172.
-
-Boyd, Lord, 121.
-
-Breadalbane, Earl of, 180.
-
-Bridge, North, 269, 283, 360.
-
-Bridges, the, 53.
-
-British Linen Company’s Bank, 280.
-
-Brodie, Deacon, 76, 91.
-
-Brodie’s Close, 76.
-
-Broomfield, Andrew, 124.
-
-Brougham, Lord, 80.
-
-Broughton, 360.
-
-Broughton, Baron of, 367.
-
-Brownhill, James, joiner, 55.
-
-Brown, James, builder, 5.
-
-Brown, Mrs, of Coalstoun, 266.
-
-Brownonian System Club, 156.
-
-Brown’s Close, 18.
-
-Brown Square, 5, 248.
-
-Bruce, Dame Magdalen, of Kinross, 19 _n._
-
-Bruce of Kennet, 3.
-
-Bruce of Kinnaird, 210.
-
-Bruntsfield Links, 5.
-
-Bryce, his small shop, 101.
-
-Buccleuch, Duchess of, 327.
-
-Buccleuch, Duke of, 328.
-
-Buchanan, George, 288 _n._
-
-Buchan, Earl of, 98.
-
-Burke, Edward (Ned—a chairman engaged in the escape of Prince Charles), 177.
-
-Burleigh, Lord, 307.
-
-Burnett, Miss, of Monboddo, 251.
-
-Burning, strange tale of a, 298.
-
-Burns, Robert, 7, 14, 106, 164, 251, 351, 358, 362, 365.
-
-Burton, Mrs, 58, 60.
-
-Burt’s Letters, 176.
-
-Busks, enormous size of, 201.
-
-Bute, Lord, 10, 316, 317.
-
-Byres of Coates, 95.
-
-Byres’s Close, 96.
-
-
-Caddies (street messengers), 175.
-
-Cairnie, Lady, 124.
-
-Caithness, Earls of, 77.
-
-Caledonian Club, 155.
-
-_Caledonian Mercury_, 15.
-
-Calton, 149.
-
-Calton Hill, 83, 297, 360.
-
-Cambuskenneth, Abbot of, 223.
-
-Campbell, Alexander, 180, 345.
-
-Campbell, Lady Eleanor, 64.
-
-Campbell, Mrs, of Monzie, 205, 208.
-
-Campbell, Mungo, 90.
-
-Campbell of Laguine, 134.
-
-Campbell, Sir James, of Aberuchil, 72.
-
-Campbell, Thomas, poet, 167, 359.
-
-Canal, Forth and Clyde, 5.
-
-Canongate, 3, 8, 11, 65, 295-301.
-
-Canongate Council House, 71.
-
-Canongate Theatre, 346.
-
-Canongate Tolbooth, 248.
-
-Canonmills, 154.
-
-Cant’s Close, 221.
-
-Cape Club, 149.
-
-Cardross, Lord, 98.
-
-Carrubber’s Close, 15.
-
-Carters of Gilmerton, the, 4.
-
-Castle-hill, 11, 18, 20, 22, 39, 150.
-
-Castle Street, 8.
-
-Cathcart, Robert, 39.
-
-Cat Nick on Salisbury Crags, 91.
-
-Cats, a lover of, 16.
-
-Cayley, Squire, or Captain, 291.
-
-Chairmen, 176.
-
-Chalmers, Miss (Mrs Pringle), 251.
-
-Chalmers, Miss, of Pittencrief, 251.
-
-Chalmers’s Entry, 168.
-
-Changes of the last hundred years, 1.
-
-Chapman, Walter, printer, 109.
-
-Charles I., 64, 170, 301, 306, 321.
-
-Charles II., 260, 327.
-
-Charles X., 228.
-
-Charles, Prince, 27, 28, 48, 72, 175, 177, 181, 219, 235, 236, 269.
-
-Charlotte Square, 9.
-
-Charteris, Colonel, 328.
-
-Chessels’s Court, 27, 91.
-
-Chiesly of Dairy, 75, 211.
-
-Circulating Library, 15, 104.
-
-Citadel of Leith, inhabitants in 1745, 19.
-
-City Guard, 4, 31, 84, 148, 179, 233, 238, 348.
-
-Clarinda, 358.
-
-Clarke, Stephen, musician, 253.
-
-Clattering of tinsmiths in West Bow, 42.
-
-Claudero, pamphleteer, 330.
-
-Claverhouse, 6.
-
-Cleanse the Causeway, 117, 241, 242.
-
-Cleghorn, Miss, 251.
-
-Clerihugh’s Tavern, 162.
-
-Clerks, drucken, of Sir William Forbes, 138.
-
-Clerk, Sir John, of Penicuik, 193.
-
-Clubs, convivial, 149-157.
-
-Coalstoun, Lord, and his wig, 96.
-
-Coates, Sir John Byres of, 95.
-
-Cockburn, Mrs, author of _Flowers of the Forest_, 58.
-
-Cock-fights, 236.
-
-Coffee-house, John’s, 112.
-
-Coffee-house, Netherbow, 332.
-
-Coffin, the, 166.
-
-Coinage, 260.
-
-Coke, William, bookseller, 167.
-
-College of King James, 259.
-
-College Street, North, 242.
-
-College, the, 3.
-
-College Wynd, 3, 242.
-
-Colquhoun, Sir James, 132.
-
-Commendator Bothwell’s house, 97.
-
-Commercial Bank, 265.
-
-Concerts, 249, 251.
-
-Constable, Archibald, 7.
-
-Convivial clubs, 149-157.
-
-Convivialia, 138-157.
-
-Corelli, musician, 254.
-
-Corri, Signor and Signora Domenico, 250, 253.
-
-_Court of Session Garland_, a burlesque poem, 124, 125.
-
-Court, the Dirt, 115.
-
-Covington, Lockhart of, 129.
-
-Covington, Lord, fate of his gown, 130.
-
-Cowgate, 72, 223, 240, 244, 257.
-
-Cowgate Port, 152.
-
-Craigie, Lord President, 9.
-
-Craig, James, 7.
-
-Crawford, Earl of, 311.
-
-Crawfuird, 39.
-
-Creech, Provost, bookseller, 9, 103, 339.
-
-Crighton Street, Potterrow, 59.
-
-_Criminal Trials_, by Hugo Arnot, 13.
-
-Crochallan, a convivial society, 164.
-
-Cromarty, Earl of, 225.
-
-Cromwell, Oliver, 99, 122, 193, 307, 360.
-
-Crosbie, advocate, 153.
-
-Cross, the, 4, 174, 175;
- taken down, 178 _n._
-
-Cullen, Dr, 261.
-
-Cullen, Lord, 263.
-
-Cullen, Robert, mimic, 261.
-
-Culloden, 177.
-
-Cumming of Lyon Office, 167.
-
-Cunliffe, Sir Foster, of Acton, 252.
-
-Cunningham, Rev. Mr, 352.
-
-Cunyie House (Mint), 257, 260.
-
-
-Dalrymple, Miss, New Hailes, 131.
-
-Dalrymple, President, 123.
-
-Dalrymple, Sir David (Lord Hailes), 126 _n._, 131, 300.
-
-Dancing in Edinburgh, 44;
- Allan Ramsay on, 44;
- Goldsmith on, 45.
-
-Danish lords entertained, 260.
-
-Darien Expedition, the, 52.
-
-Darnley, 71, 83, 107, 121, 256.
-
-David I., 295.
-
-Davidson’s Close, 170.
-
-Defensive Band, 152.
-
-Defoe, 337.
-
-‘Deid-chack,’ the, 114.
-
-De la Cour, artist, 9.
-
-De Witt’s map, 259.
-
-Dhu, Sergeant John, 180.
-
-Dick, Lady Anne, of Corstorphine, her eccentricities and verses, 225.
-
-Dick, Sir William, &c., 78, 100.
-
-Dicks of Prestonfield, 78.
-
-Dickson, Andrew, golf-club maker, 321.
-
-Dickson, Rev. David, 307.
-
-Dickson’s Close, 222.
-
-Dirt Court, the, 115.
-
-Dirty Club, 155.
-
-_Diurnal_, the, of a Scottish judge, 139.
-
-Doctors of Faculty Club, the, 155.
-
-Doctor, the Tinklarian, 41.
-
-Donacha Bhan, a Highland poet, 180.
-
-Donaldson, Alexander, bookseller, 48.
-
-Donaldson, James, bookseller, 49.
-
-Douglas, Archibald, 238.
-
-Douglas, Duke of, 9, 69.
-
-Douglas, Gavin, poet, 240.
-
-Douglas, Jeanie, Adam Smith’s cousin, 319.
-
-Douglas, Lady Anne, ghost of, 343.
-
-Douglas, Lady Jane, 69, 238.
-
-Douglas’s Tavern, 162.
-
-_Douglas_, tragedy of, 347.
-
-Doune, Lord, 307.
-
-Dowie, Johnnie, 138, 166.
-
-Dowie’s Tavern, 138, 166.
-
-Drem, Barony of, 50.
-
-Dresses, ladies’, of last century, 199.
-
-Drinking customs, 138, 143.
-
-Drumlanrig, 336, 339, 340, 343.
-
-Drummond, Bishop Abernethy, 229.
-
-Drummond, Pious Club poet, 150.
-
-Drummond, Provost, 5, 6, 360.
-
-Drummore, Lord, 9, 125.
-
-Drumsheugh, 205.
-
-Dryden, 327, 344.
-
-Duff, Miss (Countess of Dumfries and Stair), 230.
-
-Dunbar’s Close, 100.
-
-Dunbar, Willie, 164.
-
-Dundas, Robert, of Arniston, Lord President, 127, 132, 140.
-
-Dundee, Lord, 30, 366.
-
-Dundonald, Earl of, 69.
-
-Dunglass Castle, 99.
-
-Dunkeld, Bishop of, 223, 240.
-
-Dun, Lady, 124.
-
-Durie, Abbot of Dunfermline, 273.
-
-
-Easter Road, 328, 360.
-
-Edward or Udward, Nicol, Provost, 210.
-
-Eglintoune, Countess of, 192-198.
-
-Eglintoune, Earl of, 90, 162, 192.
-
-Eglintoune, Miss (Lady Wallace), 276.
-
-Elcho, Lord, 307.
-
-Elibank, Lord, 14.
-
-Elliot, Jeanie, of Minto, 6.
-
-Elliot, Lady, of Minto, 266.
-
-Elliot, Sir Gilbert, of Minto, 206.
-
-Elphingston, Lady Betty, 124.
-
-Elphinstone, James, 49.
-
-Errol, Earl of (Constable), 103.
-
-Erskine, Alexander, the Hon., 98.
-
-Erskine, Harry, epigram by, on Hugo Arnot, 12.
-
-Erskine, James, of Cambo, 98.
-
-Erskine, James, of Grange, 211.
-
-Euphame, Mrs (Effie Sinclair), 230.
-
-Excise Office, 91, 244, 247, 248.
-
-Executioners of Edinburgh, 51.
-
-
-Faculty of Doctors’ Club, 155.
-
-Falconer, William, author of _The Shipwreck_, 285.
-
-Female dresses of last century, 199-203.
-
-Ferguson, Dr, 56.
-
-Fergusson, Governor, his house in the Luckenbooths, 10.
-
-Fergusson, Robert, 26, 114 _n._, 148, 149, 162, 180, 233, 271, 349.
-
-Fergusson, Robert, the Plotter, took refuge in Old Tolbooth, 88.
-
-Fergusson, Walter, writer, digs for water in James’s Square, 335.
-
-Fife’s Close, Bailie, 265.
-
-Findlater, Earl of, 231.
-
-Fishmarket Close, 140.
-
-Fives, the game of, 344.
-
-Flockhart’s, Lucky, Tavern in Potterrow, 168.
-
-_Flowers of the Forest_, the author of, 58.
-
-Foliot, John and Bartoulme, 209.
-
-Foote, Samuel, anecdotes of, 363-365.
-
-Forbes, Lord President, 123, 125, 235.
-
-Forbes, Rev. Robert, Bishop of Orkney, 19 _n._
-
-Forbes, Sir William, 115, 138, 199, 251.
-
-Fore-stairs, 100, 271.
-
-Forrest, David, 273.
-
-Forrester, Sir Andrew, 293.
-
-Forrester’s Wynd, 3.
-
-Forster of Corsebonny, 214.
-
-Forth and Clyde Canal, 5.
-
-Fortune’s Tavern, 143, 161, 192, 251.
-
-Foulis, William, of Woodhall, 124.
-
-Fountainhall, Lord, anecdote of, 61.
-
-Fyvie, Lord, 120.
-
-
-Gabriel’s Road, 366.
-
-Galloway, Earl of, 244.
-
-Gallow Lee, the, 75, 185, 361.
-
-Gallows Stone in Grassmarket, 51.
-
-Gardenstone, Lord, 132.
-
-Gardiner, Colonel, his oratory, 29.
-
-Gask family, 10.
-
-Gay, John, poet, 4, 338, 339.
-
-Geddes, Jenny, and her stool, 105, 106.
-
-Ged, Dougal, of Town-guard, 233.
-
-Ged, Misses, their boarding-school, 232.
-
-General’s Entry, the residence of Burns’s ‘Clarinda,’ 358.
-
-George II., 279.
-
-George III., 16, 197, 275.
-
-George IV., 269.
-
-George IV. Bridge, 70, 167, 244.
-
-George Square, 5, 8, 169, 243.
-
-George Street, 46, 53.
-
-Gibson of Durie, 121, 124.
-
-Gilmerton, carters of, 4.
-
-Gilmour, Lord President, 122.
-
-Gilmour, Mr Little, of the Inch, 76.
-
-Gilson, Mr, singer, 253.
-
-Giornovicki, violinist, 254.
-
-Glencairn, 25, 352.
-
-Glenlee, Lord, 5.
-
-Glenorchy, Lady, 226, 205, 206.
-
-Goldsmith, 242, 265.
-
-Goldsmith, account of a dancing assembly in Edinburgh, 45.
-
-Goldsmiths in Parliament Square, 111.
-
-Golfers’ Land, 320.
-
-Golf, the game of, 52;
- Charles I. plays on Leith Links, 321.
-
-Goolister, Henry, Captain, 260.
-
-Gordon, Captain, 181.
-
-Gordon, Duchess of, 145, 252, 275, 276, 313, 316, 361.
-
-Gordon family, 18, 316.
-
-Gordon, Mr, of Ellon, 366.
-
-Gourlay, Robert, house of, 70, 71.
-
-Grace, Countess, of Aboyne and Murray, 66.
-
-Grange, Lady, story of, 211-221.
-
-Grange, Lord, 15, 211.
-
-Grassmarket, 18, 26, 50, 51, 171, 260.
-
-Gray, Sir William, of Pittendrum, 64, 76.
-
-Green Breeks, a noted fighter, 190.
-
-Gregory, Dr John, 172.
-
-Greping-office Tavern, 159.
-
-Greville, Lord, 262.
-
-Greyfriars, 93, 95, 109, 224, 288.
-
-Guard, City or Town, 84, 148, 179, 233, 238, 348.
-
-Guard-house, 84, 140, 180.
-
-Guise, Mary of, 22.
-
-Guthrie, Bishop Henry, 307.
-
-Guthrie, Rev. James, 307.
-
-
-Haddington, Earl of, 99, 244.
-
-Hailes, Lord (Sir D. Dalrymple), 126, 131, 300.
-
-Haining, Lord, 125.
-
-Halkerston’s Wynd, 5, 117, 366.
-
-Halket, Miss, of Pitferran, 252.
-
-Halyburton, James, 222.
-
-Hamilton, ‘Dear Sandie,’ 247.
-
-Hamilton, Duke of, 172, 308.
-
-Hamilton, Marie, 295.
-
-Hamiltons of Pencaitland, 270.
-
-Hamilton’s Tavern, Mrs, 345.
-
-Hamiltons, the, 241.
-
-Hamilton, Thomas (Tam o’ the Cowgate),
- Lord President, first Earl of Haddington, 244.
-
-Hammermen of Canongate, 313.
-
-Hangman’s Craig, 52.
-
-Hangmen of Edinburgh, 51.
-
-Ha’s, Jenny, Ale-house, 142, 339.
-
-Harcarse, Lord, 123.
-
-Haunted houses, 35.
-
-Hawley, General, 181.
-
-Hay, advocate, Lord Newton, 139.
-
-Hay, a young criminal, singular escape, 92.
-
-Hay, Miss, of Hayston, 251.
-
-Heart of Midlothian, 82.
-
-Heckler, the, a lunatic litigant, 135.
-
-Hell-fire Club, 153.
-
-Henderland, Lord, 118.
-
-Henderson, Alexander, tombstone of, 288.
-
-Hepburn of Bearford, 366.
-
-Herd, David, 167, 168.
-
-Heriot, George, 50, 113-116;
- stock with which he commenced business, 112 _n._;
- a costly fire, 113.
-
-Heriot’s Hospital, 93, 247, 310.
-
-‘He that tholes overcomes,’ 47.
-
-High Constables, 346.
-
-High School, 76, 242, 245.
-
-High School Wynd, 257.
-
-High Street, 8, 11, 29.
-
-Hilderstone, 367.
-
-_History of Edinburgh_, by Hugo Arnot, 12.
-
-_History of England_, by Hume, 56.
-
-Hogg’s, Daniel, Tavern, 151, 153.
-
-Holderness, Lord, 323.
-
-Holstein, Duke of, entertained, 78.
-
-Holyrood, 11, 28, 206, 209, 228, 248, 256, 260, 295, 321, 344.
-
-Holyrood, Chapel of, 109.
-
-Holyroodhouse, Lord, 97.
-
-Home, Countess of, 306.
-
-Home-Drummond of Blairdrummond, 252.
-
-Home, Earl of, 307.
-
-Home, Miss Betsy, 251.
-
-Hoop, the, as worn by ladies, 200.
-
-Hope of Rankeillor, 216, 218.
-
-Hope’s Close, 70.
-
-Hope, Sir Thomas, K.C., 70, 72, 73, 74.
-
-Hope, Sir Thomas, of Kerse, 72.
-
-Hopetoun, Earl of, 204, 342.
-
-‘Horn Order,’ the, 157.
-
-Horse Wynd, 59, 239, 244.
-
-Howard, Lady Elizabeth, 316.
-
-Hume, David, 55-59, 162.
-
-Hume, Misses, of Linthill, 231.
-
-Humphrey, Duke, 107.
-
-Hunter, John, Professor, 133.
-
-Huntly, Marquis of, 19, 175, 210.
-
-Hyndford’s Close, 264, 275.
-
-
-Inchdairnie, Aytouns of, 270.
-
-Inch, the, 76.
-
-Industrious Company Club, 154.
-
-Infirmary Street, 241.
-
-Innes, Gilbert, of Stow, 289.
-
-Innes, Mrs Gilbert, of Stow, 61.
-
-Inn, White Hart, 2.
-
-Inn, White Horse, 2.
-
-Irvine, Robert, 366.
-
-Irving, General, 27.
-
-Irving, Mrs, her recollections of the ’45, 27, 28.
-
-
-Jack’s Land, 56.
-
-Jacobite blackbird, a, 30.
-
-Jail, 3, 83.
-
-James I., 83, 307.
-
-James II., 321, 327.
-
-James III., 183.
-
-James IV., 272.
-
-James V., 229.
-
-James VI., 38, 77, 175, 183, 210, 244, 260, 344.
-
-James’s Court, 55-62, 172.
-
-James’s Square, 335.
-
-Jameson, George, painter, 288.
-
-Jardine, Miss, 252.
-
-Jeddart staff possessed by each citizen, 100.
-
-Jeffrey, Francis, 265.
-
-‘Jock o’ Sklates’ (Earl of Mar), 246.
-
-John’s Coffee-house, 148.
-
-Johnson, Dr Samuel, 16, 49, 60, 172, 197.
-
-Johnston, James, of Westerhall, 37.
-
-Johnston, Miss Lucy, 252.
-
-Justice in bygone times, 120.
-
-
-Kames, Lord, 130;
- scene at the death of, 130;
- his house, 300.
-
-Kay’s portraits, 181.
-
-Keith, Bishop, 170.
-
-Keith, Mrs, 230.
-
-Keith, Sir Alexander, of Ravelston, 242.
-
-Keith, Sir Robert, ambassador, 230.
-
-Kelly, Earl of, 255.
-
-Kennedy, Sir Archibald, 194.
-
-Kennedy, Susanna, 192.
-
-Kerr & Dempster, goldsmiths, 111.
-
-Kerr, goldsmith, Parliament Square, 3.
-
-Ketten’s, Michael, shoe-shop, 83.
-
-Kincaid, Mr (a great dandy), king’s printer, 277.
-
-King’s Bridge, 18.
-
-King’s Park, 91.
-
-King’s Stables, 260.
-
-Kinloch, Miss, of Gilmerton, 252.
-
-Kinloch, Sir Francis and Mrs, 124.
-
-Kinnaird, Miss, having second sight, 210.
-
-Kirkcudbright, Lord, 265.
-
-Kirk o’ Field, situation of, 256, 259.
-
-Knockers, 207.
-
-Knowles, Admiral, 304.
-
-Knox, John, 25, 84, 105, 107, 109, 271, 279.
-
-Krames, 102, 119.
-
-
-Ladies and the drinking customs, 143, 147.
-
-Ladies of Traquair, 286.
-
-Lady’s Steps, the, payments made at, 103.
-
-Laigh shops, 145.
-
-Lally-Tollendal, Count, 252.
-
-Lament, a, by Anne Bothwell, 97.
-
-Lang Gait, or Lang Dykes, 6, 366.
-
-Lauderdale, Duchess of, 307.
-
-Lauderdale, Duke of, 122.
-
-Lauder, Sir Andrew, 61.
-
-Lauder, Sir Thomas Dick, 61.
-
-Lauder, Thomas, Canon of Aberdeen, 240.
-
-Lawnmarket, 11, 26, 27, 39, 70, 223.
-
-Lawnmarket Club, 156.
-
-Leith Links, 320.
-
-Leith Street, 283.
-
-Leith Walk, 281, 283, 360.
-
-Leith Wynd, 149, 258, 281, 284.
-
-Lennox, Earl of, 107.
-
-Leslie, General, 39, 193, 360.
-
-Leslie, Lady Mary, 328.
-
-Leven, Lord, 124, 311.
-
-Liberton’s Wynd, 166.
-
-Lind, Mr, of the ‘Pious Club,’ 150.
-
-Lindsay, Sir Alexander, of Evelick, 17.
-
-Linlithgow road, 214.
-
-List of Notables who lived in Canongate, 296.
-
-Little, William, of Liberton, 76.
-
-Lockhart of Carnwath, 209.
-
-Lockhart of Covington, 129.
-
-Lockhart, President, murder of, 75.
-
-Lockhart’s Court, 209.
-
-Lodge, Canongate Kilwinning, 305.
-
-Logan, Rev. George, 27.
-
-Long Way, the, 214.
-
-Lord’s Day, walking on the, condemned, 11.
-
-Lorimer, the, a deceased trade, 233.
-
-Lorne, Lord, 308.
-
-Lothian, Earl of, 307, 323.
-
-Lothian Hut, 323.
-
-Lothian, Marchioness, 323.
-
-Loudon, Earl of, 64.
-
-Loudoun, Chancellor, 307.
-
-Loughborough, Chancellor, his house in the Mint Close, 263.
-
-_Lounger_, the, 6.
-
-Lovat, Lady, 234-239, 286.
-
-Lovat, Lord, 205, 213, 214, 234, 235.
-
-Luckenbooths, 10, 95-104, 272, 339.
-
-Lucky Fykie’s Tavern, 168.
-
-Lucky Middleman’s Tavern, 145, 146 _n._
-
-Lyon Close, Old, 323.
-
-
-Macalpine’s, Saunders, sedan-chair, 4.
-
-M’Crie, Dr, 273.
-
-M’Culloch, David (Wee Davie), 363.
-
-M’Culloch of Ardwell, residence of, 362.
-
-Macdonald, Sir Alexander, of Sleat, 216.
-
-Macdowalls of Logan, 60.
-
-Macduff of Ballenloan and his two law pleas, 136.
-
-Macfarlane, John and Mrs, 291.
-
-Macfarlane, William, judge, 60.
-
-Macgill of Rankeillour, 244.
-
-Macintyre, Duncan (Donacha Bhan), poet, 180.
-
-Mackenzie, Henry, attorney, 154.
-
-Mackenzie, Henry (_Man of Feeling_), 6, 288.
-
-Mackenzie, Hon. Stuart, 316.
-
-Mackenzie, Sir George, 93, 103, 223, 224, 225, 288.
-
-_Mackoull, James, Life and Trial of_ (supposed Murderer of Begbie), 282.
-
-Maclaurin, John, advocate, 125.
-
-M’Lehose, Mrs, house of (Clarinda of Burns), 358.
-
-Maclellans of Galloway, 265.
-
-Maclennan, Rev. Roderick, St Kilda, 217.
-
-Macleod, Alexander, of Muiravonside, 177.
-
-Macleod, John, of Muiravonside, 214.
-
-Macmoran, Bailie, killed, 76;
- banquets held in house of, 77, 78.
-
-Macrae, Mr, Marionville, tragical story of, 351.
-
-Magdalen Chapel, Cowgate, 248 _n._
-
-Mahogany Land, 47, 100.
-
-‘Maiden,’ the, 71.
-
-Maitland, _History of Edinburgh_, 209, 271, 272.
-
-_Mally Lee_, a ballad, 202.
-
-Mansfield, Earl of, 17, 265.
-
-March, Lady, 103.
-
-Mar, Countess of, 74, 213, 220.
-
-Mar, Earl of, 5, 98, 119, 246.
-
-Marionville, villa of, 323;
- theatricals at, 351.
-
-Martin’s Wynd, story of, 209.
-
-Mary King’s Close, 36.
-
-Mary of Guise, her house in Edinburgh, 22;
- her resistance to the Reformation, 25;
- erection of Free Church Hall on the site of her house, 25.
-
-Mary, Queen, 71, 83, 109, 163, 257, 260, 271, 287.
-
-Mary, Regent, 23.
-
-Maugaret, Braid Ransome, 260.
-
-Maule, William, 318.
-
-Maxwell, Lady, of Monreith, her house, 275.
-
-Maxwell, Sir William, 355, 356.
-
-Meadows, the, 5.
-
-Meldrum, George, of Dumbreck, 121.
-
-Melrose, Abbot of, his ‘lodging’ in Edinburgh, 223.
-
-Melville, Lord, 127 _n._, 140, 145, 305.
-
-Merchant Street, 248.
-
-‘Meridian,’ a, 147.
-
-Meuse Lane, St Andrew Street, 13.
-
-Mickle, William Julius, on Parliament Close, 116.
-
-Miller, Sir William, of Glenlee, 251.
-
-Milliners, a story of two, 323, 324.
-
-Mint Close, 10, 260, 263.
-
-Minto, Lord, 325.
-
-Mint, the, 257-259.
-
-Mirror, magic, story of a, 65.
-
-_Mirror_, the, 6.
-
-Mitchell, William, pamphleteer, 41, 42.
-
-Mobs of Edinburgh, 183-188.
-
-Modena, Mary of, 344.
-
-Monastery, the Blackfriars’, 242.
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-Monboddo, Lord, 59, 132, 133, 303.
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-Monk, Peter, admiral of Denmark, 260.
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-Monmouth, Duchess of, 327.
-
-Montagu, Lady Mary Wortley, 69, 220.
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-Montgomery, Lady Margaret, 328.
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-Montrose, Marquis of, 108, 170, 175, 308.
-
-Moray, Bonny Earl of, 312.
-
-Moray, Countess of, 307.
-
-Moray House, Canongate, 306.
-
-Moray, Lord, 66 _n._
-
-Morocco’s Land, 299.
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-Morton, Regent, 25, 71, 120, 260.
-
-Motte, De la, French ambassador, 71.
-
-Mound, the, 23, 55.
-
-Moyses’s memoirs, 71, 210.
-
-Murder, extraordinary, 366.
-
-Mure, Baron, 316.
-
-Murkle, Lord, 124.
-
-Murray, Hon. Miss Nicky, ball directress, 265-268.
-
-Murray, Miss, of Lintrose (‘Flower of Strathmore’), 251.
-
-Murray, Mr, of Henderland, 16, 17.
-
-Murray, Mrs, of Broughton, 175.
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-Murray, Mrs, of Henderland, 15, 239.
-
-Murray, Regent, 38, 106.
-
-Murray, Sir John A. (Lord), erects a statue to Allan Ramsay, 18.
-
-Murray, Sir Peter, of Balmanno, 226.
-
-Music Hall, 253.
-
-Musselburgh Links, 355.
-
-Mutrie’s Hill, 5, 7, 367.
-
-Mylne, Robert, architect, 252.
-
-Mylnes, family of, 204.
-
-Mylne Square, 204.
-
-
-Nairne, Katherine, her tale of guilt and escape from justice, 88.
-
-Nairn’s Close, 22.
-
-Neale, John (built first house in Princes Street), 7.
-
-Negligée, the, 199.
-
-Negro servants, 69 _n._
-
-Netherbow Port (fortified gate), 1, 149, 257, 258, 271, 272, 281, 331, 332.
-
-Newberry, Mr J., his books for the young, 41.
-
-Newhall, Lord, 124.
-
-Newhaven, fishwomen of, 4.
-
-New Street, 8, 16, 131, 284, 300, 347.
-
-Newton, Lord, 44, 139.
-
-New Town, first house in, 8;
- Hume’s house in, 58.
-
-Nichol, Andrew, diarist, 106.
-
-Nichol, Andrew (‘Muck Andrew’), claimant-at-law of a midden-stead, 136.
-
-Nicolson Square, 358.
-
-Niddry Street, 241.
-
-Niddry’s Wynd, 121, 209, 212, 249.
-
-Nimmo, Miss, in whose house Burns met Clarinda, 358.
-
-North Back of Canongate, 170.
-
-North Bridge, 6, 269, 283, 360.
-
-North, Christopher, 167.
-
-Northesk, Earl of, 204.
-
-North Loch, 8, 23, 64, 117, 118, 366.
-
-Norton, Baron, 316.
-
-
-Odd Fellows Club, 155.
-
-Ogilvie, Hon. Mrs, her boarding-school, 231.
-
-Old Bank Close, 70.
-
-Oliphant, Miss, of Gask, house of, 10.
-
-Oliver & Boyd, publishers, 280.
-
-Oratories, a feature in houses of a certain era, 29.
-
-‘Order of the Horn,’ the, 156.
-
-Ormistounes, Laird of, 257.
-
-Oswald, Mr, of Auchincruive, 252.
-
-Oyster cellars, 145.
-
-
-Paganini, 254.
-
-Pages, keeping of, 328, 329.
-
-Palmerston, Lord, a pupil of Dugald Stewart in Edinburgh, 323.
-
-Panmure, Earl of, 318.
-
-Panmure House, 318.
-
-Paoli, General, 172.
-
-Parliament Close, 109-116, 142, 159, 337.
-
-Parliament Council, 115.
-
-Parliament House, 8, 85, 106, 110, 119.
-
-Parliament House worthies, 134-137.
-
-Parliament Square, 3, 115, 247.
-
-Paterson, John, a golfing shoemaker, 320.
-
-Paterson, Lady Jane, 212.
-
-Paterson’s Court, 232.
-
-Paton, George, antiquary, 167.
-
-Patullo, William, 35.
-
-Peat or Pate, a, 123.
-
-Peebles, Peter, 134.
-
-Peebles Wynd, 39.
-
-Pettigrew, Rev. Mr, of Govan, 160.
-
-Picardy Place, 140.
-
-Pigs, 276.
-
-Pinners, 201.
-
-Pious Club, the, 149.
-
-Pitcairn, Dr, 158, 160, 166, 287, 310, 320, 345.
-
-Pitcairn, Miss, 345.
-
-Pitfour, Lord, 129.
-
-Pitilloch, Mr, advocate, 123.
-
-Playfair, architect, 50
-
-Pleasance, 187.
-
-Poker Club, the, 3, 162.
-
-Poole, Miss, singer, 253.
-
-Population returns, the first in Scotland, 20.
-
-Porteous, Captain (Porteous Riot), 42, 47, 51, 111, 133, 180, 184.
-
-Portobello, origin of village of, 332 _n._
-
-Post-office Close, 129 _n._
-
-Post-office, old arrangement of, 129 _n._
-
-Potatoes, earliest trace of, in Scotland, 325.
-
-Potterrow, 59, 168, 247, 358.
-
-Prebendaries’ Chamber, 256, 259.
-
-Prentice, Henry, introducer of the field-culture of potatoes, 325.
-
-Press, printing, used in the rebel army, 72.
-
-Prestonfield, 78.
-
-Primrose, Lady Dorothy, 237.
-
-Primrose, Lord, 124.
-
-Primrose, Viscount, a profligate, 64.
-
-Princes Street, 53, 214, 366.
-
-Princes Street Gardens, 18.
-
-Princes Street one hundred years ago, 6.
-
-Princes Street, the naming of, 7.
-
-Pringle, Dr and Miss, Newhall, 124.
-
-Pringle, Mr, of Haining, 251.
-
-Puppo, Signor, violinist, 253.
-
-
-Queen Mary, 71, 83, 109, 163, 257-259, 271, 287.
-
-Queensberry, Catherine, Duchess of, 339.
-
-Queensberry House, 142, 320, 336.
-
-Queensberry, second Duke of, strange story of, 336.
-
-Queensberry, third Duke of, and poet Gay, 338.
-
-Queen’s garden, 257.
-
-Queen Street, 9.
-
-
-Raeburn, Sir Henry, portrait-painter, 354.
-
-_Rambler_, the, reproduced in Edinburgh, 49.
-
-Ramsay, Allan, the painter, 16, 17.
-
-Ramsay, Allan, the poet, 4, 14-18, 44, 104, 161, 248, 288, 295, 339, 346.
-
-Ramsay, Christian, 16.
-
-Ramsay Gardens, 16.
-
-Ramsay, General John, 16.
-
-Ramsay, Lady, of Bamff, 353.
-
-Ramsay, Miss, anecdote of, 323.
-
-Ramsay’s Inn or Tavern, 152, 171, 276.
-
-Ramsay, Sir Andrew, Provost, 32.
-
-Ramsay, Sir George, of Bamff, killed in a duel, 353-356.
-
-Rats, pets of Lady Eglintoune, 197, 198.
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-Rats, town, 179, 186.
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-Rattray, Clerk, Sheriff, 281.
-
-Register House, 7, 366.
-
-Reinagle, Joseph, ’cellist, 253.
-
-Renton, Eleonora, of Lamerton, 304.
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-Restalrig, 323, 326, 351.
-
-Riddel’s Close, Lawnmarket, 55, 76.
-
-Risps or tirlin’-pins on doors, 207.
-
-Rivane, Generall, 40.
-
-Robertson, Principal, 80, 162, 243, 262, 288.
-
-Rochester, Earl of, 122.
-
-Rockville, Lord, 230.
-
-Rollo, Lord, 270.
-
-Romieu, Paul, a noted watchmaker, 46.
-
-Rope for hanging Porteous bought, 47.
-
-Rose Court, George Street, 7.
-
-Rose, Dr Alexander, Bishop of Edinburgh, 170.
-
-Rosehaugh’s Close (Strichen’s), 224.
-
-Ross House, George Square, 209 _n._
-
-Rosslyn, Earl of, 263.
-
-Rothes, the Duke of, his rough remark, 51.
-
-Roxburgh Street, 187.
-
-Royal Bank, 7, 367.
-
-Royal Bank Close, 154.
-
-Ruddiman, Thomas, 27.
-
-Rumple-knot, the, 201.
-
-Runciman, painter, 149.
-
-Rutherford, Dr Daniel (Professor), 264, 277, 328.
-
-Rutherford, Miss, Sir Walter Scott’s mother, 231.
-
-Ruthven, Mr, 300.
-
-Rye-House Plot, 88.
-
-
-St Andrews, Bishop of, 223.
-
-St Andrew Square, 6, 8, 58.
-
-St Cecilia’s Hall, 152, 249.
-
-St Clair, Lord, 124.
-
-St David Street, a joke about name of, 58.
-
-St Giles’s, booths around, 3, 110.
-
-St Giles’s, characteristics of the High Kirk, 114.
-
-St Giles’s Church, endowment to chaplain of, 240.
-
-St Giles’s Churchyard, 109.
-
-St Giles’s Clock, 8.
-
-St Giles’s, memoranda of Old Kirk of, 105-108.
-
-St Giles’s, Old Kirk described, 114.
-
-St Giles’s, position of, relative to Heart of Midlothian, 82.
-
-St Giles’s Street, suggested name for Princes Street, 7.
-
-St Giles, statue of, thrown into North Loch, 118.
-
-St Giles’s, Tolbooth Church described, 114.
-
-St James’s Square, 335.
-
-St John’s Cross, 301.
-
-St John’s Street, 8, 302.
-
-St Mary-in-the-Fields (Kirk o’ Fields), situation of, 256.
-
-St Mary’s Wynd, 171, 258, 276, 287.
-
-Saints, Bowhead, the, 30.
-
-Salisbury Crags, 91.
-
-Sanctuary, 260.
-
-‘Saving the ladies,’ 147, 251.
-
-Schetky, J. G. H., musician, 152, 253.
-
-Scott, Sir Walter, 6, 24, 31, 38, 87, 134, 140, 143, 147, 181,
- 182, 190, 231, 242, 243, 264, 277, 293, 298, 327, 328, 365.
-
-Scott, Walter, W.S., 335.
-
-Scott, William, Lord Stowell, 172.
-
-Scoundrels’ Walk, the, 115.
-
-Seafield, Earl of, 309.
-
-Selkirk, Earl of, 156, 264.
-
-Sellar, Mrs, milliner, anecdote of, 324.
-
-Shakspeare Square, 151.
-
-Sharpe, Charles Kirkpatrick, antiquary, 304.
-
-Ship Tavern, Leith, 284.
-
-Shows in Leith Walk, 362.
-
-Shut-up houses in Old Town, 35.
-
-Siddons, Mrs, 345.
-
-Silvermills, village of, 367.
-
-Sinclair, Effie (Mrs Euphame), her boarding-school, 230.
-
-Sinclair, Sir Robert, of Longformacus, 230.
-
-Sinclair, Sir William, of Mey, 77.
-
-Singing Jamie Balfour, 141.
-
-Sinkum the Cawdy, 130.
-
-Skull, the, of George Buchanan, 288 _n._
-
-Smeaton, Mr, singer, 253.
-
-Smellie, William, printer of Burns’s Poems, 164.
-
-Smith, Adam, 57, 318.
-
-Smith, David, of Methven, 252.
-
-Smith, ‘General’ Joe, leader of Edinburgh mobs, 184.
-
-Smollett, a sister of, 303.
-
-Smollett, Tobias, 56, 303.
-
-Snuff-taking, prevalence of, 200.
-
-Somerville, Braid Hugh, a street fight in 1640, 39.
-
-Somerville family, arms of, 43.
-
-Somerville, Lord, and his method of litigation, 120.
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-Somerville, Major, his combat with Captain Crawford, 39.
-
-Somerville of Cambusnethan, 120.
-
-Somerville, Peter and Bartholomew, 43.
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-_Somervilles, Memorie of the_, 37.
-
-Sommers, Thomas, 149.
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-South Back of Canongate, 258.
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-South Bridge, 209.
-
-Speaking House, the, 312.
-
-Spendthrift Club, the, 150, 345.
-
-Spottiswoode, John, of Spottiswoode, 119, 269.
-
-Springfield, 362.
-
-Stabilini, musician, 254.
-
-Stair, Countess of, 63-69.
-
-Stair, Earl of, 63, 67, 123.
-
-Stamp-office Close, 143, 162, 192.
-
-Star and Garter Tavern, 162.
-
-Stays, 199.
-
-Steell, Sir John, sculptor, 18.
-
-Steil, John, musician, 161.
-
-Stewart, Archibald, Provost, 48, 181.
-
-Stewart, Dugald, Professor, 323.
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-Stewart, General, of Garth, 72.
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-Stewart, James, 25.
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-Stewart, Robert (Rob Uncle), 72.
-
-Stewart, Sir William, killed in Blackfriars Wynd, 38.
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-Stewarts of Bonskeid, 181.
-
-Stinking Close, 34.
-
-Stipends of Scotch Church, 20.
-
-Stomacher, the, 199.
-
-Strachan, Lord, 124.
-
-Straiton, Colonel Charles, 293.
-
-Strichen, Lord, 224, 236.
-
-Strichen’s Close, 222.
-
-Sutherland, Countess of, 205.
-
-Sutherland, Earl of, 205, 288.
-
-Sweating Club, 154.
-
-Swift, 314, 315.
-
-Swine roaming in the streets, 100.
-
-Swinton, Margaret, 293.
-
-Syme, Mrs, 80.
-
-Syme, Robert, W.S., 61.
-
-
-Tailors’ Hall, Cowgate, 346.
-
-Tam o’ the Cowgate (first Earl of Haddington), 244, 367.
-
-Tappit-hen, 151.
-
-Taverns of old times, 158-173.
-
-Taylor, the Water-Poet, 138.
-
-Tea-parties, fashionable hour for, 286.
-
-Telfer, Mrs, Smollett’s sister, 303.
-
-Templars’ Lands in Grassmarket, 50.
-
-Tenducci, singer, 253, 304, 305.
-
-Tennis Court, 344, 345.
-
-Theatre in Canongate, 346.
-
-Theatre in Carrubber’s Close, 15, 346.
-
-Theatre Royal, 7.
-
-Theatres, early, in Edinburgh, 344, 346, 347.
-
-Theophilus, Nicholaus, 260.
-
-Thomson, George, his account of music in Edinburgh in last century, 249-254.
-
-Thomson, poet, 7.
-
-Thomson’s, Mrs, lodgings, 171.
-
-Thomson, William, dagger-maker, 39.
-
-Thrale, Mrs, 60.
-
-Threipland, Sir Stuart, of Fingask, 269.
-
-Tinklarian Doctor (William Mitchell), a prating fanatic, 41.
-
-Tinwald, Lord Justice-Clerk, 9.
-
-Tirlin’-pins, 207.
-
-Toddrick’s Wynd, 257.
-
-Tod’s Close, 22.
-
-Tolbooth, Canongate, 248, 319.
-
-Tolbooth Church, 53, 105, 107, 114, 115.
-
-Tolbooth, Old, 82-94, 179.
-
-Tolbooth or ‘Towbuith’ Whigs, 21, 115.
-
-Topham, Major, 49, 176, 267.
-
-Town-guard, the, 4, 30, 84, 148, 179-182, 233.
-
-Town Rats, the, 179, 186.
-
-Town-wall, 258.
-
-Tradesman, habits of an old Edinburgh, 148.
-
-Traquair, ladies of, 286.
-
-Tron Church, 39, 58, 143, 144, 209.
-
-Tulzies (street fights), 37.
-
-Tweeddale Court, 280.
-
-Tweeddale, Marquis of, 225, 279.
-
-Tytler, Alexander, 289.
-
-Tytler of Woodhouselee, 152, 321.
-
-
-Udward’s house in Niddry’s Wynd, 210.
-
-Union Club, the, 155.
-
-Union, the, legends of, 309.
-
-University, the, 259.
-
-Urbani, Mr, singer, 253.
-
-
-Veronica, Miss, 60.
-
-Violante, Signora, 346.
-
-
-Wallace, Lady, 276, 277.
-
-Wall, town, 258.
-
-Ward’s Inn, 355.
-
-Warriston, 175.
-
-Water-gate, 150, 170, 308, 344.
-
-Water of Leith, 367.
-
-Waterstone, John, 39.
-
-Watson, George, 50.
-
-Webster, Dr Alexander, of convivial memory, 20, 115, 162.
-
-Webster’s Close, 20.
-
-Weigh-house, the, 27, 39.
-
-Weir, Grizel, 32.
-
-Weir, Major, wizard, 26, 31-37.
-
-Wemyss, Earl of, 111, 305.
-
-Wemyss, Laird of, 38.
-
-West Bow, 26-54, 133.
-
-West Port, 75, 245.
-
-Whey Club, the, 156.
-
-Whigs, Tolbooth, 21, 115.
-
-Whitefield, George, in Edinburgh, 7.
-
-Whiteford House, 10.
-
-White Hart Inn, 2, 171.
-
-White Horse Inn, 2, 170, 172.
-
-White Horse Stables, 170.
-
-Whitesmiths of the Bow, 26, 42.
-
-Wig Club, the, 155.
-
-Wig, the, of Lord Coalstoun, 96.
-
-Williamson of Cardrona, 165.
-
-Williamson, Peter, 114.
-
-Wilson, Daniel (_Memorials of Edinburgh_), 222.
-
-Wilson, James (Claudero), 330.
-
-Wilson the smuggler, 52, 180.
-
-Wodrow, historian, 15.
-
-Wooden-fronted houses, account of, 271.
-
-Woodhead, 61, 62.
-
-Woodhouselee, Lord, 130.
-
-Wood, Lang Sandy, 6.
-
-Wood’s Farm, 6, 366.
-
-Woods, Mr, actor, 149.
-
-Worthies, the, of Parliament House, 134.
-
-Writers’ Court, 162.
-
-
-Young, Alexander, W.S., 59.
-
-Young Bibles, 277.
-
-Young, John, 7.
-
-York, Duke of, 80, 181, 248, 344.
-
-
-THE END.
-
-
-Edinburgh:
-Printed by W. & R. Chambers, Limited.
-
-
-
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s note:
-
-The following changes have been made to this text:
-
-Footnote 167: ancedote to anecdote—‘an anecdote is told’.
-
-Page 238: encirling to encircling—‘encircling the head’.
-
-Page 291: where to were—‘what were called the Back Stairs’.
-
-Page 371: Newhailes to New Hailes—‘Dalrymple, Miss, Newhailes’.
-
-Page 372: Fyfie to Fyvie—‘Fyvie, Lord’.
- Hardcarse to Harcarse—‘Harcarse, Lord’.
-
-Page 373: Jamieson to Jameson—‘Jameson, George’.
-
-Page 374: Moyse’s to Moyses’s.
- North Esk to Northesk.
-
-
-
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-<h1 class="pgx" title="header title">The Project Gutenberg eBook, Traditions of Edinburgh, by Robert Chambers,
-Illustrated by James Riddel</h1>
-<p>This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States
-and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
-restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
-under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
-eBook or online at <a
-href="http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you are not
-located in the United States, you'll have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this ebook.</p>
-<p>Title: Traditions of Edinburgh</p>
-<p>Author: Robert Chambers</p>
-<p>Release Date: February 4, 2020 [eBook #61314]</p>
-<p>Language: English</p>
-<p>Character set encoding: UTF-8</p>
-<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TRADITIONS OF EDINBURGH***</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<h4 class="pgx" title="credit">E-text prepared by Susan Skinner<br />
- and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
- (<a href="http://www.pgdp.net">http://www.pgdp.net</a>)<br />
- from page images generously made available by<br />
- Internet Archive<br />
- (<a href="https://archive.org">https://archive.org</a>)</h4>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;margin: 0 auto;" cellpadding="10">
- <tr>
- <td valign="top">
- Note:
- </td>
- <td>
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- <a href="https://archive.org/details/traditionsofedin00chamuoft">
- https://archive.org/details/traditionsofedin00chamuoft</a>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="pgx" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<h1>TRADITIONS OF EDINBURGH</h1>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="figcenter w500"><a id="frontispiece"></a>
-<img src="images/frontis.jpg" width="500" height="687" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">AN ELEGANT MODERN CITY.</p>
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap"><a href="#Page_8">Page 8.</a></span></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<p class="center p2">
-<span class="smcap xxlargetext">Traditions of Edinburgh</span><br />
-<br />
-<span class="xlargetext">By <span class="smcap">Robert Chambers, ll.d.</span></span><br />
-<br />
-ILLUSTRATED BY<br />
-<br />
-<span class="xlargetext">JAMES RIDDEL, R.S.W.</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w350">
-<img src="images/illus_p_001.jpg" width="350" height="430" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="smalltext">LONDON: 38 Soho Square, W.</span><br />
-W. &amp; R. CHAMBERS, LIMITED<br />
-<span class="smalltext">EDINBURGH: 339 High Street</span><br />
-J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY, PHILADELPHIA<br />
-1912
-</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="center">
-Edinburgh:<br />
-Printed by W. &amp; R. Chambers, Limited.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">{v}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" /><div class="chapter">
-
-
-<h2><a name="INTRODUCTORY_NOTICE" id="INTRODUCTORY_NOTICE">INTRODUCTORY NOTICE.</a>
-<br />
-1868.</h2>
-
-
-<p>I am about to do what very few could do without emotion&mdash;revise
-a book which I wrote forty-five years ago. This little
-work came out in the Augustan days of Edinburgh, when Jeffrey
-and Scott, Wilson and the Ettrick Shepherd, Dugald Stewart and
-Alison, were daily giving the productions of their minds to the
-public, and while yet Archibald Constable acted as the unquestioned
-emperor of the publishing world. I was then an insignificant
-person of the age of twenty; yet, destitute as I was both of means
-and friends, I formed the hope of writing something which would
-attract attention. The subject I proposed was one lying readily
-at hand, the romantic things connected with Old Edinburgh. If,
-I calculated, a first <em>part</em> or <em>number</em> could be issued, materials for
-others might be expected to come in, for scores of old inhabitants,
-even up perhaps to the very ‘oldest,’ would then contribute their
-reminiscences.</p>
-
-<p>The plan met with success. Materials almost unbounded came
-to me, chiefly from aged professional and mercantile gentlemen,
-who usually, at my first introduction to them, started at my
-youthful appearance, having formed the notion that none but an
-old person would have thought of writing such a book. A friend
-gave me a letter to Mr Charles Kirkpatrick Sharpe, who, I was
-told, knew the scandal of the time of Charles II. as well as he did
-the merest gossip of the day, and had much to say regarding the
-good society of a hundred years ago.</p>
-
-<p>Looking back from the year 1868, I feel that C. K. S. has
-himself become, as it were, a tradition of Edinburgh. His thin
-effeminate figure, his voice pitched <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">in alt</i>&mdash;his attire, as he took
-his daily walks on Princes Street, a long blue frock-coat, black
-trousers, rather wide below, and sweeping over white stockings
-and neat shoes&mdash;something like a web of white cambric round his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi">{vi}</a></span>
-neck, and a brown wig coming down to his eyebrows&mdash;had long
-established him as what is called a character. He had recently
-edited a book containing many stories of diablerie, and another in
-which the original narrative of ultra-presbyterian church history
-had to bear a series of cavalier notes of the most mocking character.
-He had a quaint biting wit, which people bore as they would a
-scratch from a provoked cat. Essentially, he was good-natured,
-and fond of merriment. He had considerable gifts of drawing,
-and one caricature portrait by him, of Queen Elizabeth dancing,
-‘high and disposedly,’ before the Scotch ambassadors, is the delight
-of everybody who has seen it. In jest upon his own peculiarity of
-voice, he formed an address-card for himself consisting simply of
-the following anagram:</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w400">
-<img src="images/illus_p_vi.jpg" width="400" height="223" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p><i lang="la" xml:lang="la">quasi dicitur</i> C sharp. He was intensely aristocratic, and cared
-nothing for the interests of the great multitude. He complained
-that one never heard of any gentlefolks committing crimes nowadays,
-as if that were a disadvantage to them or the public. Any
-case of a Lady Jane stabbing a perjured lover would have delighted
-him. While the child of whim, Mr Sharpe was generally believed
-to possess respectable talents by which, with a need for exerting
-them, he might have achieved distinction. His ballad of the
-‘Murder of Caerlaverock,’ in the <cite>Minstrelsy</cite>, is a masterly production;
-and the concluding verses haunt one like a beautiful strain
-of music:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘To sweet Lincluden’s haly cells</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Fu’ dowie I’ll repair;</div>
-<div class="verse">There Peace wi’ gentle Patience dwells,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Nae deadly feuds are there.</div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">{vii}</a></span>
-<div class="verse">In tears I’ll wither ilka charm,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Like draps o’ balefu’ yew;</div>
-<div class="verse">And wail the beauty that cou’d harm</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">A knight sae brave and true.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>After what I had heard and read of Charles Sharpe, I called
-upon him at his mother’s house, No. 93 Princes Street, in a somewhat
-excited frame of mind. His servant conducted me to the
-first floor, and showed me into what is generally called amongst us
-the back drawing-room, which I found carpeted with green cloth,
-and full of old family portraits, some on the walls, but many more
-on the floor. A small room leading off this one behind, was the
-place where Mr Sharpe gave audience. Its diminutive space was
-stuffed full of old curiosities, cases with family bijouterie, &amp;c.
-One petty object was strongly indicative of the man&mdash;a calling-card
-of Lady Charlotte Campbell, the once adored beauty, stuck
-into the frame of a picture. He must have kept it at that time
-about thirty years. On appearing, Mr Sharpe received me very
-cordially, telling me he had seen and been pleased with my first
-two numbers. Indeed, he and Sir Walter Scott had talked together
-of writing a book of the same kind in company, and calling
-it <cite>Reekiana</cite>, which plan, however, being anticipated by me, the
-only thing that remained for him was to cast any little matters of
-the kind he possessed into my care. I expressed myself duly
-grateful, and took my leave. The consequence was the appearance
-of notices regarding the eccentric Lady Anne Dick, the beautiful
-Susanna, Countess of Eglintoune, the Lord Justice-clerk Alva, and
-the Duchess of Queensberry (the ‘Kitty’ of Prior), before the close
-of my first volume. Mr Sharpe’s contributions were all of them
-given in brief notes, and had to be written out on an enlarged
-scale, with what I thought a regard to literary effect as far as the
-telling was concerned.</p>
-
-<p>By an introduction from Dr Chalmers, I visited a living lady
-who might be considered as belonging to the generation at the
-beginning of the reign of George III. Her husband, Alexander
-Murray, had, I believe, been Lord North’s Solicitor-general for
-Scotland. She herself, born before the Porteous Riot, and well
-remembering the Forty-five, was now within a very brief space<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">{viii}</a></span>
-of the age of a hundred. Although she had not married in her
-earlier years, her children, Mr Murray of Henderland and others,
-were all elderly people. I found the venerable lady seated at a
-window in her drawing-room in George Street, with her daughter,
-Miss Murray, taking the care of her which her extreme age
-required, and with some help from this lady, we had a conversation
-of about an hour. She spoke with due reverence of her
-mother’s brother, the Lord Chief-justice Mansfield, and when I
-adverted to the long pamphlet against him written by Mr Andrew
-Stuart at the conclusion of the Douglas Cause, she said that, to
-her knowledge, he had never read it, such being his practice in
-respect of all attacks made upon him, lest they should disturb his
-equanimity in judgment. As the old lady was on intimate terms
-with Boswell, and had seen Johnson on his visit to Edinburgh&mdash;as
-she was the sister-in-law of Allan Ramsay the painter, and had
-lived in the most cultivated society of Scotland all her long life&mdash;there
-were ample materials for conversation with her; but her
-small strength made this shorter and slower than I could have
-wished. When we came upon the <em>poet</em> Ramsay, she seemed to
-have caught new vigour from the subject: she spoke with animation
-of the child-parties she had attended in his house on the
-Castle-hill during a course of ten years before his death&mdash;an event
-which happened in 1757. He was ‘charming,’ she said; he
-entered so heartily into the plays of children. He, in particular,
-gained their hearts by making houses for their dolls. How
-pleasant it was to learn that our great pastoral poet was a man
-who, in his private capacity, loved to sweeten the daily life of his
-fellow-creatures, and particularly of the young! At a warning
-from Miss Murray, I had to tear myself away from this delightful
-and never-to-be-forgotten interview.</p>
-
-<p>I had, one or two years before, when not out of my teens,
-attracted some attention from Sir Walter Scott by writing for
-him and presenting (through Mr Constable) a transcript of the
-songs of the <cite>Lady of the Lake</cite>, in a style of peculiar calligraphy,
-which I practised for want of any better way of attracting
-the notice of people superior to myself. When George IV.
-some months afterwards came to Edinburgh, good Sir Walter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">{ix}</a></span>
-remembered me, and procured for me the business of writing
-the address of the Royal Society of Edinburgh to His Majesty,
-for which I was handsomely paid. Several other learned bodies
-followed the example, for Sir Walter Scott was the arbiter of
-everything during that frantic time, and thus I was substantially
-benefited by his means.</p>
-
-<p>According to what Mr Constable told me, the great man liked
-me, in part because he understood I was from Tweedside. On
-seeing the earlier numbers of the <cite>Traditions</cite>, he expressed
-astonishment as to ‘where the boy got all the information.’
-But I did not see or hear from him till the first volume had
-been completed. He then called upon me one day, along with
-Mr Lockhart. I was overwhelmed with the honour, for Sir
-Walter Scott was almost an object of worship to me. I literally
-could not utter a word. While I stood silent, I heard him
-tell his companion that Charles Sharpe was a writer in the
-<cite>Traditions</cite>, and taking up the volume, he read aloud what he
-called one of his <em>quaint bits</em>. ‘The ninth Earl of Eglintoune
-was one of those patriarchal peers who live to an advanced
-age&mdash;indefatigable in the frequency of their marriages and the
-number of their children&mdash;who linger on and on, with an unfailing
-succession of young countesses, and die at last leaving a
-progeny interspersed throughout the whole of Douglas’s <cite>Peerage</cite>,
-two volumes, folio, re-edited by Wood.’ And then both gentlemen
-went on laughing for perhaps two minutes, with interjections:
-‘How like Charlie!’&mdash;‘What a strange being he is!’&mdash;‘<em>Two
-volumes, folio, re-edited by Wood</em>&mdash;ha, ha, ha! There you
-have him past all doubt;’ and so on. I was too much abashed
-to tell Sir Walter that it was only an impudent little bit of writing
-of my own, part of the solution into which I had diffused the
-actual notes of Sharpe. But, having occasion to write next
-day to Mr Lockhart, I mentioned Sir Walter’s mistake, and he
-was soon after good enough to inform me that he had set his
-friend right as to the authorship, and they had had a <em>second</em>
-hearty laugh on the subject.</p>
-
-<p>A very few days after this visit, Sir Walter sent me, along
-with a kind letter, a packet of manuscript, consisting of sixteen<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">{x}</a></span>
-folio pages, in his usual close handwriting, and containing all
-the reminiscences he could at the time summon up of old
-persons and things in Edinburgh. Such a treasure to me!
-And such a gift from the greatest literary man of the age to the
-humblest! Is there a literary man of the present age who
-would scribble as much for any humble aspirant? Nor was this
-the only act of liberality of Scott to me. When I was preparing
-a subsequent work, <cite>The Popular Rhymes of Scotland</cite>, he sent me
-whole sheets of his recollections, with appropriate explanations.
-For years thereafter he allowed me to join him in his walks
-home from the Parliament House, in the course of which he
-freely poured into my greedy ears anything he knew regarding
-the subjects of my studies. His kindness and good-humour on
-these occasions were untiring. I have since found, from his
-journal, that I had met him on certain days when his heart was
-overladen with woe. Yet his welcome to me was the same.
-After 1826, however, I saw him much less frequently than before,
-for I knew he grudged every moment not spent in thinking and
-working on the fatal tasks he had assigned to himself for the
-redemption of his debts.</p>
-
-<p>All through the preparation of this book, I was indebted a good
-deal to a gentleman who was neither a literary man nor an artist
-himself, but hovered round the outskirts of both professions, and
-might be considered as a useful adjunct to both. Every votary
-of pen or pencil amongst us knew David Bridges at his drapery
-establishment in the Lawnmarket, and many had been indebted
-to his obliging disposition. A quick, dark-eyed little
-man, with lips full of sensibility and a tongue unloving of rest,
-such a man in a degree as one can suppose Garrick to have
-been, he held a sort of court every day, where wits and painters
-jostled with people wanting coats, jerkins, and spotted handkerchiefs.
-The place was small, and had no saloon behind;
-so, whenever David had got some ‘bit’ to show you, he dragged
-you down a dark stair to a packing-place, lighted only by a
-grate from the street, and there, amidst plaster-casts numberless,
-would fix you with his glittering eye, till he had convinced you of
-the fine handling, the ‘buttery touches’ (a great phrase with him),<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">{xi}</a></span>
-the admirable ‘scummling’ (another), and so forth. It was in
-the days prior to the Royal Scottish Academy and its exhibitions;
-and it was left in a great measure to David Bridges to bring
-forward aspirants in art. Did such a person long for notice,
-he had only to give David one of his best ‘bits,’ and in a short
-time he would find himself chattered into fame in that profound,
-the grate of which I never can pass without recalling something
-of the buttery touches of those old days. The Blackwood wits,
-who laughed at everything, fixed upon our friend the title of
-‘Director-general of the Fine Arts,’ which was, however, too
-much of a truth to be a jest. To this extraordinary being I
-had been introduced somehow, and, entering heartily into my
-views, he brought me information, brought me friends, read and
-criticised my proofs, and would, I dare say, have written the
-book itself if I had so desired. It is impossible to think of
-him without a smile, but at the same time a certain melancholy,
-for his life was one which, I fear, proved a poor one for himself.</p>
-
-<p>Before the <cite>Traditions</cite> were finished, I had become favourably
-acquainted with many gentlemen of letters and others, who were
-pleased to think that Old Edinburgh had been chronicled.
-Wilson gave me a laudatory sentence in the <cite>Noctes Ambrosianæ</cite>.
-The Bard of Ettrick, viewing my boyish years, always spoke of
-and to me as an unaccountable sort of person, but never could
-be induced to believe otherwise than that I had written all my
-traditions from my own head. I had also the pleasure of
-enjoying some intercourse with the venerable Henry Mackenzie,
-who had been born in 1745, but always seemed to feel as if the
-<cite>Man of Feeling</cite> had been written only one instead of sixty years
-ago, and as if there was nothing particular in antique occurrences.
-The whole affair was pretty much of a triumph at the
-time. Now, when I am giving it a final revision, I reflect with
-touched feelings, that all the brilliant men of the time when it
-was written are, without an exception, passed away, while, for
-myself, I am forced to claim the benefit of Horace’s humanity:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Solve senescentem mature sanus equum, ne</div>
-<div class="verse">Peccet ad extremum ridendus, et ilia ducat.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xiii" id="Page_xiii">{xiii}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="INTRODUCTION_TO_PRESENT_ISSUE" id="INTRODUCTION_TO_PRESENT_ISSUE">INTRODUCTION TO PRESENT ISSUE.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>It has been very shrewdly remarked by a famous essayist and
-critic that a book is none the worse for having survived a
-generation or two. Robert Chambers’s <cite>Traditions of Edinburgh</cite>
-has survived many generations since its first appearance in 1825,
-and I have before me a copy of this edition in the original six
-parts, published at two shillings each, the first of which aroused in
-Sir Walter Scott so much interest. The work when completed
-appears to have passed through many reprints, but retained its
-original form until it was remodelled and almost rewritten in
-1846, much new matter being then added, and certain passages
-altogether omitted. Shortly before his death the author again
-revised the work, adding a new introduction, in which he
-reviewed the changes of the preceding forty years. This was in
-1868, and since that time old Edinburgh has almost ceased
-to exist. Many an ancient wynd and close has disappeared,
-or remains simply as a right of way, on all sides surrounded
-by modern buildings. The City Improvements Act, obtained
-by Dr William Chambers when Lord Provost of Edinburgh
-in 1865 and again in 1868, swept away hundreds of old buildings;
-and to it is due the disappearance of Leith Wynd, St
-Mary’s Wynd, Blackfriars Wynd, the Ancient Scottish Mint in
-the Cowgate, and other landmarks more or less familiar to our
-grandfathers. These changes are confined not alone to the old
-town of Edinburgh, but extend to other districts which at the
-beginning of the nineteenth century were comparatively modern
-and fashionable. Brown Square and the buildings adjoining it
-known as ‘the Society’ have passed away, being intersected by the
-modern Chambers Street. Adam Square, adjoining the College,
-has been absorbed in South Bridge Street; Park Street and Park
-Place, where was once a fashionable boarding-school for young<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xiv" id="Page_xiv">{xiv}</a></span>
-ladies, have disappeared to make room for the M’Ewan Hall and
-other University buildings.</p>
-
-<p>If it is true that the old town of Edinburgh has been modernised
-out of existence, the remark applies equally to its immediate
-suburbs. Indeed the all-round changes of the last forty years can
-fitly be compared to like changes which within the same period
-have taken place in the city of Rome. Until within very recent
-times Edinburgh bore some slight resemblance to the Rome of the
-Popes, with its stately villas and great extent of walled-in garden
-ground. Much of this aristocratic old-world aspect has passed
-away, and one can but lament the disappearance of many an
-eighteenth-century house and grounds, interesting in not a few
-cases as the former residence of a citizen whose memory extended
-back to the Edinburgh of Sir Walter Scott and the famous men
-who were his contemporaries and friends.</p>
-
-<p>Falcon Hall on the south side of the town, with its great
-gardens and walled-in parks, has disappeared. So also has the
-interesting villa of Abbey Hill, occupied until very recent times
-by the Dowager Lady Menzies. The Clock Mill House adjoining
-Holyrood Palace and the Duke’s Walk, and surrounded by ancient
-trees, has gone, as have likewise the many fine old residences with
-pleasant gardens which adjoined the two main roads between
-Edinburgh and Leith. All have passed away, giving place to rows
-of semi-detached villas and endless lines of streets erected for the
-housing of an ever-increasing population.</p>
-
-<p>One of the few surviving examples of the old Scotch baronial
-mansion is Coates House, standing within the grounds of St Mary’s
-Episcopal Cathedral at the west end of the city. This house was
-occupied by Robert Chambers for several years prior to his removal
-to St Andrews in 1840. It has since been modernised, and is now
-used for various purposes in connection with the Cathedral.</p>
-
-<p>Although Robert Chambers died so long ago as 1871, no
-adequate story of his life has since been attempted. This is a
-matter for regret in view of some comparatively recent discoveries,
-particularly those relating to the history of the authorship of
-that famous work, <cite>Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation</cite>,
-made public for the first time in 1884. Of that work,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xv" id="Page_xv">{xv}</a></span>
-written between the years 1841-44, in the solitude of Abbey
-Park, St Andrews, a recent writer has said: ‘This book was
-almost as great a source of wonder in its time as the <cite>Letters of
-Junius</cite>, or <cite>Waverley</cite> itself. The learning and common-sense of
-the book, its rare temperateness and common-sense, commanded
-immediate attention. It was the wonder of the world at that
-period, nor was the authorship ever acknowledged, I believe.’
-The mystery is now solved; but be it said that in the opinion of
-many Robert Chambers is more interesting as an antiquary than
-a scientist. It is in the former capacity that his name will be
-handed down to posterity as author of the standard work on the
-tradition and antiquities of the Scottish capital. The outstanding
-feature of the present issue of the <cite>Traditions</cite> is the series of
-original drawings which have been provided by Mr James
-Riddel, R.S.W., and it is hoped they will enable the reader more
-readily to realise the city’s old world charm, so sympathetically
-described by Robert Chambers. While a few notes have been
-added to this edition, it has not been deemed advisable to alter
-the text, and therefore that fact must be borne in mind where
-dates and lapses of time are mentioned.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-C. E. S. CHAMBERS.
-</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xvii" id="Page_xvii">{xvii}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="CONTENTS" id="CONTENTS">CONTENTS.</a></h2>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">PAGE</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Changes of the Last Hundred Years</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Castle-Hill</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_11">11</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><p class="blockquot">Hugo Arnot&mdash;Allan Ramsay&mdash;House of the Gordon Family&mdash;Sir
-David Baird&mdash;Dr Webster&mdash;House of Mary de Guise.</p></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The West Bow</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_26">26</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><p class="blockquot">The Bowhead&mdash;Weigh-house&mdash;Anderson’s Pills&mdash;Oratories&mdash;Colonel
-Gardiner&mdash;‘Bowhead Saints’&mdash;‘The Seizers’&mdash;Story of a Jacobite
-Canary&mdash;Major Weir&mdash;Tulzies&mdash;The Tinklarian Doctor&mdash;Old Assembly
-Room&mdash;Paul Romieu&mdash;‘He that Tholes Overcomes’&mdash;Provost
-Stewart&mdash;Donaldsons the Booksellers&mdash;Bowfoot&mdash;The
-Templars’ Lands&mdash;The Gallows Stone.</p></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">James’s Court</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_55">55</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><p class="blockquot">David Hume&mdash;James Boswell&mdash;Lord Fountainhall.</p></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Story of the Countess of Stair</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_63">63</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Old Bank Close</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_70">70</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><p class="blockquot">The Regent Morton&mdash;The Old Bank&mdash;Sir Thomas Hope&mdash;Chiesly of
-Dalry&mdash;Rich Merchants of the Sixteenth Century&mdash;Sir William
-Dick&mdash;The Birth of Lord Brougham.</p></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Old Tolbooth</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_82">82</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Some Memories of the Luckenbooths</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_95">95</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><p class="blockquot">Lord Coalstoun and his Wig&mdash;Commendator Bothwell’s House&mdash;Lady
-Anne Bothwell&mdash;Mahogany Lands and Fore-stairs&mdash;The Krames&mdash;Creech’s Shop.</p></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Some Memoranda of the Old Kirk of St Giles</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_105">105</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Parliament Close</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_109">109</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><p class="blockquot">Ancient Churchyard&mdash;Booths attached to the High Church&mdash;Goldsmiths&mdash;George
-Heriot&mdash;The Deid-Chack.</p></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Memorials of the Nor’ Loch</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_117">117</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Parliament House</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_119">119</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><p class="blockquot">Old Arrangements of the House&mdash;Justice in Bygone Times&mdash;<cite>Court
-of Session Garland</cite>&mdash;Parliament House Worthies.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xviii" id="Page_xviii">{xviii}</a></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Convivialia</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_138">138</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Taverns of Old Times</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_158">158</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Cross&mdash;Caddies</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_174">174</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Town-Guard</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_179">179</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Edinburgh Mobs</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_183">183</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><p class="blockquot">The Blue Blanket&mdash;Mobs of the Seventeenth Century&mdash;Bowed Joseph.</p></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Bickers</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_189">189</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Susanna, Countess of Eglintoune</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_192">192</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Female Dresses of Last Century</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_199">199</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Lord Justice-Clerk Alva</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_204">204</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><p class="blockquot">Ladies Sutherland and Glenorchy&mdash;The Pin or Risp.</p></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Marlin’s and Niddry’s Wynds</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_209">209</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><p class="blockquot">Tradition of Marlin the Pavier&mdash;House of Provost Edward&mdash;Story of
-Lady Grange.</p></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Abbot of Melrose’s Lodging</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_223">223</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><p class="blockquot">Sir George Mackenzie&mdash;Lady Anne Dick.</p></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Blackfriars Wynd</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_228">228</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><p class="blockquot">Palace of Archbishop Bethune&mdash;Boarding-Schools of the Last Century&mdash;The
-Last of the Lorimers&mdash;Lady Lovat.</p></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Cowgate</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_240">240</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><p class="blockquot">House of Gavin Douglas the Poet&mdash;Skirmish of Cleanse-the-Causeway&mdash;College
-Wynd&mdash;Birthplace of Sir Walter Scott&mdash;The Horse Wynd&mdash;Tam o’ the Cowgate&mdash;Magdalen Chapel.</p></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">St Cecilia’s Hall</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_249">249</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Murder of Darnley</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_256">256</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Mint Close</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_260">260</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><p class="blockquot">The Mint&mdash;Robert Cullen&mdash;Lord Chancellor Loughborough.</p></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Miss Nicky Murray</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_265">265</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Bishop’s Land</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_269">269</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">John Knox’s Manse</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_271">271</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Hyndford’s Close</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_275">275</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">House of the Marquises of Tweeddale&mdash;The Begbie Tragedy</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_279">279</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Ladies of Traquair</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_286">286</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xix" id="Page_xix">{xix}</a></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Greyfriars Churchyard</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_288">288</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><p class="blockquot">Signing of the Covenant&mdash;Henderson’s Monument&mdash;Bothwell Bridge
-Prisoners&mdash;A Romance.</p></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Story of Mrs Macfarlane</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_291">291</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Canongate</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_295">295</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><p class="blockquot">Distinguished Inhabitants in Former Times&mdash;Story of a Burning&mdash;Morocco’s
-Land&mdash;New Street.</p></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">St John Street</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_302">302</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><p class="blockquot">Lord Monboddo’s Suppers&mdash;The Sister of Smollett&mdash;Anecdote of
-Henry Dundas.</p></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Moray House</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_306">306</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Speaking House</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_312">312</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Panmure House&mdash;Adam Smith</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_318">318</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">John Paterson the Golfer</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_320">320</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Lothian Hut</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_323">323</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Henry Prentice and Potatoes</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_325">325</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Duchess of Buccleuch and Monmouth</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_327">327</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Claudero</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_330">330</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Queensberry House</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_336">336</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Tennis Court</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_344">344</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><p class="blockquot">Early Theatricals&mdash;The Canongate Theatre&mdash;Digges and Mrs Bellamy&mdash;A
-Theatrical Riot.</p></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Marionville&mdash;Story of Captain Macrae</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_351">351</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Alison Square</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_358">358</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Leith Walk</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_360">360</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">Gabriel’s Road</span></td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_366">366</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">INDEX</td><td align="right"><a href="#Page_369">369</a></td></tr>
-</table></div>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxi" id="Page_xxi">{xxi}</a></span></p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2><a name="LIST_OF_ILLUSTRATIONS" id="LIST_OF_ILLUSTRATIONS">LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.</a></h2>
-
-
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right" colspan="3">PAGE</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">An Elegant Modern City</td><td align="right" colspan="3"><em><a href="#frontispiece">Frontispiece</a></em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Map of Edinburgh, Old and New</td><td align="right" colspan="3"><a href="#Page_xxvi">xxvi</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">A series of towers rising from a palace on the plain to a castle in the air</td><td align="left" colspan="2"><em>Colour&nbsp;Drawing</em></td><td align="right"><a href="#illus_c_001">1</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">White Hart Inn, Grassmarket</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td align="right"><a href="#illus_c_002">2</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Newhaven Fishwife</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td align="right"><a href="#illus_c_003">4</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Rouping-Wife</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td align="right"><a href="#illus_c_004">9</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Castle-Hill</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td align="right"><a href="#illus_c_005">11</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Duke of Gordon’s House</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td align="right"><a href="#illus_c_006">18</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Bowhead</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td align="right"><a href="#illus_c_007">27</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Grassmarket, from west end of Cowgate</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td align="right"><a href="#illus_c_008">50</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Edinburgh, from the Calton Hill</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td align="right"><a href="#illus_c_009">83</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">St Giles, West Window</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td align="right"><a href="#illus_c_010">105</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Heriot’s Hospital, from Greyfriars Churchyard</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td align="right"><a href="#illus_c_011">113</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">A Suggestion of the North Loch and St Cuthbert’s, from Allan Ramsay’s Garden</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td align="right"><a href="#illus_c_012">117</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Parliament House</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td align="right"><a href="#illus_c_013">128</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">‘Auld Reekie,’ from Largo</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td align="right"><a href="#illus_c_014">152</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Upper Baxter’s Close, where Burns first resided in Edinburgh</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td align="right"><a href="#illus_c_015">164</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">White Horse Inn</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td align="right"><a href="#illus_c_016">170</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Forenoon at the Cross</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td align="right"><a href="#illus_c_017">174</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Town-Guard</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td align="right"><a href="#illus_c_018">179</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Castle, from Princes Street</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td align="right"><a href="#illus_c_019">214</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Blackfriars Wynd</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td align="right"><a href="#illus_c_020">228</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Cowgate</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td align="right"><a href="#illus_c_021">240</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Old Houses, College Wynd (near here Sir Walter Scott was born)</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td align="right"><a href="#illus_c_022">242</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">John Knox’s Manse</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td align="right"><a href="#illus_c_023">274</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Greyfriars Churchyard</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td align="right"><a href="#illus_c_024">288</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">St John’s Close, Entrance to Canongate Kilwinning Mason Lodge</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td class="center">&#8221;</td><td align="right"><a href="#illus_c_025">305</a></td></tr>
-</table></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chap">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxiii" id="Page_xxiii">{xxiii}</a></span></p>
-
-
-<p class="p2 center">The objects of interest between the Castle and Holyrood are grouped topographically
-in the following list, with references to the Map.</p>
-
-<p class="center p2">CASTLE.</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Objects of interest between the Castle and Holyrood">
-<tr><td align="left">Blair’s or Baird’s Close</td><td align="right" class="br">1</td><td align="left" colspan="2"> Castlehill Walk or Esplanade</td><td align="right" class="br">A</td><td align="left"> Allan Ramsay’s House</td><td align="right">a</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Brown’s Close</td><td align="right" class="br">3</td><td align="left" colspan="3" class="br"> </td><td align="left"> Blyth’s Close</td><td align="right">2</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Webster’s Close</td><td align="right" class="br">5</td><td align="left" colspan="2"> CASTLEHILL</td><td align="right" class="br">B</td><td align="left"> Nairn’s Close</td><td align="right">4</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Site of the Duke of Gordon’s House</td><td align="right" class="br">b</td><td align="left" colspan="2"> Weigh-House</td><td align="right" class="br">d</td><td align="left"> Tod’s Close</td><td align="right">6</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left" colspan="2" class="br"> </td><td align="left" colspan="3" class="br"></td><td align="left"> Site of Mary of Guise’s House</td><td align="right">c</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left" colspan="6">&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">West Bow</td><td align="right" class="br">CC</td><td align="left" colspan="2"> LAWNMARKET</td><td align="right" class="br">D</td><td align="left"> Mylne’s Court</td><td align="right">8</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Angle of Bow</td><td align="right" class="br">Z</td><td align="left" colspan="2"> Tolbooth</td><td align="right" class="br">e</td><td align="left"> James’s Court</td><td align="right">10</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Riddel’s Close</td><td align="right" class="br">7</td><td align="left" colspan="2"> Luckenbooths</td><td align="right" class="br">f</td><td align="left"> Lady Stair’s Close</td><td align="right">12</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Brodie’s Close</td><td align="right" class="br">9</td><td align="left" rowspan="4"> St Giles’ <span class="xxlargebracket">{</span></td><td align="left">Haddo’s Hole Church</td><td align="right" class="br">g</td><td align="left"> Upper Baxter’s Close</td><td align="right">14</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Old Bank Close</td><td align="right" class="br">11</td><td align="left">Tolbooth Church</td><td align="right" class="br">h</td><td align="left"> Wardrop’s Court</td><td align="right">16</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Liberton’s Wynd</td><td align="right" class="br">13</td><td align="left" colspan="2" class="br">Old Church</td><td align="left"> Paterson’s Court</td><td align="right">18</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left" colspan="2" class="br"></td><td align="left" colspan="2" class="br">New Church</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left" colspan="6">&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Hope’s Close</td><td align="right" class="br">15</td><td align="left" colspan="2"> HIGH STREET</td><td align="right" class="br">EE</td><td align="left"> Dunbar’s Close</td><td align="right">20</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Beith’s or Bess Wynd</td><td align="right" class="br">17</td><td align="left" colspan="2"> Cross</td><td align="right" class="br">x</td><td align="left"> Byres’s Close</td><td align="right">22</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Parliament Close</td><td align="right" class="br">19</td><td align="left" colspan="2"> Guard House</td><td align="right" class="br">i</td><td align="left"> Writers’ Court</td><td align="right">24</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Parliament House</td><td align="right" class="br">k</td><td align="left" colspan="2"> Tron Church</td><td align="right" class="br">j</td><td align="left"> Royal Exchange</td><td align="right">26</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Back Stairs</td><td align="right" class="br">21</td><td align="left" colspan="3" class="br"></td><td align="left"> Mary King’s Close</td><td align="right">28</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Fishmarket Close</td><td align="right" class="br">23</td><td align="left" colspan="3" class="br"></td><td align="left"> Post-Office Close</td><td align="right">30</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Assembly Close</td><td align="right" class="br">25</td><td align="left" colspan="3" class="br"></td><td align="left"> Anchor Close</td><td align="right">32</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Bell’s Wynd</td><td align="right" class="br">27</td><td align="left" colspan="3" class="br"></td><td align="left"> Lyon Close</td><td align="right">34</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Peebles Wynd</td><td align="right" class="br">29</td><td align="left" colspan="3" class="br"></td><td align="left"> Jackson’s Close</td><td align="right">36</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Marlin’s Wynd</td><td align="right" class="br">31</td><td align="left" colspan="3" class="br"></td><td align="left"> Fleshmarket Close</td><td align="right">38</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Niddry’s Wynd</td><td align="right" class="br">33</td><td align="left" colspan="3" class="br"></td><td align="left"> Fleshmarket</td><td align="right">m</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Site of St Cecilia’s Hall</td><td align="right" class="br">l</td><td align="left" colspan="3" class="br"></td><td align="left"> Greenmarket</td><td align="right">n</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Dickson’s Close</td><td align="right" class="br">35</td><td align="left" colspan="3" class="br"></td><td align="left"> Halkerston’s Wynd</td><td align="right">40</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Cant’s Close</td><td align="right" class="br">37</td><td align="left" colspan="3" class="br"></td><td align="left"> Carrubber’s Close</td><td align="right">42</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Strichen’s Close</td><td align="right" class="br">39</td><td align="left" colspan="3" class="br"></td><td align="left"> Bailie Fife’s Close</td><td align="right">44</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Blackfriars Wynd</td><td align="right" class="br">41</td><td align="left" colspan="3" class="br"></td><td align="left"> Chalmers’ Close</td><td align="right">46</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Todrick’s Wynd</td><td align="right" class="br">43</td><td align="left" colspan="3" class="br"></td><td align="left"> John Knox’s Manse</td><td align="right">p</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Mint Close</td><td align="right" class="br">45</td><td align="left" colspan="3" class="br"></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">The Old Mint</td><td align="right" class="br">o</td><td align="left" colspan="3" class="br"></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Hyndford’s Close</td><td align="right" class="br">47</td><td align="left" colspan="3" class="br"></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Tweeddale Court</td><td align="right" class="br">49</td><td align="left" colspan="2"> Nether Bow Port.</td><td align="right" class="br">F</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left" colspan="6">&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">St Mary’s Wynd</td><td align="right" class="br">51</td><td align="left" colspan="3" class="br"></td><td align="left"> Leith Wynd</td><td align="right">48</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Chessels’s Court</td><td align="right" class="br">53</td><td align="left" colspan="3" class="br"></td><td align="left"> Morocco’s Land</td><td align="right">50</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Weir’s Close</td><td align="right" class="br">55</td><td align="left" colspan="3" class="br"></td><td align="left"> New Street</td><td align="right">52</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Old Playhouse Close</td><td align="right" class="br">57</td><td align="left" colspan="3" class="br"></td><td align="left"> Jack’s Land</td><td align="right">54</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">St John’s Close</td><td align="right" class="br">59</td><td align="left" colspan="3" class="br"></td><td align="left"> Tolbooth Wynd</td><td align="right">56</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">St John’s Street</td><td align="right" class="br">61</td><td align="center" colspan="3" class="br"> CANONGATE.</td><td align="left"> Canongate Church</td><td align="right">58</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Moray House</td><td align="right" class="br">63</td><td align="left" colspan="3" class="br"></td><td align="left"> Canongate Churchyard</td><td align="right">q</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Speaking House</td><td align="right" class="br">65</td><td align="left" colspan="3" class="br"></td><td align="left"> Panmure House</td><td align="right">60</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Acheson House</td><td align="right" class="br">67</td><td align="left" colspan="3" class="br"></td><td align="left"> Golfers’ Land</td><td align="right">62</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Queensberry House</td><td align="right" class="br">69</td><td align="left" colspan="3" class="br"></td><td align="left"> White Horse Inn</td><td align="right">64</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left" colspan="2" class="br"></td><td align="left" colspan="3" class="br"></td><td align="left"> Water Gate</td><td align="right">r</td></tr>
-</table></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chap">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_xxvi" id="Page_xxvi">{xxvi}</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>EDINBURGH OLD AND NEW.</h2>
-
-<p>In the map the streets and buildings printed in black represent the historic Old Town; those in red indicate not
-merely the ‘New Town’ to the north, specifically so called, but some part of the alterations, additions, and
-extensions round the ancient nucleus that have gone to constitute the Edinburgh of the present day.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w600">
-<img src="images/map_thumb.jpg" width="600" height="291" alt="Map" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="screenonly center"><a href="images/map.jpg">Click here to view a larger version of the map.</a></p>
-<p class="handonly center">[Transcriber’s note: A larger version of the map is available
-in the HTML version of this text at Project Gutenberg.]</p>
-
-
-<p class="ph3">KEY TO THE STREETS AND BUILDINGS NOT NAMED ON MAP.</p>
-
-
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<tr><td align="left">Acheson House</td><td align="right">67</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Allan Ramsay’s House</td><td align="right"><em>a</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Anchor Close</td><td align="right">32</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Angle of Bow</td><td align="right"><em>Z</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Assembly Close</td><td align="right">25</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Back Stairs</td><td align="right">21</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Bailie Fife’s Close</td><td align="right">44</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Bank of Scotland</td><td align="right">red <em>F</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Beith’s or Bess Wynd</td><td align="right">17</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Bell’s Wynd</td><td align="right">27</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Blackfriars Wynd</td><td align="right">41</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Blair’s or Baird’s Close</td><td align="right">1</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Blyth’s Close</td><td align="right">2</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Bristo</td><td align="right"><em>N</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Bristo Port</td><td align="right"><em>O</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Brodie’s Close</td><td align="right">9</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Brown’s Close</td><td align="right">3</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Byres’s Close</td><td align="right">22</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Calton Burying-Ground</td><td align="right"><em>t</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Candlemaker Row</td><td align="right"><em>T</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Canongate Church</td><td align="right">58</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Canongate Churchyard</td><td align="right"><em>q</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Cant’s Close</td><td align="right">37</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Carrubber’s Close</td><td align="right">42</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Castlehill</td><td align="right"><em>B</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Castlehill Walk or Esplanade</td><td align="right"><em>A</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Castle Wynd</td><td align="right">74</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Chalmers’ Close</td><td align="right">46</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Chessels’s Court</td><td align="right">53</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">College Wynd</td><td align="right">71</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Council Chambers</td><td align="right">red <em>G</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">County Buildings</td><td align="right">red <em>I</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Court of Session</td><td align="right">red <em>K</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Cowgate</td><td align="right"><em>J J</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Cowgate Port</td><td align="right"><em>L</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Cross</td><td align="right"><em>x</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Dickson’s Close</td><td align="right">35</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Dunbar’s Close</td><td align="right">20</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Established Church Assembly Hall</td><td align="right">red <em>h</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Fishmarket Close</td><td align="right">23</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Fleshmarket</td><td align="right"><em>m</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Fleshmarket Close</td><td align="right">88</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Free Library</td><td align="right">red <em>L</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">General Post-Office</td><td align="right">red <em>E</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Golfers’ Land</td><td align="right">62</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Gordon’s (Duke of) House</td><td align="right"><em>b</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Greenmarket</td><td align="right"><em>n</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Guard House</td><td align="right"><em>i</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Halkerston’s Wynd</td><td align="right">40</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Heriot’s Hospital</td><td align="right"><em>V</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Heriot-Watt College</td><td align="right">red <em>n n</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">High School Wynd</td><td align="right">72</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">High Street</td><td align="right"><em>E E</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Holyrood</td><td align="right"><em>G</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Hope’s Close</td><td align="right">15</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Horse Wynd</td><td align="right">70</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Hyndford’s Close</td><td align="right">47</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Jack’s Land</td><td align="right">54</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Jackson’s Close</td><td align="right">36</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">James’s Court</td><td align="right">10</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">John Knox’s Manse</td><td align="right"><em>p</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Lady Stair’s Close</td><td align="right">12</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Lauriston</td><td align="right"><em>M M</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Lawnmarket</td><td align="right"><em>D</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Leith Wynd</td><td align="right">48</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Liberton’s Wynd</td><td align="right">13</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Luckenbooths</td><td align="right"><em>f</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Lyon Close</td><td align="right">34</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Magdalen Chapel</td><td align="right">66</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Marlin’s Wynd</td><td align="right">31</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Mary King’s Close</td><td align="right">28</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Mary of Guise’s House, Site of</td><td align="right"><em>c</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Mint Close</td><td align="right">45</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Mint, The Old</td><td align="right"><em>o</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Moray House</td><td align="right">63</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Morocco’s Land</td><td align="right">50</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Mutrie’s Hill</td><td align="right"><em>u</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Mylne’s Court</td><td align="right">8</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Nairn’s Close</td><td align="right">4</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Nether Bow Port</td><td align="right"><em>F</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">New Street</td><td align="right">52</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Niddry’s Wynd</td><td align="right">33</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Old Bank Close</td><td align="right">11</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Old Playhouse Close</td><td align="right">57</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Panmure House</td><td align="right">60</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Parliament Close</td><td align="right">19</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Parliament House</td><td align="right"><em>k</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Paterson’s Court</td><td align="right">18</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Peebles Wynd</td><td align="right">29</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Pleasance</td><td align="right"><em>R</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Portsburgh</td><td align="right"><em>H</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Post-Office Close</td><td align="right">80</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Potterrow</td><td align="right"><em>P</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Potterrow Port</td><td align="right"><em>Q</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Queensberry House</td><td align="right">69</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Register House</td><td align="right">red <em>A</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Riddel’s Close</td><td align="right">7</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Royal Exchange</td><td align="right">26</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Royal Infirmary</td><td align="right"><em>K</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Royal Scottish Academy Galleries</td><td align="right">red <em>B</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">St Cecilia’s Hall, Site of</td><td align="right"><em>l</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">St Giles’&mdash;<br /></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="ml2">Haddo’s Hole Church</span></td><td align="right"><em>g</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="ml2">Tolbooth Church</span></td><td align="right"><em>h</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">St John’s Close</td><td align="right">59</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">St John’s Street</td><td align="right">61</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">St Mary’s Wynd</td><td align="right">51</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Scottish National Gallery</td><td align="right">red <em>C</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Scott’s (Sir Walter) Monument</td><td align="right">red <em>D</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Sheriff Court House</td><td align="right">red <em>M</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Speaking House</td><td align="right">65</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">S.S.C. Library</td><td align="right">red <em>J</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Strichen’s Close</td><td align="right">39</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Surgeons’ Hall</td><td align="right">red <em>o</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Tailors’ Hall</td><td align="right">68</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Todrick’s Wynd</td><td align="right">43</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Tod’s Close</td><td align="right">6</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Tolbooth</td><td align="right"><em>e</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Tolbooth Wynd</td><td align="right">56</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Trinity College Church</td><td align="right"><em>S</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Tron Church</td><td align="right"><em>j</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Tweeddale Court</td><td align="right">49</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Upper Baxter’s Close</td><td align="right">14</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Wardrop’s Court</td><td align="right">16</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Water Gate</td><td align="right"><em>r</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Webster’s Close</td><td align="right">5</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Weigh-House</td><td align="right"><em>d</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Weir’s Close</td><td align="right">55</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">West Bow</td><td align="right"><em>C C</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">West Port</td><td align="right"><em>I</em></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">White Hart Inn</td><td align="right">73</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">White Horse Inn</td><td align="right">64</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left">Writers’ Court</td><td align="right">24</td></tr>
-</table></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<div class="figcenter w600">
-<a id="illus_c_001"></a>
-<img src="images/illus_c_001.jpg" width="600" height="515" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">A series of towers rising from a palace on the plain to a castle in the air.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap"><a href="#Page_1">Page 1.</a></span></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">{1}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="TRADITIONS_OF_EDINBURGH" id="TRADITIONS_OF_EDINBURGH">TRADITIONS OF EDINBURGH.</a></h2>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="THE_CHANGES_OF_THE_LAST_HUNDRED_YEARS" id="THE_CHANGES_OF_THE_LAST_HUNDRED_YEARS">THE CHANGES OF THE LAST HUNDRED YEARS.</a><br />
-[1745-1845.]</h2>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter w350">
-<img src="images/illus_p_001.jpg" width="350" height="430" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Fortified Gate,
-Nether Bow Port, from Canongate.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Edinburgh was, at the beginning of George III.’s reign, a
-picturesque, odorous, inconvenient, old-fashioned town, of
-about seventy thousand inhabitants. It had no court, no factories,
-no commerce; but there was a nest of lawyers in it, attending
-upon the Court of Session; and a considerable
-number of the Scotch gentry&mdash;one of
-whom then passed as rich with a thousand
-a year&mdash;gave it the benefit of
-their presence during the winter.
-Thus the town had lived for some
-ages, during which political
-discontent and division had
-kept the country poor. A
-stranger approaching the city,
-seeing it piled ‘close and
-massy, deep and high’&mdash;a
-series of towers, rising from
-a palace on the plain to a
-castle in the air&mdash;would have
-thought it a truly romantic
-place; and the impression
-would not have subsided much
-on a near inspection, when he
-would have found himself
-admitted by a fortified gate
-through an ancient wall, still
-kept in repair. Even on entering the one old street of which
-the city chiefly consisted, he would have seen much to admire&mdash;houses<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">{2}</a></span>
-of substantial architecture and lofty proportions, mingled
-with more lowly, but also more arresting wooden fabrics; a huge
-and irregular, but venerable Gothic church, surmounted by an
-aërial crown of masonry; finally, an esplanade towards the Castle,
-from which he could have looked abroad upon half a score of
-counties, upon firth and fell, yea, even to the blue Grampians.
-Everywhere he would have seen symptoms of denseness of
-population; the open street a universal market; a pell-mell of
-people everywhere. The eye would have been, upon the whole,
-gratified, whatever might be the effect of the <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">clangor strepitusque</i>
-upon the ear, or whatever might have been the private
-meditations of the nose. It would have only been on coming
-to close quarters, or to quarters at all, that our stranger would
-have begun to think of serious drawbacks from the first impression.
-For an inn, he would have had the White Horse, in
-a close in the Canongate; or the White Hart, a house which
-now appears like a carrier’s inn, in the Grassmarket. Or, had
-he betaken himself to a private lodging, which he would have
-probably done under the conduct of a ragged varlet, speaking
-more of his native Gaelic than English, he would have had to
-ascend four or five stories of a common stair, into the narrow
-chambers of
-some Mrs
-Balgray or
-Luckie Fergusson,
-where
-a closet-bed
-in the sitting-room
-would
-have been
-displayed as
-the most comfortable
-place
-in the world;
-and he would
-have had, for
-amusement, a
-choice between
-an extensive
-view of house-tops from the window and the study of a
-series of prints of the four seasons, a sampler, and a portrait of
-the Marquis of Granby, upon the wall.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w500">
-<img src="images/illus_p_002.jpg" width="500" height="317" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">House-tops.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter w500">
-<a id="illus_c_002"></a>
-<img src="images/illus_c_002.jpg" width="500" height="666" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">WHITE HART INN, GRASSMARKET.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap"><a href="#Page_2">Page 2.</a></span>
-</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">{3}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>On being introduced into society, our stranger might have discovered
-cause for content with his lodging on finding how poorly
-off were the first people with respect to domestic accommodations.
-I can imagine him going to tea at Mr Bruce of Kennet’s, in
-Forrester’s Wynd&mdash;a country gentleman and a lawyer (not long
-after raised to the bench), yet happy to live with his wife and
-children in a house of fifteen pounds of rent, in a region of profound
-darkness and mystery, now no more. Had he got into
-familiar terms with the worthy lady of the mansion, he might
-have ascertained that they had just three rooms and a kitchen;
-one room, ‘my lady’s’&mdash;that is, the kind of parlour he was
-sitting in; another, a consulting-room for the gentleman; the
-third, a bedroom. The children, with their maid, had beds
-laid down for them at night in their father’s room; the housemaid
-slept under the kitchen dresser; and the one man-servant
-was turned at night out of the house. Had our friend chanced
-to get amongst tradespeople, he might have found Mr Kerr,
-the eminent goldsmith in the Parliament Square, stowing his
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">ménage</i> into a couple of small rooms above his booth-like shop,
-plastered against the wall of St Giles’s Church; the nursery
-and kitchen, however, being placed in a cellar under the level
-of the street, where the children are said to have rotted off
-like sheep.</p>
-
-<p>But indeed everything was on a homely and narrow scale. The
-College&mdash;where Munro, Cullen, and Black were already making
-themselves great names&mdash;was to be approached through a mean
-alley, the College Wynd. The churches were chiefly clustered
-under one roof; the jail was a narrow building, half-filling up
-the breadth of the street; the public offices, for the most part,
-obscure places in lanes and dark entries. The men of learning
-and wit, united with a proportion of men of rank, met as the
-<em>Poker Club</em> in a tavern, the best of its day, but only a dark house
-in a close, to which our stranger could scarcely have made his
-way without a guide. In a similar situation across the way, he
-would have found, at the proper season, the <em>Assembly</em>; that is,
-a congregation of ladies met for dancing, and whom the gentlemen
-usually joined rather late, and rather merry. The only theatre
-was also a poor and obscure place in some indescribable part of the
-Canongate.</p>
-
-<p>The town was, nevertheless, a funny, familiar, compact, and not
-unlikable place. Gentle and semple living within the compass of
-a single close, or even a single stair, knew and took an interest in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">{4}</a></span>
-each other.<a name="FNanchor_1" id="FNanchor_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> Acquaintances might not only be formed, Pyramus-and-Thisbe
-fashion, through party-walls, but from window to
-window across alleys, narrow enough in many cases to allow of
-hand coming to hand, and even lip to lip. There was little
-elegance, but a vast amount of cheap sociality. Provokingly
-comical clubs, founded each upon one joke, were abundant. The
-ladies had tea-drinkings at the primitive hour of six, from which
-they cruised home under the care of a lantern-bearing, patten-shod
-lass; or perhaps, if a bad night, in Saunders Macalpine’s sedan-chair.
-Every forenoon, for several hours, the only clear space
-which the town presented&mdash;that around the Cross&mdash;was crowded
-with loungers of all ranks, whom it had been an amusement to
-the poet Gay to survey from the neighbouring windows of Allan
-Ramsay’s shop. The jostle and huddlement was extreme everywhere.
-Gentlemen and ladies paraded along in the stately attire
-of the period; tradesmen chatted in groups, often bareheaded,
-at their shop-doors; caddies whisked about, bearing messages,
-or attending to the affairs of strangers; children filled the kennel
-with their noisy sports. Add to all this, corduroyed men from
-Gilmerton, bawling coals or yellow sand, and spending as much
-breath in a minute as could have served poor asthmatic Hugo
-Arnot for a month; fishwomen crying their caller haddies from
-Newhaven; whimsicals and idiots going along, each with his or
-her crowd of listeners or tormentors; sootymen with their bags;
-town-guardsmen with their antique Lochaber axes; water-carriers
-with their dripping barrels; barbers with their hair-dressing
-materials; and so forth&mdash;and our stranger would have been
-disposed to acknowledge that, though a coarse and confused, it
-was a perfectly unique scene, and one which, once contemplated,
-was not easily to be forgotten.</p>
-
-<p>A change at length began. Our northern country had settled
-to sober courses in the reign of George II., and the usual results
-of industry were soon apparent. Edinburgh by-and-by felt much
-like a lady who, after long being content with a small and inconvenient
-house, is taught, by the money in her husband’s pockets,
-that such a place is no longer to be put up with. There was a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">{5}</a></span>
-wish to expatiate over some of the neighbouring grounds, so as
-to get more space and freer air; only it was difficult to do, considering
-the physical circumstances of the town, and the character
-of the existing outlets. Space, space!&mdash;air, air! was, however,
-a strong and a general cry, and the old romantic city did at
-length burst from its bounds, though not in a very regular way,
-or for a time to much good purpose.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w550">
-<a id="illus_c_003"></a>
-<img src="images/illus_c_003.jpg" width="550" height="680" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">NEWHAVEN FISHWIFE.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap"><a href="#Page_4">Page 4.</a></span>
-</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>A project for a new street on the site of Halkerston’s Wynd,
-leading by a bridge to the grounds of Mutrie’s Hill, where a
-suburb might be erected, was formed before the end of the
-seventeenth century.<a name="FNanchor_2" id="FNanchor_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> It was a subject of speculation to John,
-Earl of Mar, during his years of exile, as were many other schemes
-of national improvement which have since been realised&mdash;for
-example, the Forth and Clyde Canal. The grounds to the north
-lay so invitingly open that the early formation of such a project
-is not wonderful. Want of spirit and of means alone could delay
-its execution. After the Rebellion of 1745, when a general spirit
-of improvement began to be shown in Scotland, the scheme was
-taken up by a public-spirited provost, Mr George Drummond,
-but it had to struggle for years with local difficulties. Meanwhile,
-a sagacious builder, by name James Brown, resolved to take
-advantage of the growing taste; he purchased a field near the
-town for £1200, and <em>feued</em> it out for a square. The speculation
-is said to have ended in something like giving him his own money
-as an annual return. This place (George Square) became the
-residence of several of the judges and gentry. I was amused a
-few years ago hearing an old gentleman in the country begin
-a story thus: ‘When I was in Edinburgh, in the year ’67, I went
-to George Square, to call for Mrs Scott of Sinton,’ &amp;c. To this
-day some relics of gentry cling to its grass-green causeways,
-charmed, perhaps, by its propinquity to the Meadows and Bruntsfield
-Links. Another place sprang into being, a smaller quadrangle
-of neat houses, called Brown’s Square.<a name="FNanchor_3" id="FNanchor_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a> So much was
-thought of it at first that a correspondent of the <cite>Edinburgh
-Advertiser</cite>, in 1764, seriously counsels his fellow-citizens to erect
-in it an equestrian statue of the then popular young king, George
-III.! This place, too, had some distinguished inhabitants; till
-1846, one of the houses continued to be nominally the town
-mansion of a venerable judge, Lord Glenlee. We pass willingly
-from these traits of grandeur to dwell on the fact of its having<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">{6}</a></span>
-been the residence of Miss Jeanie Elliot of Minto, the authoress
-of the original song, <cite>The Flowers of the Forest</cite>; and even to
-bethink ourselves that here Scott placed the ideal abode of
-Saunders Fairford and the adventure of Green Mantle. Sir
-Walter has informed us, from his own recollections, that the
-inhabitants of these southern districts formed for a long time a
-distinct class of themselves, having even places of polite amusement
-for their own recreation, independent of the rest of Edinburgh.
-He tells us that the society was of the first description, including,
-for one thing, most of the gentlemen who wrote in the <cite>Mirror</cite>
-and the <cite>Lounger</cite>. There was one venerable inhabitant who did
-not die till half the New Town was finished, yet he had never
-once seen it!</p>
-
-<p>The exertions of Drummond at length procured an act (1767)
-for extending the royalty of the city over the northern fields;
-and a bridge was then erected to connect these with the elder
-city. The scheme was at first far from popular. The exposure
-to the north and east winds was felt as a grievous disadvantage,
-especially while houses were few. So unpleasant even was the
-North Bridge considered that a lover told a New-Town mistress&mdash;to
-be sure only in an epigram&mdash;that when he visited her, he
-felt as performing an adventure not much short of that of Leander.
-The aristocratic style of the place alarmed a number of pockets,
-and legal men trembled lest their clients and other employers
-should forget them if they removed so far from the centre of
-things as Princes Street and St Andrew Square. Still, the move
-was unavoidable, and behoved to be made.</p>
-
-<p>It is curious to cast the eye over the beautiful city which now
-extends over this district, the residence of as refined a mass of
-people as could be found in any similar space of ground upon
-earth, and reflect on what the place was a hundred years ago.
-The bulk of it was a farm, usually called Wood’s Farm, from its
-tenant (the father of a clever surgeon, well known in Edinburgh
-in the last age under the familiar appellation of <em>Lang Sandy
-Wood</em>). Henry Mackenzie, author of the <cite>Man of Feeling</cite>, who
-died in 1831, remembered shooting snipes, hares, and partridges
-about that very spot to which he alludes at the beginning of the
-paper on Nancy Collins in the <cite>Mirror</cite> (July 1779): ‘As I walked
-one evening, about a fortnight ago, <em>through St Andrew Square</em>, I
-observed a girl meanly dressed,’ &amp;c. Nearly along the line now
-occupied by Princes Street was a rough enclosed road, called the
-<em>Lang Gait</em> or <em>Lang Dykes</em>, the way along which Claverhouse<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">{7}</a></span>
-went with his troopers in 1689, when he retired in disgust from
-the Convention, with the resolution of raising a rebellion in the
-Highlands. On the site of the present Register House was a
-hamlet or small group of houses called <em>Mutrie’s Hill</em>; and where
-the Royal Bank now stands was a cottage wherein ambulative
-citizens regaled themselves with fruit and curds and cream.
-Broughton, which latterly has been surprised and swamped by
-the spreading city, was then a village, considered as so far afield
-that people went to live in it for the summer months, under the
-pleasing idea that they had got into the country. It is related
-that Whitefield used to preach to vast multitudes on the spot
-which by-and-by became appropriated for the <em>Theatre Royal</em>.
-Coming back one year, and finding a playhouse on the site of his
-tub, he was extremely incensed. Could it be, as Burns suggests,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘There was rivalry just in the job!’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>James Craig, a nephew of the poet Thomson, was entrusted with
-the duty of planning the new city. In the engraved plan, he
-appropriately quotes from his uncle:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘August, around, what PUBLIC WORKS I see!</div>
-<div class="verse">Lo, stately streets! lo, squares that court the breeze!</div>
-<div class="verse">See long canals and deepened rivers join</div>
-<div class="verse">Each part with each, and with the circling main,</div>
-<div class="verse">The whole entwined isle.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>The names of the streets and squares were taken from the royal
-family and the tutelary saints of the island. The honest citizens
-had originally intended to put their own local saint in the foreground;
-but when the plan was shown to the king for his
-approval, he cried: ‘Hey, hey&mdash;what, what&mdash;<em>St Giles Street!</em>&mdash;never
-do, never do!’ And so, to escape from an unpleasant
-association of ideas, this street was called <em>Princes Street</em>, in honour
-of the king’s two sons, afterwards George IV. and the Duke of
-York. So difficult was it at the very first to induce men to
-build that a premium of twenty pounds was offered by the
-magistrates to him who should raise the first house; it was
-awarded to Mr John Young, on account of a mansion erected by
-him in Rose Court, George Street. An exemption from burghal
-taxes was granted to the first house in the line of Princes Street,
-built by Mr John Neale, haberdasher (afterwards occupied by
-Archibald Constable, and then as the Crown Hotel), in consequence
-of a bargain made by Mr Graham, plumber, who sold<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">{8}</a></span>
-this and the adjoining ground to the town.<a name="FNanchor_4" id="FNanchor_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> Mr Shadrach Moyes,
-when having a house built for himself in Princes Street, in 1769,
-took the builder bound to rear another farther along besides his,
-to shield him from the west wind! Other quaint particulars are
-remembered; as, for instance: Mr Wight, an eminent lawyer,
-who had planted himself in St Andrew Square, finding he was in
-danger of having his view of St Giles’s clock shut up by the
-advancing line of Princes Street, built the intervening house
-himself, that he might have it in his power to keep the roof low
-for the sake of the view in question; important to him, he said,
-as enabling him to regulate his movements in the morning, when
-it was necessary that he should be punctual in his attendance at
-the Parliament House.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w600">
-<a id="illus_c_004"></a>
-<img src="images/illus_c_004.jpg" width="600" height="590" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">ROUPING-WIFE.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap"><a href="#Page_9">Page 9.</a></span>
-</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The foundation was at length laid of that revolution which has
-ended in making Edinburgh a kind of double city&mdash;<em>first</em>, an
-ancient and picturesque hill-built one, occupied chiefly by the
-humbler classes; and <em>second</em>, an elegant modern one, of much
-regularity of aspect, and possessed almost as exclusively by the
-more refined portion of society. The New Town, keeping pace
-with the growing prosperity of the country, had, in 1790, been
-extended to Castle Street; in 1800 the necessity for a second
-plan of the same extent still farther to the north had been felt,
-and this was after acted upon. Forty years saw the Old Town
-thoroughly changed as respects population. One after another,
-its nobles and gentry, its men of the robe, its ‘writers,’ and even
-its substantial burghers, had during that time deserted their
-mansions in the High Street and Canongate, till few were left.
-Even those modern districts connected with it, as St John Street,
-New Street, George Square, &amp;c., were beginning to be forsaken
-for the sake of more elegantly circumstanced habitations beyond
-the North Loch. Into the remote social consequences of this
-change it is not my purpose to enter, beyond the bare remark
-that it was only too accordant with that tendency of our present
-form of civilisation to separate the high from the low, the intelligent
-from the ignorant&mdash;that dissociation, in short, which would
-in itself run nigh to be a condemnation of all progress, if we
-were not allowed to suppose that better forms of civilisation are
-realisable. Enough that I mention the tangible consequences of
-the revolution&mdash;a flooding in of the humbler trading classes where
-gentles once had been; the houses of these classes, again, filled<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">{9}</a></span>
-with the vile and miserable. Now were to be seen hundreds of
-instances of such changes as Provost Creech indicates in 1783:
-‘The Lord Justice-Clerk Tinwald’s house possessed by a French
-teacher&mdash;Lord President Craigie’s house by a rouping-wife or
-salewoman of old furniture&mdash;and Lord Drummore’s house left by
-a chairman for want of accommodation.’ ‘The house of the Duke
-of Douglas at the Union, now possessed by a wheelwright!’ To
-one who, like myself, was young in the early part of the present
-century, it was scarcely possible, as he permeated the streets and
-closes of ancient Edinburgh, to realise the idea of a time when
-the great were housed therein. But many a gentleman in middle
-life, then living perhaps in Queen Street or Charlotte Square,
-could recollect the close or the common stair where he had been
-born and spent his earliest years, now altogether given up to a
-different portion of society. And when the younger perambulator
-inquired more narrowly, he could discover traces of this former
-population. Here and there a carved coat-armorial, with supporters,
-perhaps even a coronet, arrested attention
-amidst the obscurities of some
-<em>wynd</em> or court. Did he ascend a stair
-and enter a floor, now subdivided
-perhaps into four or five distinct
-dwellings, he might readily perceive,
-in the massive wainscot
-of the lobby, a proof that
-the refinements of life had
-once been there. Still more
-would this idea be impressed
-upon him when, passing into
-one of the best rooms of the
-old house, he would find not
-only a continuation of such
-wainscoting, but perhaps a
-tolerable landscape by Norie
-on a panel above the fireplace,
-or a ceiling decorated
-by De la Cour, a French
-artist, who flourished in
-Edinburgh about 1740. Even yet he would discover a very few
-relics of gentry maintaining their ground in the Old Town, as if
-faintly to show what it had once been. These were generally old
-people, who did not think it worth while to make any change<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">{10}</a></span>
-till the great one. There is a melancholy pleasure in recalling
-what I myself found about 1820, when my researches for this
-work were commenced. In that year I was in the house of
-Governor Fergusson, an ancient gentleman of the Pitfour family,
-in a floor, one stair up, in the Luckenbooths. About the same
-time I attended the book-sale of Dr Arrot, a physician of good
-figure, newly deceased, in the Mint Close. For several years later,
-any one ascending a now miserable-looking stair in Blackfriars
-Wynd would have seen a door-plate inscribed with the name
-<span class="smcap">Miss Oliphant</span>, a member of the Gask family. Nay, so late as
-1832, I had the pleasure of breakfasting with Sir William Macleod
-Bannatyne in Whiteford House, Canongate (afterwards a type-foundry),
-on which occasion the venerable old gentleman talked
-as familiarly of the levees of the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">sous-ministre</i> for Lord Bute in the
-old villa at the Abbey Hill as I could have talked of the affairs
-of the Canning administration; and even recalled, as a fresh
-picture of his memory, his father drawing on his boots to go
-to make interest in London in behalf of some of the men in
-trouble for the Forty-five, particularly his own brother-in-law,
-the Clanranald of that day. Such were the connections recently
-existing between the past system of things and the present. Now,
-alas! the sun of Old-Town glory has set for ever. Nothing is
-left but the decaying and rapidly diminishing masses of ancient
-masonry, and a handful of traditionary recollections, which be
-it my humble but not unworthy task to transmit to future
-generations.<a name="FNanchor_5" id="FNanchor_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w350">
-<img src="images/illus_p_009.jpg" width="350" height="378" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Carved Armorial, with Supporters.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="figcenter w500">
-<a id="illus_c_005"></a>
-<img src="images/illus_c_005.jpg" width="500" height="668" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">THE CASTLE-HILL.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap"><a href="#Page_11">Page 11.</a></span></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">{11}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="THE_CASTLE-HILL" id="THE_CASTLE-HILL">THE CASTLE-HILL.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="chapter_summary"><strong>Hugo Arnot&mdash;Allan Ramsay&mdash;House of the Gordon Family&mdash;Sir
-David Baird&mdash;Dr Webster&mdash;House of Mary de Guise.</strong></p>
-
-
-<p>The saunter which I contemplate through the streets and
-stories, the lanes and legends, of Old Edinburgh may
-properly commence at the Castle-hill, as it is a marked extremity
-of the city as well as its highest ground.</p>
-
-<p>The Castle-hill is partly an esplanade, serving as a parade-ground
-for the garrison of the Castle, and partly a street, the
-upper portion of that vertebral line which, under the various
-names of Lawnmarket, High Street, and Canongate, extends to
-Holyrood Palace. The open ground&mdash;a scene of warfare during
-the sieges of the fortress, often a place of execution in rude
-times&mdash;the place, too, where, by a curious legal fiction, the Nova
-Scotia baronets were enfeoffed in their ideal estates on the other
-side of the Atlantic&mdash;was all that Edinburgh possessed as a
-readily accessible promenade before the extension of the city.
-We find the severe acts for a strict observance of the Sabbath,
-which appeared from time to time in the latter part of the
-seventeenth and early part of the eighteenth century, denouncing
-the King’s Park, the Pier of Leith, and the <em>Castle-hill</em> as the
-places chiefly resorted to for the profane sport of walking on
-‘the Lord’s Day.’ Denounce as they might, human nature could
-never, I believe, be altogether kept off the Castle-hill; even the
-most respectable people walked there in multitudes during the
-intervals between morning and evening service. We have an
-allusion to the promenade character of the Castle-hill in Ramsay’s
-city pastoral, as it may be called, of <cite>The Young Laird and
-Edinburgh Katy</cite>&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Wat ye wha I met yestreen,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Coming down the street, my jo?</div>
-<div class="verse">My mistress in her tartan screen,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Fu’ bonny, braw, and sweet, my jo.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">“My dear,” quoth I, “thanks to the night,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">That never wished a lover ill,</div>
-<div class="verse">Since ye’re out o’ your mother’s sight,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Let’s tak’ a walk up to <em>the hill</em>.”’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">{12}</a></span></p>
-<p>A memory of these Sunday promenadings here calls me to
-introduce what I have to say regarding a man of whom there
-used to be a strong popular remembrance in Edinburgh.</p>
-
-
-<h3>HUGO ARNOT.</h3>
-
-<p>The cleverly executed <cite>History of Edinburgh</cite>, published by
-Arnot in 1779, and which to this day has not been superseded,
-gives some respectability to a name which tradition would have
-otherwise handed down to us as only that of an eccentric gentleman,
-of remarkably scarecrow figure, and the subject of a few
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">bon-mots</i>.</p>
-
-<p>He was the son of a Leith shipmaster, named Pollock, and
-took the name of Arnot from a small inheritance in Fife. Many
-who have read his laborious work will be little prepared to hear
-that it was written when the author was between twenty and
-thirty; and that, antiquated as his meagre figure looks in Kay’s
-Portraits, he was at his death, in 1786, only thirty-seven. His
-body had been, in reality, made prematurely old
-by a confirmed asthma, accompanied by a cough,
-which he himself said would carry him off like a
-rocket some day, when a friend remarked, with
-reference to his known latitudinarianism: ‘Possibly,
-Hugo, in the contrary direction.’</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w150">
-<img src="images/illus_p_012.jpg" width="150" height="427" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Hugo Arnot, looking
-so like his meat.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Most of the jokes about poor Hugo’s person
-have been frequently printed&mdash;as Harry Erskine
-meeting him on the street when he was gnawing
-at a spelding or dried haddock, and congratulating
-him on <em>looking so like his meat</em>; and his
-offending the piety of an old woman who was
-cheapening a Bible in Creech’s shop, by some
-thoughtless remark, when she first burst out
-with: ‘Oh, you monster!’ and then turning
-round and seeing him, added: ‘And he’s an
-anatomy too!’ An epigram by Erskine is less
-known:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘The Scriptures assure us that much is forgiven</div>
-<div class="verse"><em>To flesh and to blood</em> by the mercy of Heaven;</div>
-<div class="verse">But I’ve searched the whole Bible, and texts can find none</div>
-<div class="verse">That extend the assurance <em>to skin and to bone</em>.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Arnot was afflicted by a constitutional irritability to an extent<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">{13}</a></span>
-which can hardly be conceived. A printer’s boy, handing papers
-to him over his shoulder, happened to touch his ear with one
-of them, when he started up in a rage, and demanded of the
-trembling youth what he meant by insulting him in that manner!
-Probably from some quarrel arising out of this nervous weakness&mdash;for
-such it really was&mdash;the Edinburgh booksellers, to a man,
-refused to have anything to do with the prospectuses of his
-<cite>Criminal Trials</cite>, and Arnot had to advertise that they were to
-be seen in the coffee-houses, instead of the booksellers’ shops.</p>
-
-<p>About the time when he entered at the bar (1772), he had a
-fancy for a young lady named Hay (afterwards Mrs Macdougall),
-sister of a gentleman who succeeded as Marquis of Tweeddale,
-and then a reigning toast. One Sunday, when he contemplated
-making up to his divinity on the Castle-hill, after forenoon
-service, he entertained two young friends at breakfast in his
-lodgings at the head of the Canongate. By-and-by the affairs
-of the toilet came to be considered. It was then found that
-Hugo’s washerwoman had played false, leaving him in a total
-destitution of clean linen, or at least of clean linen that was also
-<em>whole</em>. A dreadful storm took place, but at length, on its
-calming a little, love found out a way, by taking the hand-ruffles
-of one cast garment, in connection with the front of another,
-and adding both to the body of a third. In this eclectic form
-of shirt the meagre young philosopher marched forth with his
-friends, and was rewarded for his perseverance by being allowed
-a very pleasant chat with the young lady on ‘the hill.’ His
-friends standing by had their own enjoyment in reflecting what
-the beauteous Miss Hay would think if she knew the struggles
-which her admirer had had that morning in preparing to make
-his appearance before her.</p>
-
-<p>Arnot latterly dwelt in a small house at the end of the Meuse
-Lane in St Andrew Street, with an old and very particular lady
-for a neighbour in the upper-floor. Disturbed by the enthusiastic
-way in which he sometimes rang his bell, the lady ventured to
-send a remonstrance, which, however, produced no effect. This
-led to a bad state of matters between them. At length a very
-pressing and petulant message being handed in one day, insisting
-that he should endeavour to call his servants <em>in a different
-manner</em>, what was the lady’s astonishment next morning to hear
-a pistol discharged in Arnot’s house! He was simply complying
-with the letter of his neighbour’s request, by firing, instead of
-ringing, as a signal for shaving-water.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">{14}</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>ALLAN RAMSAY.</h3>
-
-<p>On the north side of the esplanade&mdash;enjoying a splendid view
-of the Firth of Forth, Fife and Stirling shires&mdash;is the neat little
-villa of Allan Ramsay, surrounded by its miniature pleasure-grounds.
-The sober, industrious life of this exception to the
-race of poets having resulted in a small competency,
-he built this odd-shaped house in
-his latter days, designing to enjoy in it
-the Horatian quiet which he had so
-often eulogised in his verse. The
-story goes that, showing it soon
-after to the clever Patrick, Lord
-Elibank, with much fussy interest
-in all its externals and
-accommodations, he remarked
-that the wags were already at
-work on the subject&mdash;they
-likened it to a goose-pie<a name="FNanchor_6" id="FNanchor_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a>
-(owing to the roundness of the
-shape). ‘Indeed, Allan,’ said
-his lordship, ‘now I see you in
-it, I think the wags are not far
-wrong.’</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w300">
-<img src="images/illus_p_014.jpg" width="300" height="384" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Allan Ramsay’s Villa.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The splendid reputation of
-Burns has eclipsed that of Ramsay
-so effectually that this pleasing
-poet, and, upon the whole,
-amiable and worthy man, is now little regarded. Yet Ramsay
-can never be deprived of the credit of having written the best
-pastoral poem in the range of British literature&mdash;if even that be
-not too narrow a word&mdash;and many of his songs are of great
-merit.</p>
-
-<p>Ramsay was secretly a Jacobite, openly a dissenter from the
-severe manners and feelings of his day, although a very decent
-and regular attender of the Old Church in St Giles’s. He
-delighted in music and theatricals, and, as we shall see,
-encouraged the Assembly. It was also no doubt his own taste<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">{15}</a></span>
-which led him, in 1725, to set up a circulating library, whence
-he diffused plays and other works of fiction among the people
-of Edinburgh. It appears, from the private notes of the historian
-Wodrow, that, in 1728, the magistrates, moved by some
-meddling spirits, took alarm at the effect of this kind of reading
-on the minds of youth, and made an attempt to put it down,
-but without effect. One cannot but be amused to find amongst
-these self-constituted guardians of morality Lord Grange, who
-kept his wife in unauthorised restraint for several years, and
-whose own life was a scandal to his professions. Ramsay, as is
-well known, also attempted to establish a theatre in Edinburgh,
-but failed. The following advertisement on this subject appears
-in the <cite>Caledonian Mercury</cite>, September 1736: ‘The New
-Theatre in Carrubber’s Close being in great forwardness, will be
-opened the 1st of November. These are to advertise the
-gentlemen and ladies who incline to purchase annual tickets, to
-enter their names before the 20th of October next, on which day
-they shall receive their tickets from Allan Ramsay, on paying
-30s.&mdash;no more than forty to be subscribed for; after which none
-will be disposed of under two guineas.’</p>
-
-<p>The late Mrs Murray of Henderland knew Ramsay for the
-last ten years of his life, her sister having married his son, the
-celebrated painter. She spoke of him to me in 1825, with kindly
-enthusiasm, as one of the most amiable men she had ever
-known. His constant cheerfulness and lively conversational
-powers had made him a favourite amongst persons of rank,
-whose guest he frequently was. Being very fond of children, he
-encouraged his daughters in bringing troops of young ladies
-about the house, in whose sports he would mix with a patience
-and vivacity wonderful in an old man. He used to give these
-young friends a kind of ball once a year. From pure kindness
-for the young, he would help to make dolls for them, and cradles
-wherein to place these little effigies, with his own hands.<a name="FNanchor_7" id="FNanchor_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> But
-here a fashion of the age must be held in view; for, however
-odd it may appear, it is undoubtedly true that to make and
-dispose of dolls, such as children now alone are interested in,
-was a practice in vogue amongst grown-up ladies who had little
-to do about a hundred years ago.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">{16}</a></span></p>
-<p>Ramsay died in 1757. An elderly female told a friend of
-mine that she remembered, when a girl, living as an apprentice
-with a milliner in the Grassmarket, being sent to Ramsay
-Garden to assist in making <em>dead-clothes</em> for the poet. She could
-recall, however, no particulars of the scene but the roses
-blooming in at the window of the death-chamber.</p>
-
-<p>The poet’s house passed to his son, of the same name, eminent
-as a painter&mdash;portrait-painter to King George III. and his queen&mdash;and
-a man of high mental culture; consequently much a
-favourite in the circles of Johnson and Boswell. The younger
-Allan enlarged the house, and built three additional houses to
-the eastward, bearing the title of Ramsay Garden. At his death,
-in 1784, the property went to his son, General John Ramsay,
-who, dying in 1845, left this mansion and a large fortune to Mr
-Murray of Henderland. So ended the line of the poet. His
-daughter Christian, an amiable, kind-hearted woman, said to possess
-a gift of verse, lived for many years in New Street. At
-seventy-four she had the misfortune to be thrown down by a
-hackney-coach, and had her leg broken; yet she recovered, and
-lived to the age of eighty-eight. Leading a solitary life, she
-took a great fancy for cats. Besides supporting
-many in her own house, curiously
-disposed in bandboxes, with doors to go in
-and out at, she caused
-food to be laid out for
-others on her stair and
-around her house. Not a word of obloquy
-would she listen to against the species, alleging,
-when any wickedness of a cat was spoken
-of, that the animal must have acted under provocation, for by
-nature, she asserted, cats are harmless. Often did her maid go
-with morning messages to her friends, inquiring, with her compliments,
-after their pet cats. Good Miss Ramsay was also a
-friend to horses, and indeed to all creatures. When
-she observed a carter ill-treating his horse, she would
-march up to him, tax him with cruelty, and, by
-the very earnestness of her remonstrances, arrest
-the barbarian’s hand. So also, when she saw one
-labouring on the street, with the appearance of
-defective diet, she would send
-rolls to its master, entreating
-him to feed the animal. These<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">{17}</a></span>
-peculiarities, although a little eccentric, are not unpleasing; and
-I cannot be sorry to record them of the daughter of one whose
-heart and head were an honour to his country.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w200">
-<img src="images/illus_p_016a.jpg" width="200" height="80" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Happy.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter w200">
-<img src="images/illus_p_016b.jpg" width="200" height="86" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Contented.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter w200">
-<img src="images/illus_p_016c.jpg" width="200" height="98" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Repose.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter w350">
-<img src="images/illus_p_016d.jpg" width="350" height="133" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Convivial.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>[1868.&mdash;It seems to have been unknown to the biographers of
-Allan Ramsay the painter that he made a romantic marriage. In
-his early days, while teaching the art of drawing in the family of
-Sir Alexander Lindsay of Evelick, one of the young ladies fell in
-love with him, captivated probably by the tongue which afterwards
-gave him the intimacy of princes, and was undoubtedly a
-great source of his success in life. The father of the enamoured
-girl was an old proud baronet; her mother, a sister of the Chief-Justice,
-Earl of Mansfield. A
-marriage with consent of parents
-was consequently impossible. The
-young people, nevertheless, contrived
-to get themselves united in
-wedlock.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w500">
-<img src="images/illus_p_017.jpg" width="500" height="602" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Allan Ramsay’s Monument, Princes Street Gardens.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The speedily developed talent
-of Ramsay, the illustrious patronage
-they secured to him, and the
-very considerable wealth which
-he acquired must have in time
-made him an acceptable relation
-to those proud people. A
-time came when their descendants
-held the connection
-even as an honour. The
-wealth of the painter
-ultimately, on the death
-of his son
-in 1845,
-became the
-property of
-Mr Murray
-of Henderland,
-a
-grandson of
-Sir Alexander
-Lindsay
-and nephew
-of Mrs Allan
-Ramsay;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">{18}</a></span>
-thence it not long after passed to Mr Murray’s brother, Sir John
-Archibald Murray, better known by his judicial name of Lord
-Murray. This gentleman admired the poet, and resolved to
-raise a statue to him beside his goose-pie house on the Castlehill;
-but the situation proved unsuitable, and since his own
-lamented death, in 1858, the marble full-length of worthy
-Allan, from the studio of John Steell, has found a noble
-place in the Princes Street Gardens, resting on a pedestal,
-containing on its principal side a medallion portrait of Lord
-Murray, on the reverse one of General Ramsay, on the
-west side one of the General’s lady, and on the east similar
-representations of the General’s two daughters, Lady Campbell
-and Mrs Malcolm. Thus we find&mdash;owing to the esteem
-which genius ever commands&mdash;the poet of the <cite>Gentle Shepherd</cite>
-in the immortality of marble, surrounded by the figures
-of relatives and descendants who so acknowledged their aristocratic
-rank to be inferior to his, derived from mind alone.]</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w350">
-<img src="images/illus_p_018.jpg" width="350" height="467" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Doorway of Duke of Gordon’s House.
-Now built into School in Boswell’s Court.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3>HOUSE OF THE GORDON
-FAMILY.</h3>
-
-<p>Tradition points out, as the
-residence of the Gordon family, a
-house, or rather range of buildings,
-situated between Blair’s and
-Brown’s Closes, being almost the
-first mass of building in the
-Castle-hill Street on the right-hand
-side. The southern portion
-is a structure of lofty and massive
-form, battlemented at top, and
-looking out upon a garden which
-formerly stretched down to the old
-town-wall near the Grassmarket,
-but is now crossed by the access
-from the King’s Bridge.<a name="FNanchor_8" id="FNanchor_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a> From
-the style of building, I should be
-disposed to assign it a date a little
-subsequent to the Restoration.
-There are, however, no authentic<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">{19}</a></span>
-memorials respecting the alleged connection of the Gordon family
-with this house,<a name="FNanchor_9" id="FNanchor_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> unless we are to consider as of that character a
-coronet resembling that of a marquis, flanked by two deer-hounds,
-the well-known supporters of this noble family, which figures over
-a finely moulded door in Blair’s Close.<a name="FNanchor_10" id="FNanchor_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> The coronet will readily
-be supposed to point to the time when the <em>Marquis of Huntly</em>
-was the principal honour of the family&mdash;that is, previous to 1684,
-when the title of Duke of Gordon was conferred.<a name="FNanchor_11" id="FNanchor_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w550">
-<a id="illus_c_006"></a>
-<img src="images/illus_c_006.jpg" width="550" height="693" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">DUKE OF GORDON’S HOUSE.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap"><a href="#Page_18">Page 18.</a></span>
-</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In more recent times, this substantial mansion was the abode of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">{20}</a></span>
-Mr Baird of Newbyth; and here it was that the late gallant Sir
-David Baird, the hero of Seringapatam, was born and brought up.
-Returning in advanced life from long foreign service, this distinguished
-soldier came to see the home of his youth on the Castle-hill.
-The respectable individual whom I found occupying the
-house in 1824 received his visitor with due respect, and after
-showing him through the house, conducted him out to the garden.
-Here the boys of the existing tenant were found actively engaged
-in throwing cabbage-stalks at the tops of the chimneys of the
-houses of the Grassmarket, situated a little below the level of the
-garden. On making one plump down the vent, the youngsters
-set up a great shout of triumph. Sir David fell a-laughing at
-sight of this example of practical waggery, and entreated the
-father of the lads ‘not to be too angry; he and his brother, when
-living here at the same age, had indulged in precisely the same
-amiable amusement, the chimneys then, as now, being so provokingly
-open to such attacks that there was no resisting the
-temptation.’</p>
-
-<p>The whole matter might have been put into an axiomatic form&mdash;Given
-a garden with cabbage-stalks, and a set of chimneys
-situated at an angle of forty-five degrees below the spot, any boys
-turned loose into the said garden will be sure to endeavour to
-bring the cabbage-stalks and the chimneys into acquaintance.</p>
-
-
-<h3>DR WEBSTER.</h3>
-
-<p>An isolated house which formerly stood in Webster’s Close,<a name="FNanchor_12" id="FNanchor_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> a
-little way down the Castle-hill, was the residence of the Rev. Dr
-Webster, a man eminent in his day on many accounts&mdash;a leading
-evangelical clergyman in Edinburgh, a statist and calculator of
-extraordinary talent, and a distinguished figure in festive scenes.
-The first population returns of Scotland were obtained by him in
-1755; and he was the author of that fund for the widows of the
-clergy of the Established Church which has proved so great a
-blessing to many, and still exists in a flourishing state.<a name="FNanchor_13" id="FNanchor_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a> He was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">{21}</a></span>
-also deep in the consultations of the magistrates regarding the
-New Town.</p>
-
-<p>It is not easy to reconcile the two leading characteristics of this
-divine&mdash;his being the pastor of a flock of noted sternness, called,
-from the church in which they assembled, the <em>Tolbooth Whigs</em>;
-and his at the same time entering heartily and freely into the
-convivialities of the more mirthful portion of society. Perhaps
-he illustrated the maxim that one man may steal horses with
-impunity, &amp;c.; for it is related that, going home early one
-morning with strong symptoms of over-indulgence upon him, and
-being asked by a friend who met him ‘what the Tolbooth Whigs
-would say if they were to see him at this moment,’ he instantly
-replied: ‘They would not believe their own eyes.’ Sometimes he
-did fall on such occasions under plebeian observation, but the
-usual remark was: ‘Ah, there’s Dr Webster, honest man, going
-hame, nae doubt, frae some puir afflicted soul he has been visiting.
-Never does he tire o’ well-doing!’ And so forth.</p>
-
-<p>The history of Dr Webster’s marriage is romantic. When a
-young and unknown man, he was employed by a friend to act as
-go-between, or, as it is termed in Scotland, black-fit, or black-foot,
-in a correspondence which he was carrying on with a young lady
-of great beauty and accomplishment. Webster had not acted
-long in that character, till the young lady, who had never entertained
-any affection for his constituent, fell deeply in love with
-himself. Her birth and expectations were better than his; and
-however much he might have been disposed to address her on his
-own behalf, he never could have thought of such a thing so long
-as there was such a difference between their circumstances. The
-lady saw his difficulty, and resolved to overcome it, and that in
-the frankest manner. At one of these interviews, when he was
-exerting all his eloquence in favour of his friend, she plainly told
-him that he would probably come better speed if he were to speak
-for himself. He took the hint, and, in a word, was soon after
-married to her. He wrote upon the occasion an amorous lyric,
-which exhibits in warm colours the gratitude of a humble lover
-for the favour of a mistress of superior station, and which is
-perhaps as excellent altogether in its way as the finest compositions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">{22}</a></span>
-of the kind produced in either ancient or modern times. There is
-one particularly impassioned verse, in which, after describing a
-process of the imagination by which, in gazing upon her, he comes
-to think her a creature of more than mortal nature, he says that
-at length, unable to contain, he clasps her to his bosom, and&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Kissing her lips, she turns woman again!’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-<h3>HOUSE OF MARY DE GUISE.</h3>
-
-<p>The restrictions imposed upon a city requiring defence appear
-as one of the forms of misery leading to strange associations.
-We become, in a special degree, sensible of this truth when we see
-the house of a royal personage sunk amidst
-the impurities of a narrow close in
-the Old Town of Edinburgh.
-Such was literally the
-case of an aged pile of
-buildings on the north
-side of the Castle-hill,
-behind the front line
-of the street, and
-accessible by Blyth’s,
-Nairn’s, and Tod’s
-Closes, which was declared
-by tradition to
-have been the residence
-of Mary de Guise, the
-widow of James V., and
-from 1554 to 1560
-regent of this realm.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w450">
-<img src="images/illus_p_022.jpg" width="450" height="472" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Ancient Pile of Buildings, North Side of Castle-Hill.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Descending the first
-of these alleys about
-thirty yards, we came
-to a dusky, half-ruinous
-building on the left-hand
-side, presenting one or two lofty windows and a doorway,
-surrounded by handsome mouldings; the whole bearing that
-appearance which says: ‘There is here something that has been
-of consequence, all haggard and disgraced though it now be.’
-Glancing to the opposite side of the close, where stood another
-portion of the same building, the impression was confirmed by
-further appearances of a goodly style of architecture. These<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">{23}</a></span>
-were, in reality, the principal portions of the palace of the
-Regent Mary; the former being popularly described as her
-<em>house</em>, the latter as her <em>oratory</em> or chapel. The close terminated
-under a portion of the building; and when the visitor
-made his way so far, he found an exterior presented northwards,
-with many windows, whence of old a view must have been
-commanded, first of the gardens descending to the North Loch,
-and second, of the Firth of Forth and Fife. One could easily
-understand that, when the gardens existed, the north side of the
-house might have had many pleasant apartments, and been, upon
-the whole, tolerable as a place of residence, albeit the access by a
-narrow alley could never have been agreeable. Latterly the site
-of the upper part of the garden was occupied by a brushmaker’s
-workshops and yard, while the lower was covered by the Earthen
-Mound. In the wall on the east side there was included, as a
-mere portion of the masonry, a stray stone, which had once been
-an architrave or lintel; it contained, besides an armorial device
-flanked by the initials A. A., the legend <span class="smcap">Nosce Teipsum</span>, and the
-date 1557.</p>
-
-<p>Reverting to the door of the queen’s house, which was simply
-the access of a common stair, we there found an ornamented
-architrave, bearing the legend,</p>
-
-<p class="center">
-LAUS ET HONOR DEO,
-</p>
-
-<p>terminated by two pieces of complicated lettering, one much
-obliterated, the other a monogram of the name of the Virgin
-Mary, formed of the letters M. R.<a name="FNanchor_14" id="FNanchor_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a> Finally, at the extremities
-of this stone, were two Roman letters of larger size&mdash;I. R.&mdash;doubtless
-the initials of James Rex, for James V., the style of
-cutting being precisely the same as in the initials seen on the
-palace built by that king in Stirling Castle; an indirect proof, it
-may be remarked, of this having been the residence of the Regent
-Mary.</p>
-
-<p>Passing up a spiral flight of steps, we came to a darksome lobby,
-leading to a series of mean apartments, occupied by persons of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">{24}</a></span>
-humblest grade. Immediately within the door was a small recess
-in the wall, composed of Gothic stonework, and supposed by the
-people to have been designed for containing holy-water, though
-this may well be matter of doubt. Overhead, in the ceiling, was
-a round entablature, presenting a faded coronet over the defaced
-outline of a shield. A similar object adorned the ceiling of the
-lobby in the second floor, but in better preservation, as the shield
-bore three <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fleurs de lis</i>, with the coronet above, and the letters
-H. R. below. There was a third of these entablatures, containing
-the arms of the city of Edinburgh, in the centre of the top
-of the staircase. The only other curious object in this part
-of the mansion was the door of one of the wretched apartments&mdash;a
-specimen of carving, bearing all the appearance of
-having been contemporary with the building, and containing,
-besides other devices, bust portraits of a gentleman and lady.
-This is now in the possession of the Society of the Antiquaries of
-Scotland.</p>
-
-<p>A portion of the same building, accessible by a stair nearer
-the head of the close, contained a hall-like apartment, with other
-apartments, all remarkable for their unusually lofty ceilings. In
-the large room were the remains of a spacious decorated chimney,
-to which, in the recollection of persons still living, there had been
-attached a chain, serving to confine the tongs to their proper
-domain. This was the memorial of an old custom, of which it is
-not easy to see the utility, unless some light be held as thrown
-upon it by a Scottish proverb, used when a child takes a thing
-and says he found it: ‘You found it, I suppose, where the Highlandman
-found the tongs.’ In the centre of almost all the
-ceilings of this part of the mansion I found, in 1824, circular
-entablatures, with coats of arms and other devices, in stucco,
-evidently of good workmanship, but obscured by successive coats
-of whitening.</p>
-
-<p>The place pointed out by tradition as the queen-regent’s oratory
-was in the first-floor of the building opposite&mdash;a spacious and lofty
-hall, with large windows designed to make up for the obscurity of
-the close. Here, besides a finely carved piscina, was a pretty
-large recess, of Gothic structure, in the back-wall, evidently designed
-for keeping things of importance. Many years ago, out of
-the wall behind this recess, there had been taken a small iron box,
-such as might have been employed to keep jewellery, but empty.
-I was the means of its being gifted to Sir Walter Scott, who had
-previously told me that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">{25}</a></span> ‘a passion for such little boxes was one of
-those that most did beset him;’ and it is now in the collection at
-Abbotsford.</p>
-
-<p>The other portions of the mansion, accessible from different
-alleys, were generally similar to these, but somewhat finer. One
-chamber was recognised as the <em>Deid-room</em>; that is, the room where
-individuals of the queen’s establishment were kept between their
-death and burial.</p>
-
-<p>It was interesting to wander through the dusky mazes of this
-ancient building, and reflect that they had been occupied three
-centuries ago by a sovereign princess, and one of the most illustrious
-lineage. Here was the substantial monument of a connection
-between France and Scotland, a totally past state of things. She
-whose ancestors owned Lorraine as a sovereignty, who had spent
-her youth in the proud halls of the Guises in Picardy, and been
-the spouse of a Longueville, was here content to live&mdash;in a <em>close</em>
-in Edinburgh! In these obscurities, too, was a government
-conducted, which had to struggle with Knox, Glencairn, James
-Stewart, Morton, and many other powerful men, backed by a
-popular sentiment which never fails to triumph. It was the
-misfortune of Mary to be placed in a position to resist the
-Reformation. Her own character deserved that she should have
-stood in a more agreeable relation to what Scotland now venerates,
-for she was mild and just, and sincerely anxious for the good of
-her adopted country. It is also proper to remember on the present
-occasion that ‘in her court she maintained a decent gravity, nor
-would she tolerate any licentious practices therein. Her maids of
-honour were always busied in commendable exercises, she herself
-being an example to them in virtue, piety, and modesty.’<a name="FNanchor_15" id="FNanchor_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a> When
-all is considered, and we further know that the building was strong
-enough to have lasted many more ages, one cannot but regret that
-the palace of Mary de Guise, reduced as it was to vileness, should
-not now be in existence. The site having been purchased by
-individuals connected with the Free Church, the buildings were
-removed in 1846 to make room for the erection of an academical
-institution or college for the use of that body.<a name="FNanchor_16" id="FNanchor_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">{26}</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h2><a name="THE_WEST_BOW" id="THE_WEST_BOW">THE WEST BOW.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="chapter_summary"><strong>The Bowhead&mdash;Weigh-house&mdash;Anderson’s Pills&mdash;Oratories&mdash;Colonel
-Gardiner&mdash;‘Bowhead Saints’&mdash;‘The Seizers’&mdash;Story of a Jacobite
-Canary&mdash;Major Weir&mdash;Tulzies&mdash;The Tinklarian Doctor&mdash;Old Assembly
-Room&mdash;Paul Romieu&mdash;‘He that Tholes Overcomes’&mdash;Provost
-Stewart&mdash;Donaldsons the Booksellers&mdash;Bowfoot&mdash;The
-Templars’ Lands&mdash;The Gallows Stone.</strong></p>
-
-<p class="center">[The West Bow has long since disappeared as a street;
-see <a href="#Footnote_39">note</a> on <a href="#Page_54">p. 54</a>.]</p>
-
-
-<p>In a central part of Old Edinburgh&mdash;the very Little Britain of
-our city&mdash;is a curious, angular, whimsical-looking street, of great
-steepness and narrowness, called the West Bow. Serving as a
-connection between the Grassmarket and Lawnmarket, between
-the Low and the High Town, it is of considerable fame in our
-city annals as a passage for the entry of sovereigns, and the scene
-of the quaint ceremonials used on those occasions. In more
-modern times, it has been chiefly notable in the recollections of
-country-people as a nest of the peculiarly noisy tradesmen, the
-white-iron smiths, which causes Robert Fergusson to mark, as one
-of the features of Edinburgh deserted for a holiday:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘The tinkler billies<a name="FNanchor_17" id="FNanchor_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a> o’ the Bow</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Are now less eident<a name="FNanchor_18" id="FNanchor_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> clinkin.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Another remarkable circumstance connected with the street in
-the popular mind is its having been the residence of the famed
-wizard, Major Weir. All of these particulars serve to make it a
-noteworthy sort of place, and the impression is much favoured by
-its actual appearance. A perfect Z in figure, composed of tall
-antique houses, with numerous dovecot-like gables projecting over
-the footway, full of old inscriptions and sculpturings, presenting
-at every few steps some darksome lateral profundity, into which
-the imagination wanders without hindrance or exhaustion, it
-seems eminently a place of old grandmothers’ tales, and sure at all
-times to maintain a ghost or two in its community. When I
-descend into particulars, it will be seen what grounds there truly
-are for such a surmise.</p>
-
-<p>To begin with</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w550">
-<a id="illus_c_007"></a>
-<img src="images/illus_c_007.jpg" width="550" height="680" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">THE BOWHEAD.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap"><a href="#Page_27">Page 27.</a></span>
-</p>
-</div>
-</div><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">{27}</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>THE BOWHEAD.</h3>
-
-<p>This is a comparatively open space, though partially straightened
-again by the insertion in it of a clumsy, detached old building
-called the <em>Weigh-house</em>, where enormous masses of butter and
-cheese are continually getting disposed of. Prince Charles had
-his guard at the Weigh-house when blockading the Castle; using,
-however, for this purpose, not the house itself, but a floor of the
-adjacent tall tenement in the Lawnmarket, which appears to have
-been selected on a very intelligible principle, in as far as it was
-the deserted mansion of one of the city clergy, the same Rev.
-George Logan who carried on a controversy with Thomas Ruddiman,
-in which he took unfavourable views of the title of the
-Stuart family to the throne, not only then, but at any time. It
-was, no doubt, as an additional answer to a bad pamphlet that
-the Highlanders took up their quarters at Mr Logan’s.</p>
-
-
-<h3>ANDERSON’S PILLS.</h3>
-
-<p>In this tall <em>land</em>, dated 1690, there is a house on the second-floor
-where that venerable drug, Dr Anderson’s pills, is sold, and has
-been so for above a century. As is well known, the country-people
-in Scotland have to this day [1824] a peculiar reverence for these
-pills, which are, I believe, really a good form of aloetic medicine.
-They took their origin from a physician of the time of Charles I.,
-who gave them his name. From his daughter, Lillias Anderson,
-the patent came to a person designed Thomas Weir, who left
-it to his daughter. The widow of this last person’s nephew,
-Mrs Irving, is now the patentee; a lady of advanced age, who
-facetiously points to the very brief series of proprietors intervening
-between Dr Anderson and herself, as no inexpressive indication of
-the virtue of the medicine. [Mrs Irving died in 1837, at the age
-of ninety-nine.] Portraits of Anderson and his daughter are
-preserved in this house: the physician in a Vandyke dress, with a
-book in his hand; the lady, a precise-looking dame, with a pill in
-her hand about the size of a walnut, saying a good deal for the
-stomachs of our ancestors. The people also show a glove which
-belonged to the learned physician.</p>
-
-<p>[1868.&mdash;In 1829 Mrs Irving lived in a neat, self-contained
-mansion in Chessels’s Court, in the Canongate, along with her son,
-General Irving, and some members of his family. The old lady,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">{28}</a></span>
-then ninety-one, was good enough to invite me to dinner, when I
-likewise found two younger sisters of hers, respectively eighty-nine
-and ninety. She sat firm and collected at the head of the table,
-and carved a leg of mutton with perfect propriety. She then told
-me, at her son’s request, that in the year 1745, when Prince
-Charles’s army was in possession of the town, she, a child of
-four years, walked with her nurse to Holyrood Palace, and
-seeing a Highland gentleman
-standing in the
-doorway, she went up to
-him to examine his peculiar
-attire. She even
-took the liberty of lifting
-up his kilt a little way;
-whereupon her nurse,
-fearing some danger,
-started forward for her
-protection. But the
-gentleman only patted
-her head, and said something
-kind to her. I
-felt it as very curious to
-sit as guest with a person
-who had mingled in
-the Forty-five. But my
-excitement was brought
-to a higher pitch when,
-on ascending to the
-drawing-room, I found
-the general’s daughter, a
-pretty young woman recently married, sitting there, dressed in
-a suit of clothes belonging to one of the nonagenarian aunts&mdash;a
-very fine one of flowered satin, with elegant cap and lappets,
-and silk shoes three inches deep in the heel&mdash;the same having
-been worn by the venerable owner just seventy years before
-at a Hunters’ Ball at Holyrood Palace. The contrast between
-the former and the present wearer&mdash;the old lady shrunk and
-taciturn, and her young representative full of life and resplendent
-in joyous beauty&mdash;had an effect upon me which it would be
-impossible to describe. To this day, I look upon the Chessels’s
-Court dinner as one of the most extraordinary events in my
-life.]</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w450">
-<img src="images/illus_p_028.jpg" width="450" height="496" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Chessels’s Court, Canongate.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">{29}</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>ORATORIES&mdash;COLONEL GARDINER.</h3>
-
-<p>This house presents a feature which forms a curious memorial
-of the manners of a past age. In common with all the houses
-built from about 1690 to 1740&mdash;a substantial class, still abundant
-in the High Street&mdash;there is at the end of each row of windows
-corresponding to a separate mansion, a narrow slit-like window,
-such as might suffice for a closet. In reality, each of these narrow
-apertures gives light to a small cell&mdash;much too small to require
-such a window&mdash;usually entering from the dining-room or some
-other principal apartment. The use of these cells was to serve as
-a retreat for the master of the house, wherein he might perform
-his devotions. The father of a family was in those days a sacred
-kind of person, not to be approached by wife or children too
-familiarly, and expected to be a priest in his own household.
-Besides his family devotions, he retired to a closet for perhaps an
-hour each day to utter his own prayers;<a name="FNanchor_19" id="FNanchor_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> and so regular was the
-custom that it gave rise, as we see, to this peculiarity in house-building.
-Nothing could enable us more clearly to appreciate
-that strong outward demonstration of religious feeling which pervaded
-the nation for half a century after the agonies of ‘the
-Persecution.’ I cannot help here mentioning the interest with
-which I have visited Bankton House,<a name="FNanchor_20" id="FNanchor_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a> in East Lothian, where, as is
-well known, Colonel Gardiner spent several years of his life. The
-oratory of the pious soldier is pointed out by tradition, and it
-forms even a more expressive memorial of the time than the closets
-in the Edinburgh houses. Connected with a small front room,
-which might have been a library or <em>study</em>, is a little recess, such
-as dust-pans and brooms are kept in, consisting of the angular
-space formed by a stair which passes overhead to the upper floor.
-This place is wholly without light, yet it is said to have been the
-place sacred to poor Gardiner’s private devotions. What leaves
-hardly any doubt on the matter is that there has been a wooden
-bolt within, capable only of being shot from the inside, and therefore
-unquestionably used by a person desiring to shut himself<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">{30}</a></span>
-in. Here, therefore, in this darksome, stifling little cell, had this
-extraordinary man spent hours in those devotional exercises by
-which he was so much distinguished from his class.<a name="FNanchor_21" id="FNanchor_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a></p>
-
-
-<h3>BOWHEAD SAINTS&mdash;SEIZERS&mdash;A JACOBITE BLACKBIRD.</h3>
-
-<p>In the latter part of the seventeenth century, the inhabitants of
-the West Bow enjoyed a peculiar fame for their piety and zeal in
-the Covenanting cause. The wits of the opposite faction are full
-of allusions to them as ‘the Bowhead Saints,’ ‘the godly plants of
-the Bowhead,’ and so forth. [This is the basis of an allusion by a
-later Cavalier wit, when describing the exit of Lord Dundee from
-Edinburgh, on the occasion of the settlement of the crown upon
-William and Mary:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘As he rode down the sanctified bends of the Bow,</div>
-<div class="verse">Ilka carline was flyting, and shaking her pow;</div>
-<div class="verse">But some young plants of grace, that looked couthie and slie,</div>
-<div class="verse">Said: “Luck to thy bonnet, thou bonnie Dundee!”’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>It is to be feared that Sir Walter has here shown a relenting
-towards the ‘young plants,’ for which they would not have thanked
-him.] All the writings of the wits of their own time speak of the
-system to which they were opposed as one of unmitigated sternness.
-It was in those days a custom to patrol the streets during
-the time of divine service, and take into captivity all persons found
-walking abroad; and indeed make seizure of whatever could be
-regarded as guilty of Sabbath-breaking. It is said that, led by a
-sneaking sense, the patrol one day lighted upon a joint of meat
-in the course of being roasted, and made prize of it, leaving the
-graceless owner to chew the spit. On another occasion, about the
-year 1735, a capture of a different kind was made. ‘The people
-about that time,’ says Arnot, ‘were in use to teach their birds to
-chant the songs of their party. It happened that the blackbird
-of an honest Jacobitical barber, which from his cage on the outside
-of the window gave offence to the zealous Whigs by his songs,
-was neglected, on a Saturday evening, to be brought within the
-house. Next morning he tuned his pipe to the usual air, <em>The
-king shall enjoy his own again</em>. One of the <em>seizers</em>, in his holy
-zeal, was enraged at this manifestation of impiety and treason in
-one of the feathered tribe. He went up to the house, seized the
-bird and the cage, and with much solemnity lodged them in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">{31}</a></span>
-City-Guard.’<a name="FNanchor_22" id="FNanchor_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a> Pennycook, a burgess bard of the time, represents
-the officer as addressing the bird:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Had ye been taught by me, a <em>Bowhead saint</em>,</div>
-<div class="verse">You’d sung the Solemn League and Covenant,</div>
-<div class="verse">Bessy of Lanark, or the Last Good-night;</div>
-<div class="verse">But you’re a bird prelatic&mdash;that’s not right....</div>
-<div class="verse">Oh could my baton reach the laverocks too,</div>
-<div class="verse">They’re chirping <em>Jamie, Jamie</em>, just like you:</div>
-<div class="verse">I hate vain birds that lead malignant lives,</div>
-<div class="verse">But love the chanters to the Bowhead wives.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-<h3>MAJOR WEIR.<a name="FNanchor_23" id="FNanchor_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a></h3>
-
-<div class="figcenter w275">
-<img src="images/illus_p_031.jpg" width="275" height="366" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Major Weir’s House.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>It must have been a sad scandal to this peculiar community
-when Major Weir, one of their number, was found to have been
-so wretched an example of human infirmity. The house
-occupied by this man still exists, though in an altered shape,
-in a little court accessible by a narrow passage near the first
-angle of the street. His history
-is obscurely reported; but it
-appears that he was of a good
-family in Lanarkshire, and had
-been one of the ten thousand
-men sent by the Scottish Covenanting
-Estates in 1641 to
-assist in suppressing the Irish
-Papists. He became distinguished
-for a life of peculiar
-sanctity, even in an age when
-that was the prevailing tone of
-the public mind. According to
-a contemporary account:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">{32}</a></span> ‘His
-garb was still a cloak, and somewhat
-dark, and he never went
-without his staff. He was a tall
-black man, and ordinarily looked
-down to the ground; <em>a grim
-countenance, and a big nose</em>. At
-length he became so notoriously
-regarded among the Presbyterian strict sect, that if four met
-together, be sure Major Weir was one. At private meetings he
-prayed to admiration, which made many of that stamp court his
-converse. He never married, but lived in a private lodging with
-his sister, Grizel Weir. Many resorted to his house, to join him
-and hear him pray; but it was observed that he could not officiate
-in any holy duty without the black staff, or rod, in his hand, and
-leaning upon it, which made those who heard him pray admire his
-flood in prayer, his ready extemporary expression, his heavenly
-gesture; so that he was thought more angel than man, and was
-termed by some of the holy sisters ordinarily <em>Angelical Thomas</em>.’
-Plebeian imaginations have since fructified regarding the staff, and
-crones will still seriously tell how it could run a message to a shop
-for any article which its proprietor wanted; how it could answer
-the door when any one called upon its master; and that it used to
-be often seen running before him, in the capacity of a link-boy, as
-he walked down the Lawnmarket.</p>
-
-<p>After a life characterised externally by all the graces of devotion,
-but polluted in secret by crimes of the most revolting nature,
-and which little needed the addition of wizardry to excite the horror
-of living men, Major Weir fell into a severe sickness, which affected
-his mind so much that he made open and voluntary confession of
-all his wickedness. The tale was at first so incredible that the
-provost, Sir Andrew Ramsay,<a name="FNanchor_24" id="FNanchor_24"></a><a href="#Footnote_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a> refused for some time to take him
-into custody. At length himself, his sister (partner of one of his
-crimes), and his staff were secured by the magistrates, together
-with certain sums of money, which were found wrapped up in rags
-in different parts of the house. One of these pieces of rag being
-thrown into the fire by a bailie, who had taken the whole in
-charge, flew up the chimney, and made an explosion like a cannon.
-While the wretched man lay in prison, he made no scruple to
-disclose the particulars of his guilt, but refused to address himself
-to the Almighty for pardon. To every request that he would
-pray, he answered in screams: ‘Torment me no more&mdash;I am
-tormented enough already!’ Even the offer of a Presbyterian
-clergyman, instead of an established Episcopal minister of the city,
-had no effect upon him. He was tried April 9, 1670, and being
-found guilty, was sentenced to be strangled and burnt between<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">{33}</a></span>
-Edinburgh and Leith. His sister, who was tried at the same time,
-was sentenced to be hanged in the Grassmarket. The execution
-of the profligate major took place, April 14, at the place indicated
-by the judge. When the rope was about his neck, to prepare
-him for the fire, he was bid to say: ‘Lord, be merciful to me!’
-but he answered as before: ‘Let me alone&mdash;I will not&mdash;I have
-lived as a beast, and I must die as a beast!’ After he had dropped
-lifeless in the flames, his stick was also cast into the fire; and,
-‘whatever incantation was in it,’ says the contemporary writer
-already quoted,<a name="FNanchor_25" id="FNanchor_25"></a><a href="#Footnote_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a> ‘the persons present own that it gave rare
-turnings, and was long a-burning, as also himself.’</p>
-
-<p>The conclusion to which the humanity of the present age would
-come regarding Weir&mdash;that he was mad&mdash;is favoured by some
-circumstances; for instance, his answering one who asked if he
-had ever seen the devil, that ‘the only feeling he ever had of him
-was in the dark.’ What chiefly countenances the idea is the unequivocal
-lunacy of the sister. This miserable woman confessed
-to witchcraft, and related, in a serious manner, many things which
-could not be true. Many years before, a fiery coach, she said,
-had come to her brother’s door in broad day, and a stranger
-invited them to enter, and they proceeded to Dalkeith. On the
-way, another person came and whispered in her brother’s ear
-something which affected him; it proved to be supernatural
-intelligence of the defeat of the Scotch army at Worcester, which
-took place that day. Her brother’s power, she said, lay in his
-staff. She also had a gift for spinning above other women, but
-the yarn broke to pieces in the loom. Her mother, she declared,
-had been also a witch. ‘The secretest thing that I, or any of the
-family could do, when once a mark appeared upon her brow, she
-could tell it them, though done at a great distance.’ This mark
-could also appear on her own forehead when she pleased. At the
-request of the company present, ‘she put back her head-dress, and
-seeming to frown, there was an exact horse-shoe shaped for nails
-in her wrinkles, terrible enough, I assure you, to the stoutest
-beholder.’<a name="FNanchor_26" id="FNanchor_26"></a><a href="#Footnote_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a> At the place of execution she acted in a furious
-manner, and with difficulty could be prevented from throwing off
-her clothes, in order to die, as she said, ‘with all the shame she
-could.’</p>
-
-<p>The treatise just quoted makes it plain that the case of Weir<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">{34}</a></span>
-and his sister had immediately become a fruitful theme for the
-imaginations of the vulgar. We there receive the following
-story: ‘Some few days before he discovered himself, a gentlewoman
-coming from the Castle-hill, where her husband’s niece
-was lying-in of a child, about midnight perceived about the
-Bowhead three women in windows shouting, laughing, and
-clapping their hands. The gentlewoman went forward, till, at
-Major Weir’s door, there arose, as from the street, a woman
-about the length of two ordinary females, and stepped forward.
-The gentlewoman, not as yet excessively feared, bid her maid
-step on, if by the lantern they could see what she was; but
-haste what they could, this long-legged spectre was still before
-them, moving her body with a vehement cachinnation and great
-unmeasurable laughter. At this rate the two strove for place,
-till the giantess came to a narrow lane in the Bow, commonly
-called the Stinking Close, into which she turning, and the gentlewoman
-looking after her, perceived the close full of flaming
-torches (she could give them no other name), and as if it had
-been a great number of people stentoriously laughing, and gaping
-with tahees of laughter. This sight, at so dead a time of night,
-no people being in the windows belonging to the close, made
-her and her servant haste home, declaring all that they saw to
-the rest of the family.’</p>
-
-<p>For upwards of a century after Major Weir’s death, he continued
-to be the bugbear of the Bow, and his house remained
-uninhabited. His apparition was frequently seen at night, flitting,
-like a black and silent shadow, about the street. His house,
-though known to be deserted by everything human, was sometimes
-observed at midnight to be full of lights, and heard to
-emit strange sounds, as of dancing, howling, and, what is
-strangest of all, spinning. Some people occasionally saw the
-major issue from the low close at midnight, mounted on a black
-horse without a head, and gallop off in a whirlwind of flame.
-Nay, sometimes the whole of the inhabitants of the Bow would
-be roused from their sleep at an early hour in the morning by
-the sound as of a coach and six, first rattling up the Lawnmarket,
-and then thundering down the Bow, stopping at the
-head of the terrible close for a few minutes, and then rattling
-and thundering back again&mdash;being neither more nor less than
-Satan come in one of his best equipages to take home the major
-and his sister, after they had spent a night’s leave of absence in
-their terrestrial dwelling.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">{35}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>About fifty years ago, when the shades of superstition began
-universally to give way in Scotland, Major Weir’s house came to
-be regarded with less terror by the neighbours, and an attempt
-was made by the proprietor to find a person who should be bold
-enough to inhabit it. Such a person was procured in William
-Patullo, a poor man of dissipated habits, who, having been at
-one time a soldier and a traveller, had come to disregard in a
-great measure the superstitions of his native country, and was
-now glad to possess a house upon the low terms offered by the
-landlord, at whatever risk. Upon its being known that Major
-Weir’s house was about to be reinhabited, a great deal of curiosity
-was felt by people of all ranks as to the result of the experiment;
-for there was scarcely a native of the city who had not felt, since
-his boyhood, an intense interest in all that concerned that awful
-fabric, and yet remembered the numerous terrible stories which
-he had heard respecting it. Even before entering upon his
-hazardous undertaking, William Patullo was looked upon with
-a flattering sort of interest, similar to that which we feel respecting
-a regiment on the march to active conflict. It was the hope of
-many that he would be the means of retrieving a valuable
-possession from the dominion of darkness. But Satan soon let
-them know that he does not tamely relinquish any of the outposts
-of his kingdom.</p>
-
-<p>On the very first night after Patullo and his spouse had taken
-up their abode in the house, as the worthy couple were lying
-awake in their bed, not unconscious of a certain degree of fear&mdash;a
-dim, uncertain light proceeding from the gathered embers of
-their fire, and all being silent around them&mdash;they suddenly saw
-a form like that of a calf, which came forward to the bed, and,
-setting its forefeet upon the stock, looked steadfastly at the
-unfortunate pair. When it had contemplated them thus for a
-few minutes, to their great relief it at length took itself away,
-and, slowly retiring, gradually vanished from their sight. As
-might be expected, they deserted the house next morning; and
-for another half-century no other attempt was made to embank
-this part of the world of light from the aggressions of the world
-of darkness.</p>
-
-<p>It may here be mentioned that, at no very remote time, there
-were several houses in the Old Town which had the credit of
-being haunted. It is said there is one at this day in the Lawnmarket
-(a flat), which has been shut up from time immemorial.
-The story goes that one night, as preparations were making for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">{36}</a></span>
-a supper-party, something occurred which obliged the family, as
-well as all the assembled guests, to retire with precipitation, and
-lock up the house. From that night it has never once been
-opened, nor was any of the furniture withdrawn: the very goose
-which was undergoing the process of being roasted at the time
-of the occurrence is still at the fire! No one knows to whom
-the house belongs; no one ever inquires after it; no one living
-ever saw the inside of it; it is a condemned house! There is
-something peculiarly dreadful about a house under these circumstances.
-What sights of horror might present themselves if it
-were entered! Satan is the <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">ultimus hæres</i> of all such unclaimed
-property!</p>
-
-<p>Besides the many old houses that are haunted, there are several
-endowed with the simple credit of having been the scenes of
-murders and suicides. Some contain rooms which had particular
-names commemorative of such events, and these names, handed
-down as they had been from one generation to another, usually
-suggested the remembrance of some dignified Scottish families,
-probably the former tenants of the houses. There is a common-stair
-in the Lawnmarket which was supposed to be haunted by
-the ghost of a gentleman who had been mysteriously killed,
-about a century ago, in open daylight, as he was ascending to
-his own house: the affair was called to mind by old people on
-the similar occasion of the murder of Begbie. A deserted house
-in Mary King’s Close (behind the Royal Exchange) is believed
-by some to have met with that fate for a very fearful reason.
-The inhabitants of a remote period were, it is said, compelled
-to abandon it by the supernatural appearances which took place
-in it on the very first night after they had made it their residence.
-At midnight, as the goodman was sitting with his wife by the
-fire reading his Bible, and intending immediately to go to bed,
-a strange dimness which suddenly fell upon his light caused him
-to raise his eyes from the book. He looked at the candle, and
-saw it burning blue. Terror took possession of his frame.
-Turning away his eyes, there was, directly before him, and
-apparently not two yards off, the head as of a dead person,
-looking him straight in the face. There was nothing but a head,
-though that seemed to occupy the precise situation in regard to
-the floor which it might have done had it been supported by
-a body of the ordinary stature. The man and his wife fainted
-with terror. On awaking, darkness pervaded the room. Presently
-the door opened, and in came a hand holding a candle. This<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">{37}</a></span>
-came and stood&mdash;that is, the body supposed to be attached to
-the hand stood&mdash;beside the table, whilst the terrified pair saw
-two or three couples of feet skip along the floor, as if dancing.
-The scene lasted a short time, but vanished quite away upon
-the man gathering strength to invoke the protection of Heaven.
-The house was of course abandoned, and remained ever afterwards
-shut up. Such were grandams’ tales at no remote period
-in our northern capital:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Where Learning, with his eagle eyes,</div>
-<div class="verse">Seeks Science in her coy abode.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-<h3>TULZIES.</h3>
-
-<p>At the Bowhead there happened, in the year 1596, a combat
-between James Johnston of Westerhall and a gentleman of the
-house of Somerville, which is thus related in that curious book,
-the <cite>Memorie of the Somervilles</cite>.</p>
-
-<p>‘The other actione wherein Westerhall was concerned happened
-three years thereftir in Edinburgh, and was only personal on the
-same account, betwext Westerhall and Bread (Broad) Hugh
-Somervill of the Writes. This gentleman had often formerly
-foughten with Westerhall upon equal termes, and being now in
-Edinburgh about his privat affaires, standing at the head of the
-West Bow, Westerhall by accident comeing up the same, some
-officious and unhappy fellow says to Westerhall: “There is
-Bread Hugh Somervill of the Writes.” Whereupon Westerhall,
-fancying he stood there either to waitt him, or out of contempt,
-he immediately marches up with his sword drawen, and with the
-opening of his mouth, crying: “Turne, villane;” he cuttes
-Writes in the hint head a deep and sore wound, the foullest
-stroak that ever Westerhall was knoune to give, acknowledged
-soe, and much regrated eftirwards by himself. Writes finding
-himself strucken and wounded, seeing Westerhall (who had not
-offered to double his stroak), drawes, and within a short tyme
-puttes Westerhall to the defensive part; for being the taller man,
-and one of the strongest of his time, with the advantage of the
-hill, he presses him sore. Westerhall reteires by little, traverseing
-the breadth of the Bow, to gain the advantage of the ascent,
-to supply the defect of nature, being of low stature, which Writes
-observeing, keepes closse to him, and beares him in front, that
-he might not quyte what good-fortune and nature had given him.
-Thus they continued neer a quarter of ane hour, clearing the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">{38}</a></span>
-callsay,<a name="FNanchor_27" id="FNanchor_27"></a><a href="#Footnote_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a> so that in all the strait Bow there was not one to be
-seen without their shop doores, neither durst any man attempt
-to red them, every stroak of their swords threatening present
-death both to themselves and others that should come neer
-them. Haveing now come from the head of the Bow neer to
-the foot thereof, Westerhall being in a pair of black buites,
-which for ordinary he wore closse drawen up, was quyte tyred.
-Therefore he stepes back within a shop doore, and stood upon
-his defence. The very last stroak that Writes gave went neer
-to have brocken his broad sword in peaces, haveing hitt the
-lintell of the door, the marke whereof remained there a long
-tyme. Thereftir, the toune being by this tyme all in ane uproar,
-the halbertiers comeing to seaze upon them, they wer separated
-and privatly convoyed to ther chambers. Ther wounds but
-slight, except that which Writes had upon his head proved very
-dangerous; for ther was many bones taken out of it; however,
-at lenth, he was perfectly cured, and the parties themselves,
-eftir Hugh Lord Somerville’s death, reconcealled, and all injuries
-forgotten.’</p>
-
-<p>In times of civil war, personal rencontres of this kind, and
-even skirmishes between bands of armed men&mdash;usually called
-tulzies&mdash;were of no unfrequent occurrence upon the streets of
-Edinburgh. They abounded during the troublous time of the
-minority of James VI. On the 24th of November 1567, the
-Laird of Airth and the Laird of Wemyss met upon the High
-Street, and, together with their followers, fought a bloody battle,
-‘many,’ as Birrel the chronicler reports, ‘being hurte on both
-sides by shote of pistoll.’ Three days afterwards there was a
-strict proclamation, forbidding ‘the wearing of guns or pistolls,
-or aney sick-like fyerwork ingyne, under ye paine of death, the
-king’s guards and shouldours only excepted.’ This circumstance
-seems to be referred to in <cite>The Abbot</cite>, where the Regent Murray,
-in allusion to Lord Seyton’s rencontre with the Leslies, in which
-Roland Græme had borne a distinguished part, says: ‘These
-broils and feuds would shame the capital of the Great Turk, let
-alone that of a Christian and reformed state. But if I live, this
-gear shall be amended; and men shall say,’ &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>On the 30th of July 1588, according to the same authority,
-Sir William Stewart was slain in Blackfriars Wynd by the Earl<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">{39}</a></span>
-of Bothwell [the fifth earl], who was the most famed disturber of
-the public peace in those times. The quarrel had arisen on a
-former occasion, on account of some despiteful language used by
-Sir William, when the fiery earl vowed the destruction of his enemy
-in words too shocking to be repeated; ‘sua therafter rancountering
-Sir William in ye Blackfriar Wynd by chance, told him he
-vold now ...; and vith yat drew his sword; Sir William standing
-to hes defence, and having hes back at ye vall, ye earle mad
-a thrust at him vith his raper, and strake him in at the back and
-out at the belley, and killed him.’</p>
-
-<p>Ten years thereafter, one Robert Cathcart, who had been
-with the Earl of Bothwell on this occasion, though it does
-not appear that he took an active hand in the murder, was
-slain in revenge by William Stewart, son of the deceased, while
-standing inoffensively at the head of Peebles Wynd, near the
-Tron.</p>
-
-<p>In June 1605, one William Thomson, a dagger-maker in the
-West Bow, which was even then remarkable for iron-working
-handicraftsmen, was slain by John Waterstone, a neighbour of
-his own, who was next day beheaded on the Castle-hill for his
-crime.</p>
-
-<p>In 1640, the Lawnmarket was the scene of a personal combat
-between Major Somerville, commander of the forces then in the
-Castle, devoted to the Covenanting interest (a relation of Braid
-Hugh in the preceding extract), and one Captain Crawfuird,
-which is related in the following picturesque and interesting
-manner by the same writer: ‘But it would appear this gentleman
-conceived his affront being publict, noe satisfactione acted in a
-private way could save his honour; therefore to repair the same,
-he resolves to challange and fight Somervill upon the High
-Street of Edenburgh, and at such a tyme when ther should be
-most spectators. In order to this designe, he takes the occasione,
-as this gentleman was betwext ten and eleven hours in the
-foirnoon hastily comeing from the Castle (haveing been then
-sent for to the Committie of Estates and General Leslie anent
-some important busines), to assault him in this manner; Somervill
-being past the Weigh-house, Captaine Crawfuird observeing
-him, presentlie steps into a high chope upon the south side of
-the Landmercat, and there layes by his cloak, haveing a long
-broad sword and a large Highland durke by his side; he comes
-up to Somervill, and without farder ceremonie sayes: “If you
-be a pretty man, draw your sword;” and with that word pulles<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">{40}</a></span>
-out his oune sword with the dagger. Somervill at first was
-somewhat stertled at the impudence and boldnesse of the man
-that durst soe openly and avowedly assault him, being in publict
-charge, and even then on his duty. But his honour and present
-preservatione gave him noe tyme to consult the conveniency or
-inconveniency he was now under, either as to his present charge
-or disadvantage of weapons, haveing only a great kaine staff<a name="FNanchor_28" id="FNanchor_28"></a><a href="#Footnote_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a> in
-his hand, which for ordinary he walked still with, and that same
-sword which Generall Rivane had lately gifted him, being a half-rapper
-sword backed, hinging in a shoulder-belt far back, as the
-fashion was then, he was forced to guaird two or three strokes
-with his kaine before he got out his sword, which being now
-drawne, he soon puts his adversary to the defencive part, by
-bearing up soe close to him, and putting home his thrusts,
-that the captaine, for all his courage and advantage of weapons,
-was forced to give back, having now much adoe to parie the
-redoubled thrusts that Somervill let in at him, being now
-agoeing.</p>
-
-<p>‘The combat (for soe in effect it was, albeit accidental) begane
-about the midle of the Landmercat. Somervill drives doune the
-captaine, still fighting, neer to the goldsmiths’ chops, where,
-fearing to be nailled to the boords (these chops being then all
-of timber), he resolved by ane notable blow to revenge all his
-former affronts; makeing thairfor a fent, as if he had designed
-at Somervill’s right side, haveing parried his thrust with his
-dagger, he suddenly turnes his hand, and by a back-blow with
-his broadsword he thought to have hamshekelled<a name="FNanchor_29" id="FNanchor_29"></a><a href="#Footnote_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a> him in one,
-if not both of his legges, which Somervill only prevented by
-nimbly leaping backward at the tyme, interposeing the great
-kaine that was in his left hand, which was quyte cut through
-with the violence of the blow. And now Providence soe
-ordered it, that the captaine missing his mark, overstrake himself
-soe far, that in tyme he could not recover his sword to a fit
-posture of defence, untill Somervill, haveing beaten up the dagger
-that was in the captaine’s left hand with the remaineing part of
-his oune stick, he instantly closes with him, and with the pummil
-of his sword he instantly strikes him doune to the ground, where
-at first, because of his baseness, he was mynded to have nailled
-him to the ground, but that his heart relented, haveing him in
-his mercy. And att that same instant ther happened several of
-his oune soulders to come in, who wer soe incensed, that they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">{41}</a></span>
-wer ready to have cut the poor captaine all in pieces, if he had
-not rescued him out of theire hands, and saw him safely convoyed
-to prisone, where he was layd in the irones, and continued
-in prisone in a most miserable and wretched condition somewhat
-more than a year.’<a name="FNanchor_30" id="FNanchor_30"></a><a href="#Footnote_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a></p>
-
-
-<h3>THE TINKLARIAN DOCTOR.</h3>
-
-<p>In the early part of the last century, the Bowhead was distinguished
-as the residence of an odd, half-crazy varlet of a tinsmith
-named William Mitchell, who occasionally held forth as a preacher,
-and every now and then astounded the quiet people of Edinburgh
-with some pamphlet full of satirical personalities. He seems to
-have been altogether a strange mixture of fanaticism, humour, and
-low cunning. In one of his publications&mdash;a single broadside,
-dated 1713&mdash;he has a squib upon the magistrates, in the form of
-a <em>leit</em>, or list, of a new set, whom he proposes to introduce in their
-stead. At the end he sets forward a claim on his own behalf, no
-less than that of representing the city in parliament. In another
-of his prose pieces he gives a curious account of a journey which he
-made into France, where, he affirms, ‘the king’s court is six times
-bigger than the king of Britain’s; his guards have all feathers in
-their hats, and their horse-tails are to their heels; and their king
-[Louis XV.] is one of the best-favoured boys that you can look
-upon&mdash;blithe-like, with black hair; and all his people are better
-natured in general than the Scots or English, except the priests.
-Their women seem to be modest, for they have no fardingales.
-The greatest wonder I saw in France, was to see the braw people
-fall down on their knees on the clarty ground when the priest
-comes by, carrying the cross, to give a sick person the sacrament.’</p>
-
-<p>The Tinklarian Doctor, for such was his popular appellation,
-appears to have been fully acquainted with an ingenious expedient,
-long afterwards held in view by publishers of juvenile toy-books.
-As in certain sage little histories of Tommy and Harry, King
-Pepin, &amp;c., we are sure to find that ‘the good boy who loved his
-lessons’ always bought his books from ‘kind, good, old Mr J.
-Newberry, at the corner of St Paul’s Churchyard, where the
-greatest assortment of nice books for good boys and girls is always
-to be had’&mdash;so in the works of Mr Mitchell we find some sly
-encomium upon the Tinklarian Doctor constantly peeping forth;
-and in the pamphlet from which the above extract is made, he is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">{42}</a></span>
-not forgetful to impress his professional excellence as a whitesmith.
-‘I have,’ he says, ‘a good pennyworth of pewter spoons, fine, like
-silver&mdash;none such made in Edinburgh&mdash;and silken pocks for wigs,
-and French white pearl-beads; all to be sold for little or nothing.’
-<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Vide</i> ‘A part of the works of that Eminent Divine and Historian,
-Dr William Mitchell, Professor of Tinklarianism in the University
-of the <span class="smcap">Bowhead</span>; being a Syze of Divinity, Humanity, History,
-Philosophy, Law, and Physick; Composed at Various Occasions
-for his own Satisfaction and the World’s Illumination.’ In his
-works&mdash;all of which were adorned with a cut of the Mitchell arms&mdash;he
-does not scruple to make the personages whom he introduces
-speak of himself as a much wiser man than the Archbishop of
-Canterbury, all the clergymen of his native country, and even the
-magistrates of Edinburgh! One of his last productions was a
-pamphlet on the murder of Captain Porteous, which he concludes
-by saying, in the true spirit of a Cameronian martyr: ‘If the
-king and clergy gar hang me for writing this, I’m content, because
-it is long since any man was hanged for religion.’ The learned
-Tinklarian was destined, however, to die in his bed&mdash;an event
-which came to pass in the year 1740.</p>
-
-<p>The profession of which the Tinklarian Doctor subscribed
-himself a member has long been predominant in the West Bow.
-We see from a preceding extract that it reckoned dagger-makers
-among its worthy denizens in the reign of James VI. But this
-trade has long been happily extinct everywhere in Scotland;
-though their less formidable brethren the whitesmiths, coppersmiths,
-and pewterers have continued down to our own day to
-keep almost unrivalled possession of the Bow. Till within these
-few years, there was scarcely a shop in this street occupied by
-other tradesmen; and it might be supposed that the noise of so
-many hammermen, pent up in a narrow thoroughfare, would be
-extremely annoying to the neighbourhood. Yet however disagreeable
-their clattering might seem to strangers, it is generally
-admitted that the people who lived in the West Bow became
-habituated to the noise, and felt no inconvenience whatever from
-its ceaseless operation upon their ears. Nay, they rather experienced
-inconvenience from its cessation, and only felt annoyed when
-any period of rest arrived and stopped it. Sunday morning,
-instead of favouring repose, made them restless; and when they
-removed to another part of the town, beyond the reach of the
-sound, sleep was unattainable in the morning for some weeks, till
-they got accustomed to the quiescence of their new neighbourhood.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">{43}</a></span>
-An old gentleman once told me that, having occasion in his youth
-to lodge for a short time in the West Bow, he found the incessant
-clanking extremely disagreeable, and at last entered into a paction
-with some of the workmen in his immediate neighbourhood, who
-promised to let him have another hour of quiet sleep in the
-mornings for the consideration of some such matter as half-a-crown
-to drink on Saturday night. The next day happening
-(out of his knowledge) to be some species of Saint Monday, his
-annoyers did not work at all; but such was the force of a habit
-acquired even in a week or little more, that our friend awoke
-precisely at the moment when the hammers used to commence;
-and he was glad to get his bargain cancelled as soon as possible,
-for fear of another morning’s want of disturbance.</p>
-
-
-<h3>OLD ASSEMBLY-ROOM.</h3>
-
-<p>At the first angle of the Bow, on the west side of the street, is
-a tall picturesque-looking house, which tradition points to as
-having been the first place where the fashionables of Edinburgh
-held their dancing assemblies. Over the door is a well-cut
-sculpture of the arms of the Somerville family, together with the
-initials P. J. and J. W., and the date 1602. These are memorials
-of the original owner of the mansion, a certain Peter Somerville,
-a wealthy citizen, at one time filling a dignified situation in the
-magistracy, and father of Bartholomew Somerville, who was a
-noted benefactor to the then infant university of Edinburgh. The
-architrave also bears a legend (the title of the eleventh psalm):</p>
-
-<p class="center">
-IN DOMINO CONFIDO.
-</p>
-
-<p>Ascending by the narrow spiral stair, we come to the second
-floor, now occupied by a dealer in wool, but presenting such
-appearances as leave no doubt that it once consisted of a single
-lofty wainscoted room, with a carved oak ceiling. Here, then,
-did the fair ladies whom Allan Ramsay and William Hamilton
-celebrate meet for the recreation of dancing with their toupeed
-and deep-skirted beaux. There in that little side-room, formed
-by an <em>outshot</em> from the building, did the merry sons of Euterpe
-retire to <em>rosin their bows</em> during the intervals of the performance.
-Alas! dark are the walls which once glowed with festive light;
-burdened is that floor, not with twinkling feet, but with the most
-sluggish of inanimate substances. And as for the fiddlers-room&mdash;enough:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">{44}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘A merry place it was in days of yore,</div>
-<div class="verse">But something ails it now&mdash;the place is cursed.’<a name="FNanchor_31" id="FNanchor_31"></a><a href="#Footnote_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<div class="figcenter w400">
-<img src="images/illus_p_044.jpg" width="400" height="490" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Old Assembly-Room.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Dancing, although said to be a favourite
-amusement and exercise of the Scottish people,
-has always been discountenanced, more or less,
-in the superior circles
-of society, or only
-indulged after a very
-abstemious and rigid
-fashion, until a comparatively
-late age.
-Everything that
-could be called public
-or promiscuous
-amusement was held
-in abhorrence by the
-Presbyterians, and
-only struggled
-through a desultory
-and degraded existence
-by the favour
-of the Jacobites, who
-have always been a
-less strait-laced part
-of the community.
-Thus there was nothing
-like a conventional
-system of
-dancing in Edinburgh
-till the year
-1710, when at length a private association was commenced
-under the name of ‘the Assembly;’ and probably its first quarters
-were in this humble domicile. The persecution which it experienced
-from rigid thinkers and the uninstructed populace of
-that age would appear to have been very great. On one occasion,
-we are told, the company were assaulted by an infuriated rabble,
-and the door of their hall perforated with red-hot spits.<a name="FNanchor_32" id="FNanchor_32"></a><a href="#Footnote_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a> Allan
-Ramsay, who was the friend of all amusements, which he conceived
-to tend only to cheer this sublunary scene of care, thus
-alludes to the Assembly:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">{45}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Sic as against the Assembly speak,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">The rudest sauls betray,</div>
-<div class="verse">When matrons noble, wise, and meek,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Conduct the healthfu’ play;</div>
-<div class="verse">Where they appear nae vice daur keek,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">But to what’s guid gies way,</div>
-<div class="verse">Like night, sune as the morning creek</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Has ushered in the day.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Dear E’nburgh, shaw thy gratitude,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">And o’ sic friends mak sure,</div>
-<div class="verse">Wha strive to mak our minds less rude,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">And help our wants to cure;</div>
-<div class="verse">Acting a generous part and guid,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">In bounty to the poor:</div>
-<div class="verse">Sic virtues, if right understood,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Should every heart allure.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>We can easily see from this, and other symptoms, that the
-Assembly had to make many sacrifices to the spirit which sought
-to abolish it. In reality, the dancing was conducted under such
-severe rules as to render the whole affair more like a night at
-La Trappe than anything else. So lately as 1753, when the
-Assembly had fallen under the control of a set of directors, and
-was much more of a public affair than formerly, we find Goldsmith
-giving the following graphic account of its meetings in a
-letter to a friend in his own country. The author of the <cite>Deserted
-Village</cite> was now studying the medical profession, it must be
-recollected, at the university of Edinburgh:</p>
-
-<p>‘Let me say something of their balls, which are very frequent
-here. When a stranger enters the dancing-hall, he sees one end
-of the room taken up with the ladies, who sit dismally in a group
-by themselves; on the other end stand their pensive partners that
-are to be; but no more intercourse between the sexes than between
-two countries at war. The ladies, indeed, may ogle, and the
-gentlemen sigh, but an embargo is laid upon any closer commerce.
-At length, to interrupt hostilities, the lady-directress, intendant,
-or what you will, pitches on a gentleman and a lady to walk a
-minuet, which they perform with a formality approaching to
-despondence. After five or six couple have thus walked the
-gauntlet, all stand up to country-dances, each gentleman furnished
-with a partner from the aforesaid lady-directress. So they dance
-much, and say nothing, and thus concludes our Assembly. I told
-a Scotch gentleman that such a profound silence resembled the
-ancient procession of the Roman matrons in honour of Ceres; and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">{46}</a></span>
-the Scotch gentleman told me (and, faith, I believe he was right)
-that I was a very great pedant for my pains.’</p>
-
-<p>In the same letter, however, Goldsmith allows the beauty of
-the women and the good-breeding of the men.</p>
-
-<p>It may add to the curiosity of the whole affair, that when the
-Assembly was reconstituted in February 1746, after several years
-of cessation, the first of a set of regulations hung up in the hall<a name="FNanchor_33" id="FNanchor_33"></a><a href="#Footnote_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a>
-was: ‘<em>No lady to be admitted in a night-gown, and no gentleman
-in boots</em>.’ The eighth rule was: ‘No misses in skirts and jackets,
-robe-coats, nor stay-bodied gowns, to be allowed to dance in
-country-dances, but in a sett by themselves.’</p>
-
-<p>In all probability it was in this very dingy house that Goldsmith
-beheld the scene he has so well described. At least it
-appears that the improved Assembly Room in Bell’s Wynd (which
-has latterly served as a part of the accommodations of the Commercial
-Bank) was not built till 1766.<a name="FNanchor_34" id="FNanchor_34"></a><a href="#Footnote_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a> Arnot, in his <cite>History of
-Edinburgh</cite>, describes the Assembly Room in Bell’s Wynd as very
-inconvenient, which was the occasion of the present one being
-built in George Street in 1784.</p>
-
-
-<h3>PAUL ROMIEU.</h3>
-
-<p>At this angle of the Bow the original city-wall crossed the
-line of the street, and there was, accordingly, a gate at this spot,<a name="FNanchor_35" id="FNanchor_35"></a><a href="#Footnote_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a>
-of which the only existing memorial is one of the hooks for the
-suspension of the hinges, fixed in the front wall of a house, at
-the height of about five feet from the ground. It is from the
-arch forming this gateway that the street takes its name, <em>bow</em>
-being an old word for an arch. The house immediately <em>without</em>
-this ancient port, on the east side of the street, was occupied,
-about the beginning of the last century, and perhaps at an earlier
-period, by Paul Romieu, an eminent watchmaker, supposed to
-have been one of the French refugees driven over to this country
-in consequence of the revocation of the Edict of Nantes. This<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">{47}</a></span>
-is the more likely, as he seems, from the workmanship of his
-watches, to have been a contemporary of Tompion, the famous
-London horologist of the reign of Charles II. In the front of
-the house, upon the third story, there is still to be seen the
-remains of a curious piece of mechanism&mdash;namely, a gilt ball
-representing the moon, which was made to revolve by means of
-a clock.<a name="FNanchor_36" id="FNanchor_36"></a><a href="#Footnote_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a></p>
-
-
-<h3>‘HE THAT THOLES OVERCOMES.’</h3>
-
-<p>Pursuing our way down the steep and devious street, we pass
-an antique wooden-faced house, bearing the odd name of the
-<em>Mahogany Land</em>, and just before turning the
-second corner, pause before a stone one of
-equally antiquated structure,<a name="FNanchor_37" id="FNanchor_37"></a><a href="#Footnote_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a> having a
-wooden-screened outer stair. Over the door
-at the head of this stair is a legend in
-very old lettering&mdash;certainly not later than
-1530&mdash;and hardly to be deciphered. With
-difficulty we make it out to be:</p>
-
-<p class="center">
-HE YT THOLIS OVERCVMMIS.
-</p>
-
-<p><em>He that tholes</em> (that is, bears) <em>overcomes</em>;
-equivalent to what Virgil says:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Quidquid erit, superanda omnis fortuna ferendo est.’</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="right">
-<cite>Æneid</cite>, v.
-</p></div></div>
-
-<p>We may safely speculate on this inscription
-being antecedent in date to the Reformation,
-as after that period merely moral
-apothegms were held in little regard, and
-none but biblical inscriptions were actually
-put upon the fronts of houses.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w250">
-<img src="images/illus_p_047.jpg" width="250" height="421" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Mahogany Land, West Bow.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>On the other side of the street is a small shop (marked No. 69),
-now occupied by a dealer in small miscellaneous wares,<a name="FNanchor_38" id="FNanchor_38"></a><a href="#Footnote_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a> and which
-was, a hundred years ago, open for a nearly similar kind of
-business, under the charge of a Mrs Jeffrey. When, on the night
-of the 7th September 1736, the rioters hurried their victim
-Porteous down the West Bow, with the design of executing him
-in the Grassmarket, they called at this shop to provide themselves<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">{48}</a></span>
-with a rope. The woman asked if it was to hang Porteous, and
-when they answered in the affirmative, she told them they were
-welcome to all she had of that article. They coolly took off what
-they required, and laid a guinea on the counter as payment;
-ostentatious to mark that they ‘did all in honour.’</p>
-
-
-<h3>PROVOST STEWART’S HOUSE&mdash;DONALDSONS
-THE BOOKSELLERS.</h3>
-
-<p>The upper floors of the house which looks down into the
-Grassmarket formed the mansion of Mr Archibald Stewart, Lord
-Provost of Edinburgh in 1745. This is an abode of singular
-structure and arrangements, having its principal access by a close
-out of another street, and only a postern one into the Bow, and
-being full of curious little wainscoted rooms, concealed closets,
-and secret stairs. In one apartment there is a cabinet, or what
-appears a cabinet, about three feet high: this, when cross-examined,
-turns out to be the mask of a trap-stair. Only a
-smuggler, one would think, or a gentleman conducting treasonable
-negotiations, could have bethought him of building such a house.
-Whether Provost Stewart, who was a thorough Jacobite, was the
-designer of these contrivances, I cannot tell; but fireside gossip
-used to have a strange story as to his putting his trap-stair to use
-on one important occasion. It was said that, during the occupation
-of Edinburgh by the Highland army in ’45, his lordship was
-honoured one evening with a secret visit from the Prince and some
-of his principal officers. The situation was critical, for close by
-was the line between the Highland guards and the beleaguered
-environs of the Castle. Intelligence of the Prince’s movements
-being obtained by the governor of the fortress, a party was sent
-to seize him in the provost’s house. They made their approach
-by the usual access from the Castle-hill Street; but an alarm
-preceded them, and before they obtained admission, the provost’s
-visitors had vanished through the mysterious cabinet, and made
-their exit by the back-door. What real foundation there may
-have been for this somewhat wild-looking story I do not pretend
-to say.</p>
-
-<p>The house was at a subsequent time the residence of Alexander
-Donaldson the bookseller, whose practice of reprinting modern
-English books in Edinburgh, and his consequent litigation with
-the London booksellers, attracted much attention sixty years since.
-Printing and publishing were in a low state in Edinburgh before<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">{49}</a></span>
-the time of Donaldson. In the frank language of Hugo Arnot:
-‘The printing of newspapers and of school-books, of the fanatick
-effusions of Presbyterian clergymen, and the law papers of the
-Court of Session, joined to the patent Bible printing, gave a
-scanty employment to four printing-offices.’ About the middle
-of the century, the English law of copyright not extending to
-Scotland, some of the booksellers began to reprint the productions
-of the English authors of the day; for example, the <cite>Rambler</cite>
-was regularly reproduced in this manner in Edinburgh, with no
-change but the addition of English translations of the Latin
-mottoes, which were supplied by Mr James Elphinstone. From
-this and minor causes, it came to pass that, in 1779, there were
-twenty-seven printing-offices in Edinburgh. The most active man
-in this trade was Alexander Donaldson, who likewise reprinted
-in Edinburgh, and sold in London, English books of which the
-author’s fourteen years’ copyright had expired, and which were
-then only protected by a usage of the London trade, rendering
-it dishonourable as between man and man, among themselves, to
-reprint a book which had hitherto been the assigned property of
-one of their number. Disregarding the rule of his fraternity,
-Donaldson set up a shop in the Strand for the sale of his cheap
-Edinburgh editions of the books of expired copyright. They met
-an immense sale, and proved of obvious service to the public,
-especially to those of limited means; though, as Johnson remarked,
-this made Donaldson ‘no better than Robin Hood, who robbed
-the rich in order to give to the poor.’ In reality, the London
-booksellers had no right beyond one of class sentiment, and this
-was fully found when they wrestled with Mr Donaldson at law.
-Waiving all question on this point, Donaldson may be considered
-as a sort of morning-star of that reformation which has resulted in
-the universal cheapening of literary publications. Major Topham,
-in 1775, speaks of a complete set of the English classics which
-he was bringing out, ‘in a very handsome binding,’ at the rate of
-one and sixpence a volume!</p>
-
-<p>[Donaldson, in 1763, started a twice-a-week newspaper under
-the name of the <cite>Edinburgh Advertiser</cite>, which was for a long
-course of years the prominent journal on the Conservative side,
-and eminently lucrative, chiefly through its multitude of advertisements.
-All his speculations being of a prosperous nature, he
-acquired considerable wealth, which he left to his son, the late
-Mr James Donaldson, by whom the newspaper was conducted for
-many years. James added largely to his wealth by successful<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">{50}</a></span>
-speculations in the funds, where he held so large a sum that the
-rise of a per cent. made him a thousand pounds richer than he
-had been the day before. Prompted by the example of Heriot
-and Watson, and partly, perhaps, by that modification of egotism
-which makes us love to be kept in the remembrance of future
-generations, James Donaldson, at his death in 1830, devoted the
-mass of his fortune&mdash;about £240,000&mdash;for the foundation of a
-<em>hospital</em> for the maintenance and education of poor children of
-both sexes; and a structure for the purpose was erected, on a
-magnificent plan furnished by Mr Playfair, at an expense, it is
-said, of about £120,000.</p>
-
-<p>The old house in the West Bow&mdash;which was possessed by both
-of these remarkable men in succession, and the scene of their
-entertainments to the literary men of the last age, with some of
-whom Alexander Donaldson lived on terms of intimacy&mdash;stood
-unoccupied for several years before 1824, when it was burnt down.
-New buildings now occupy its site.]</p>
-
-
-<h3>TEMPLARS’ LANDS.</h3>
-
-<p>We have now arrived at the <em>Bow-foot</em>, about which there is
-nothing remarkable to be told, except that here, and along one
-side of the Grassmarket, are several houses marked by a cross
-on some conspicuous part&mdash;either an actual iron cross, or one
-represented in sculpture. This seems a strange circumstance in
-a country where it was even held doubtful, twenty years ago,
-whether one could be placed as an ornament on the top of a
-church tower. The explanation is that these houses were built
-upon lands originally the property of the Knights Templars, and
-the cross has ever since been kept up upon them, not from any
-veneration for that ancient society, neither upon any kind of
-religious ground; the sole object has been to fix in remembrance
-certain legal titles and privileges which have been transmitted
-into secular hands from that source, and which are to this day
-productive of solid benefits. A hundred years ago, the houses
-thus marked were held as part of the barony of Drem in
-Haddingtonshire, the baron of which used to hold courts in them
-occasionally; and here were harboured many persons not free of
-the city corporations, to the great annoyance of the adherents
-of local monopoly. At length, the abolition of heritable jurisdictions
-in 1747 extinguished this little barony, but not certain
-other legal rights connected with the <em>Templar Lands</em>, which, however,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">{51}</a></span>
-it might be more troublesome to explain than advantageous
-to know.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w450">
-<a id="illus_c_008"></a>
-<img src="images/illus_c_008.jpg" width="450" height="653" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">GRASSMARKET<br />
-from west end of Cowgate.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap"><a href="#Page_50">Page 50.</a></span>
-</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3>THE GALLOWS STONE.</h3>
-
-<p>In a central situation at the east end of the Grassmarket,
-there remained till very lately a massive block of sandstone,
-having a quadrangular hole in the middle, being the stone which
-served as a socket for the gallows, when this was the common
-place of execution. Instead of the stone, there is now only a
-St Andrew’s cross, indicated by an arrangement of the paving-stones.</p>
-
-<p>This became the regular scene of executions after the Restoration,
-and so continued till the year 1784. Hence arises the sense
-of the Duke of Rothes’s remark when a Covenanting prisoner
-proved obdurate: ‘Then e’en let him glorify God in the Grassmarket!’&mdash;the
-deaths of that class of victims being always
-signalised by psalm-singing on the scaffold. Most of the hundred
-persons who suffered for that cause in Edinburgh during the reigns
-of Charles II. and James II. breathed their last pious aspirations
-at this spot; but several of the most notable, including the Marquis
-and Earl of Argyll, were executed at the Cross.</p>
-
-<p>As a matter of course, this was the scene of the Porteous riot
-in 1736, and of the subsequent murder of Porteous by the mob.
-The rioters, wishing to despatch him as near to the place of his
-alleged crime as possible, selected for the purpose a dyer’s pole
-which stood on the south side of the street, exactly opposite to
-the gallows stone.</p>
-
-<p>Some of the Edinburgh executioners have been so far notable
-men as to be the subject of traditionary fame. In the reign of
-Charles II., Alexander Cockburn, the hangman of Edinburgh, and
-who must have officiated at the exits of many of the ‘martyrs’ in
-the Grassmarket, was found guilty of the murder of a bluegown,
-or privileged beggar, and accordingly suffered that fate which he
-had so often meted out to other men. One Mackenzie, the hangman
-of Stirling, whom Cockburn had traduced and endeavoured
-to thrust out of office, was the triumphant executioner of the
-sentence.</p>
-
-<p>Another Edinburgh hangman of this period was a reduced
-gentleman, the last of a respectable family who had possessed
-an estate in the neighbourhood of Melrose. He had been a
-profligate in early life, squandered the whole of his patrimony,
-and at length, for the sake of subsistence, was compelled to accept<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">{52}</a></span>
-this wretched office, which in those days must have been unusually
-obnoxious to popular odium, on account of the frequent executions
-of innocent and religious men. Notwithstanding his extreme
-degradation, this unhappy reprobate could not altogether forget
-his original station and his former tastes and habits. He would
-occasionally resume the garb of a gentleman, and mingle in the
-parties of citizens who played at golf in the evenings on Bruntsfield
-Links. Being at length recognised, he was chased from the ground
-with shouts of execration and loathing, which affected him so
-much that he retired to the solitude of the King’s Park, and was
-next day found dead at the bottom of a precipice, over which he
-was supposed to have thrown himself in despair. This rock was
-afterwards called the <em>Hangman’s Craig</em>.</p>
-
-<p>In the year 1700, when the Scottish people were in a state of
-great excitement on account of the interference of the English
-government against their expedition to Darien, some persons were
-apprehended for a riot in the city of Edinburgh, and sentenced to
-be whipped and put upon the pillory. As these persons had acted
-under the influence of the general feeling, they excited the sympathy
-of the people in an extraordinary degree, and even the
-hangman was found to have scruples about the propriety of
-punishing them. Upon the pillory they were presented with
-flowers and wine; and when arrayed for flagellation, the executioner
-made a mere mockery of his duty, never once permitting
-his whip to touch their backs. The magistrates were very indignant
-at the conduct of their servant, and sentenced him to be
-scourged in his turn. However, when the Haddington executioner
-was brought to officiate upon his metropolitan brother, he was so
-much frightened by the threatening aspect of the mob that he
-thought it prudent to make his escape through a neighbouring
-alley. The laugh was thus turned against the magistrates, who,
-it was said, would require to get a third executioner to punish the
-Haddington man. They prudently dropped the whole matter.</p>
-
-<p>At a somewhat later period, the Edinburgh official was a man
-named John Dalgleish. He it was who acted at the execution
-of Wilson the smuggler in 1736, and who is alluded to so
-frequently in the tale of the <cite>Heart of Mid-Lothian</cite>. Dalgleish,
-I have heard, was esteemed, before his taking up this office, as a
-person in creditable circumstances. He is memorable for one
-pithy saying. Some one asking him how he contrived in whipping
-a criminal to adjust the weight of his arm, on which, it is obvious,
-much must depend: ‘Oh,’ said he,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">{53}</a></span> ‘I lay on the lash according to
-my conscience.’ Either Jock, or some later official, was remarked
-to be a regular <em>hearer</em> at the Tolbooth Church. As no other
-person would sit in the same seat, he always had a pew to himself.
-He regularly communicated; but here the exclusiveness of his
-fellow-creatures also marked itself, and the clergyman was obliged
-to serve a separate table for the hangman, after the rest of the
-congregation had retired from the church.</p>
-
-<p>The last Edinburgh executioner of whom any particular notice
-has been taken by the public was John High, commonly called
-Jock Heich, who acceded to the office in the year 1784, and died
-so lately as 1817. High had been originally induced to undertake
-this degrading duty in order to escape the punishment due
-to a petty offence&mdash;that of stealing poultry. I remember him
-living in his official mansion in a lane adjoining to the Cowgate&mdash;a
-small wretched-looking house, assigned by the magistrates
-for the residence of this race of officers, and which has only been
-removed within the last few years, to make way for the extension
-of the buildings of the Parliament Square. He had then a second
-wife, whom he used to beat unmercifully. Since Jock’s days, no
-executioner has been so conspicuous as to be known by name.
-The fame of the occupation seems somehow to have departed.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p2">I have now finished my account of the West Bow; a most
-antiquated place, yet not without its virtues even as to matters
-of the present day. Humble as the street appears, many of
-its shopkeepers and other inhabitants are of a very respectable
-character. Bankruptcies are said to be very rare in the Bow.
-Most of the traders are of old standing, and well-to-do in the
-world; few but what are the proprietors of their own shops and
-dwellings, which, in such a community, indicates something like
-wealth. The smarter and more dashing men of Princes Street
-and the Bridges may smile at their homely externals and darksome
-little places of business, or may not even pay them the
-compliment of thinking of them at all; yet, while they boast not
-of their ‘warerooms,’ or their troops of ‘young men,’ or their
-plate-glass windows, they at least feel no apprehension from the
-approach of rent-day, and rarely experience tremulations on the
-subject of bills. Perhaps, if strict investigation were made, the
-‘bodies’ of the Bow could show more comfortable balances at
-the New Year than at least a half of the sublime men who pay
-an income by way of rental in George Street. Not one of them
-but is respectfully known by a good sum on the creditor side at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">{54}</a></span>
-Sir William Forbes’s; not one but can stand at his shop-door,
-with his hands in his pockets and his hat on, not unwilling, it
-may be, to receive custom, yet not liable to be greatly distressed
-if the customer go by. Such, perhaps, were shopkeepers in the
-golden age!<a name="FNanchor_39" id="FNanchor_39"></a><a href="#Footnote_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">{55}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="JAMESS_COURT" id="JAMESS_COURT">JAMES’S COURT.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p class="chapter_summary"><strong>David Hume&mdash;James Boswell&mdash;Lord Fountainhall.</strong></p>
-
-
-<p>James’s Court, a well-known pile of building of great altitude
-at the head of the Earthen Mound, was erected about
-1725-27 by James Brownhill,<a name="FNanchor_40" id="FNanchor_40"></a><a href="#Footnote_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a> a joiner, as a speculation, and was
-for some years regarded as the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">quartier</i> of greatest dignity and
-importance in Edinburgh. The inhabitants, who were all persons
-of consequence in society, although each had but a single
-floor of four or five rooms and a kitchen, kept a clerk to
-record their names and proceedings,
-had a scavenger of their own,
-clubbed in many public measures,
-and had balls and parties among
-themselves exclusively. In those
-days it must have been quite a
-step in life when a man was able
-to fix his family in one of the
-<em>flats</em> of James’s Court.</p>
-
-<p>Amongst the many notables
-who have harboured here, only
-two or three can be said to have
-preserved their notability till our
-day, the chief being David Hume
-and James Boswell.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w350">
-<img src="images/illus_p_055.jpg" width="350" height="516" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Riddel’s Land, Lawnmarket.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3>DAVID HUME.</h3>
-
-<p>The first fixed residence of
-David Hume in Edinburgh appears
-to have been in <em>Riddel’s
-Land</em>, Lawnmarket, near the head
-of the West Bow. He commenced
-housekeeping there in 1751, when,
-according to his own account, he ‘removed from the country to
-the town, the true scene for a man of letters.’ It was while in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">{56}</a></span>
-Riddel’s Land that he published his <cite>Political Discourses</cite>, and
-obtained the situation of librarian to the Faculty of Advocates.
-In this place also he commenced the writing of his <cite>History of
-England</cite>. He dates from Riddel’s Land in January 1753, but in
-June we find him removed to
-<em>Jack’s Land</em>,<a name="FNanchor_41" id="FNanchor_41"></a><a href="#Footnote_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a> a somewhat airier
-situation in the Canongate,
-where he remained for nine
-years. Excepting only the small
-portion composed in the Lawnmarket
-mansion, the whole of
-the <cite>History of England</cite> was
-written in Jack’s Land; a fact
-which will probably raise some
-interest respecting that locality.
-It is, in reality, a plain, middle-aged
-fabric, of no particular appearance,
-and without a single
-circumstance of a curious
-nature connected with it,
-besides the somewhat odd
-one that the continuator of
-the <cite>History</cite>, Smollett, lived,
-some time after, in his
-sister’s house precisely opposite.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w350">
-<img src="images/illus_p_056.jpg" width="350" height="522" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Jack’s Land, Canongate.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Hume removed at Whitsunday
-1762 to a house
-which he purchased in
-James’s Court&mdash;the eastern
-portion of the third floor
-in the west stair (counting from the level of the court). This was
-such a step as a man would take in those days as a consequence of
-improvement in his circumstances. The philosopher had lived
-in James’s Court but a short time, when he was taken to France
-as secretary to the embassy. In his absence, which lasted several
-years, his house was occupied by Dr Blair, who here had a son of
-the Duke of Northumberland as a pupil. It is interesting to find
-Hume, some time after, writing to his friend Dr Ferguson from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">{57}</a></span>
-the midst of the gaieties of Paris: ‘I am sensible that I am
-misplaced, and I wish twice or thrice a day for <em>my easy-chair and
-my retreat in James’s Court</em>.’ Then he adds a beautiful sentiment:
-‘Never think, dear Ferguson, that as long as you are master of
-your own fireside and your own time, you can be unhappy, or that
-any other circumstance can add to your enjoyment.’<a name="FNanchor_42" id="FNanchor_42"></a><a href="#Footnote_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a> In one of
-his letters to Blair he speaks minutely of his house: ‘Never put
-a fire in the south room with the red paper. It was so warm of
-itself that all last winter, which was a very severe one, I lay with
-a single blanket; and frequently, upon coming in at midnight
-starving with cold, have sat down and read for an hour, as if I had
-had a stove in the room.’ From 1763 till 1766 he lived in high
-diplomatic situations at Paris; and thinking to settle there for life,
-for the sake of the agreeable society, gave orders to sell his house
-in Edinburgh. He informs us, in a letter to the Countess de
-Boufflers (<cite>General Correspondence</cite>, 4to, 1820, p. 231), that he was
-prevented by a singular accident from carrying his intention into
-effect. After writing a letter to Edinburgh for the purpose of
-disposing of his house, and leaving it with his Parisian landlord,
-he set out to pass his Christmas with the Countess de Boufflers
-at L’Isle Adam; but being driven back by a snowstorm, which
-blocked up the roads, he found on his return that the letter had
-not been sent to the post-house. More deliberate thoughts then
-determined him to keep up his Edinburgh mansion, thinking that,
-if any affairs should call him to his native country, ‘it would be
-very inconvenient not to have a house to retire to.’ On his
-return, therefore, in 1766, he re-entered into possession of his <em>flat</em>
-in James’s Court, but was soon again called from it by an invitation
-from Mr Conway to be an under-secretary of state. At length, in
-1769, he returned permanently to his native city, in possession of
-what he thought opulence&mdash;a thousand a year. We find him
-immediately writing from his retreat in James’s Court to his friend
-Adam Smith, then commencing his great work <cite>On the Wealth of
-Nations</cite> in the quiet of his mother’s house at Kirkcaldy: ‘I am
-glad to have come within sight of you, and to have a view of
-Kirkcaldy from my windows; but I wish also to be within speaking-terms
-of you,’ &amp;c. To another person he writes: ‘I live still, and
-must for a twelvemonth, in my old house in James’s Court, which
-is very cheerful, and even elegant, but too small to display my
-great talent for cookery, the science to which I intend to addict
-the remaining years of my life!’</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">{58}</a></span></p>
-<p>Hume now built a superior house for himself in the New Town,
-which was then little beyond its commencement, selecting a site
-adjoining to St Andrew Square. The superintendence of this
-work was an amusement to him. A story is related in more than
-one way regarding the manner in which a denomination was
-conferred upon the street in which this house is situated. Perhaps,
-if it be premised that a corresponding street at the other angle of
-St Andrew Square is called <em>St Andrew Street</em>&mdash;a natural enough
-circumstance with reference to the square, whose title was determined
-on in the plan&mdash;it will appear likely that the choosing of
-‘St David Street’ for that in which Hume’s house stood was not
-originally designed as a jest at his expense, though a second
-thought, and the whim of his friends, might quickly give it that
-application. The story, as told by Mr Burton, is as follows:
-‘When the house was built and inhabited by Hume, but while yet
-the street of which it was the commencement had no name, a witty
-young lady, daughter of Baron Ord, chalked on the wall the words,
-<span class="smcap">St David Street</span>. The allusion was very obvious. Hume’s “lass,”
-judging that it was not meant in honour or reverence, ran into the
-house much excited, to tell her master how he was made game of.
-“Never mind, lassie,” he said, “many a better man has been made
-a saint of before.”’</p>
-
-<p>That Hume was a native of Edinburgh is well known. One
-could wish to know the spot of his birth; but it is not now
-perhaps possible to ascertain it. The nearest approach made to
-the fact is from intelligence conveyed by a memorandum in his
-father’s handwriting among the family papers, where he speaks of
-‘my son David, born in the <em>Tron Church parish</em>’&mdash;a district
-comprehending a large square clump of town between the High
-Street and Cowgate, east of the site of the church itself.</p>
-
-<p>One of Hume’s most intimate friends amongst the other sex was
-Mrs Cockburn, author of one of the beautiful songs called <cite>The
-Flowers of the Forest</cite>. While he was in France in 1764, she
-writes to him from <em>Baird’s Close,<a name="FNanchor_43" id="FNanchor_43"></a><a href="#Footnote_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a> Castle-hill</em>: ‘The cloven foot for
-which thou art worshipped I despise; yet I remember <em>thee</em> with
-affection. I remember that, in spite of vain philosophy, of dark
-doubts, of toilsome learning, God has stamped his image of
-benignity so strong upon thy <em>heart</em>, that not all the labours of thy
-head could efface it.’ After Hume’s return to Edinburgh, he kept<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">{59}</a></span>
-up his acquaintance with this spirited and amiable woman. The
-late Mr Alexander Young, W.S., had some reminiscences of parties
-which he attended when a boy at her house, and at which the
-philosopher was present. Hume came in one evening behind time
-for her <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">petit souper</i>, when, seeing her bustling to get something for
-him to eat, he called out: ‘Now, no trouble, if you please, about
-quality; for you know I’m only a glutton, not an epicure.’ Mr
-Young attended at a dinner where, besides Hume, there were
-present Lord Monboddo and some other learned personages. Mrs
-Cockburn was then living in the neat first floor of a house at the
-end of Crighton Street, with windows looking along the Potterrow.
-She had a son of eccentric habits, in middle life, or rather elderly,
-who came in during the dinner tipsy, and going into a bedroom,
-locked himself in, went to bed, and fell asleep. The company in
-time made a move for departure, when it was discovered that their
-hats, cloaks, and greatcoats were all locked up in Mr Cockburn’s
-room. The door was knocked at and shaken, but no answer.
-What was to be done? At length Mrs Cockburn had no alternative
-from sending out to her neighbours to borrow a supply of
-similar integuments, which was soon procured. There was then
-such fun in fitting the various <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">savants</i> with suitable substitutes for
-their own proper gear! Hume, for instance, with a dreadnought
-riding-coat; Monboddo with a shabby old hat, as unlike his own
-neat chapeau as possible! In the highest exaltation of spirits did
-these two men of genius at length proceed homeward along the
-Potterrow, Horse Wynd, Assembly Close, &amp;c., making the old
-echoes merry with their peals of laughter at the strange appearance
-which they respectively made.<a name="FNanchor_44" id="FNanchor_44"></a><a href="#Footnote_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a></p>
-
-<p>I lately inspected Hume’s <em>cheerful and elegant</em> mansion in James’s
-Court, and found it divided amongst three or four tenants in
-humble life, each possessing little more than a single room. It
-was amusing to observe that what had been the dining-room
-and drawing-room towards the north were <em>each</em> provided with one
-of those little side oratories which have been described elsewhere<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">{60}</a></span>
-as peculiar to a period in Edinburgh house-building, being designed
-for private devotion. Hume living in a house with two private
-chapels!</p>
-
-
-<h3>JAMES BOSWELL.</h3>
-
-<p>It appears that one of the immediately succeeding leaseholders
-of Hume’s house in James’s Court was James Boswell. Mr Burton
-has made this tolerably clear (<cite>Life of Hume</cite>, ii. 137), and he
-proceeds to speculate on the fact of Boswell having there entertained
-his friend Johnson. ‘Would Boswell communicate the fact,
-or tell what manner of man was the landlord of the habitation
-into which he had, under the guise of hospitality, entrapped the
-arch-intolerant? Who shall appreciate the mental conflict which
-Boswell may have experienced on this occasion?’ It appears,
-however, that by the time when Johnson visited Boswell in James’s
-Court, the latter had removed into a better and larger mansion
-right below and on the level of the court&mdash;namely, that now
-(1846) occupied by Messrs Pillans as a printing-office. This was
-an extraordinary house in its day; for it consisted of two floors
-connected by an internal stair. Here it was that the Ursa Major
-of literature stayed for a few days, in August 1773, while preparing
-to set out to the Hebrides, and also for some time after his return.
-Here did he receive the homage of the trembling literati of
-Edinburgh; here, after handling them in his rough manner, did
-he relax in play with little Miss Veronica, whom Boswell promised
-to consider peculiarly in his will for showing a liking to so
-estimable a man. What makes all this evident is a passage in a
-letter of Samuel himself to Mrs Thrale (Edinburgh, August 17),
-where he says: ‘Boswell has very handsome and spacious rooms,
-level with the ground on one side of the house, and on the other
-four stories high.’ Boswell was only tenant of the mansion. It
-affords a curious idea of the importance which formerly attached
-to some of these Old Town residences, when we learn that this was
-part of the entailed estate of the Macdowalls of Logan, one of
-whom sold it, by permission of an act of parliament, to redeem
-the land-tax upon his country property.</p>
-
-<p>Boswell ceased to be a citizen of Edinburgh in 1785, when
-he was pleased to venture before the English bar. He is little
-remembered amongst the elder inhabitants of our city; but the
-late Mr William Macfarlane, the well-known small-debt judge, told
-me that there was <em>this</em> peculiarity about him&mdash;it was impossible
-to look in his face without being moved by the comicality which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">{61}</a></span>
-always reigned upon it. He was one of those men whose very look
-is provocative of mirth. Mr Robert Sym, W.S., who died in 1844,
-at an advanced age, remembered being at parties in this house in
-Boswell’s time.</p>
-
-
-<h3>LORD FOUNTAINHALL.</h3>
-
-<p>Before James’s Court was built, its site was occupied by certain
-closes, in one of which dwelt Lord Fountainhall, so distinguished
-as an able, liberal, and upright judge, and still more so by his
-industrious habits as a collector of historical memorabilia, and of
-the decisions of the Court of Session. Though it is considerably
-upwards of a century since Lord Fountainhall died,<a name="FNanchor_45" id="FNanchor_45"></a><a href="#Footnote_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a> a traditionary
-anecdote of his residence in this place has been handed down till
-the present time by a surprisingly small number of persons. The
-mother of the late Mr Gilbert Innes of Stow was a daughter of his
-lordship’s son, Sir Andrew Lauder, and she used to describe to her
-children the visits she used to pay to her venerable grandfather’s
-house, situated, as she said, where James’s Court now stands. She
-and her sister, a little girl like herself, always went with their maid
-on the Saturday afternoons, and were shown into the room where
-the aged judge was sitting&mdash;a room covered with gilt leather,<a name="FNanchor_46" id="FNanchor_46"></a><a href="#Footnote_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a>
-and containing many huge presses and cabinets, one of which was
-ornamented with a death’s-head at the top. After amusing themselves
-for an hour or two with his lordship, they used to get each
-a shilling from him, and retire to the anteroom, where, as Mrs
-Innes well recollected, the waiting-maid invariably pounced upon
-their money, and appropriated it to her own use. It is curious to
-think that the mother of a gentlewoman living in 1839 (for only
-then did Miss Innes of Stow leave this earthly scene) should have
-been familiar with a lawyer who entered at the bar soon after the
-Restoration (1668), and acted as counsel for the unfortunate Earl
-of Argyll in 1681; a being of an age as different in every respect
-from the present as the wilds of North America are different from
-the long-practised lands of Lothian or Devonshire.</p>
-
-<p>The judicial designation of Lord Fountainhall was adopted from
-a place belonging to him in East Lothian, now the property of his
-representative, Sir Thomas Dick Lauder. The original name of
-the place was Woodhead. When the able lawyer came to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">{62}</a></span>
-bench, and, as usual, thought of a new appellative of a territorial
-kind&mdash;‘Woodhead&mdash;Lord Woodhead,’ thought he; ‘that will
-never do for a judge!’ So the name of the place was changed
-to Fountainhall, and he became Lord Fountainhall accordingly.</p>
-
-<p>[1868.&mdash;The western half of James’s Court having been destroyed
-by accidental fire, the reader will now find a new building on the
-spot. The houses rendered interesting by the names of Blair,
-Boswell, Johnson, and Hume are consequently no more.]</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">{63}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w450">
-<img src="images/illus_p_063.jpg" width="450" height="434" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Lady Stair’s House as Restored.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-<h2><a name="STORY_OF_THE_COUNTESS_OF_STAIR" id="STORY_OF_THE_COUNTESS_OF_STAIR">STORY OF THE COUNTESS OF STAIR.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>In a short alley leading between the Lawnmarket and the Earthen
-Mound, and called <em>Lady Stair’s Close</em>,<a name="FNanchor_47" id="FNanchor_47"></a><a href="#Footnote_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a> there is a substantial<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">{64}</a></span>
-old mansion, presenting, in a sculptured stone over the doorway, a
-small coat-armorial, with the initials W. G. and G. S., the date
-1622, and the legend:</p>
-
-<p class="center">
-FEAR THE LORD, AND DEPART<br />
-FROM EVILL.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>The letters refer to Sir William Gray
-of Pittendrum, the original proprietor
-of the house, and his wife.
-Within there are marks of good
-style, particularly in the lofty ceiling
-and an inner stair apart from the common one; but all has long
-been turned to common purposes; while it must be left to the
-imagination to realise the terraced garden which formerly descended
-towards the North Loch.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w275">
-<img src="images/illus_p_064.jpg" width="275" height="164" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p>This was the last residence of a lady conspicuous in Scottish
-society in the early part of the last century&mdash;the widow of the
-celebrated commander and diplomatist, John, Earl of Stair. Lady
-Eleanor Campbell was, by paternal descent, nearly related to one
-of the greatest historical figures of the preceding century, being the
-granddaughter of the Chancellor, Earl of Loudon, whose talents
-and influence on the Covenanting side were at one time believed to
-have nearly procured him the honour of a secret death at the
-command of Charles I. Her ladyship’s first adventure in matrimony
-led to a series of circumstances of a marvellous nature, which I
-shall set down exactly as they used to be related by friends of the
-lady in the last century. It was her lot, at an early age, to be
-united to James, Viscount Primrose, a man of the worst temper
-and most dissolute manners. Her ladyship, who had no small
-share of the old chancellor in her constitution, could have managed
-most men with ease, by dint of superior intellect and force of
-character; but the cruelty of Lord Primrose was too much for her.
-He treated her so barbarously that she had even reason to fear
-that he would some day put an end to her life. One morning she
-was dressing herself in her chamber, near an open window, when
-his lordship entered the room behind her with a drawn sword in
-his hand. He had opened the door softly, and although his face
-indicated a resolution of the most horrible nature, he still had the
-presence of mind to approach her with caution. Had she not
-caught a glimpse of his face and figure in the glass, he would in all
-probability have come near enough to execute his bloody purpose
-before she was aware or could have taken any measures to save<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">{65}</a></span>
-herself. Fortunately, she perceived him in time to leap out of
-the open window into the street. Half-dressed as she was, she
-immediately, by a very laudable exertion of her natural good sense,
-went to the house of Lord Primrose’s mother, where she told her
-story, and demanded protection. That protection was at once
-extended; and it being now thought vain to attempt a reconciliation,
-they never afterwards lived together.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Primrose soon afterwards went abroad. During his
-absence, a foreign conjurer, or fortune-teller, came to Edinburgh,
-professing, among many other wonderful accomplishments, to be
-able to inform any person of the present condition or situation of
-any other person, at whatever distance, in whom the applicant
-might be interested. Lady Primrose was incited by curiosity to
-go with a female friend to the lodgings of the wise man in the
-Canongate, for the purpose of inquiring regarding the motions of
-her husband, of whom she had not heard for a considerable time.
-It was at night; and the two ladies went, with the tartan <em>screens</em>
-or <em>plaids</em> of their servants drawn over their faces by way of disguise.
-Lady Primrose having described the individual in whose fate she
-was interested, and having expressed a desire to know what he was
-at present doing, the conjurer led her to a large mirror, in which
-she distinctly perceived the appearance of the inside of a church,
-with a marriage-party arranged near the altar. To her astonishment,
-she recognised in the shadowy bridegroom no other than her
-husband. The magical scene was not exactly like a picture; or if
-so, it was rather like the live pictures of the stage than the dead
-and immovable delineations of the pencil. It admitted of additions
-to the persons represented, and of a progress of action. As the
-lady gazed on it, the ceremonial of the marriage seemed to proceed.
-The necessary arrangements had at last been made, the priest
-seemed to have pronounced the preliminary service; he was just
-on the point of bidding the bride and bridegroom join hands,
-when suddenly a gentleman, for whom the rest seemed to have
-waited a considerable time, and in whom Lady Primrose thought
-she recognised a brother of her own, then abroad, entered the
-church, and advanced hurriedly towards the party. The aspect
-of this person was at first only that of a friend who had been
-invited to attend the ceremony, and who had come too late;
-but as he advanced, the expression of his countenance and
-figure was altered. He stopped short; his face assumed a
-wrathful expression; he drew his sword, and rushed up to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">{66}</a></span>
-bridegroom, who prepared to defend himself. The whole scene
-then became tumultuous and indistinct, and soon after vanished
-entirely away.<a name="FNanchor_48" id="FNanchor_48"></a><a href="#Footnote_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a></p>
-
-<p>When Lady Primrose reached home she wrote a minute narrative
-of the whole transaction, to which she appended the day of the
-month on which she had seen the mysterious vision. This narrative
-she sealed up in the presence of a witness, and then deposited it in
-one of her drawers. Soon afterwards her brother returned from
-his travels, and came to visit her. She asked if, in the course of
-his wanderings, he had happened to see or hear anything of Lord
-Primrose. The young man only answered by saying that he wished
-he might never again hear the name of that detested personage
-mentioned. Lady Primrose, however, questioned him so closely
-that he at last confessed having met his lordship, and that under
-very strange circumstances. Having spent some time at one of the
-Dutch cities&mdash;it was either Amsterdam or Rotterdam&mdash;he had
-become acquainted with a rich merchant, who had a very beautiful
-daughter, his only child, and the heiress of his large fortune. One
-day his friend the merchant informed him that his daughter was
-about to be married to a Scottish gentleman, who had lately come
-to reside there. The nuptials were to take place in the course of
-a few days; and as he was a countryman of the bridegroom, he
-was invited to the wedding. He went accordingly, was a little too
-late for the commencement of the ceremony, but fortunately came
-in time to prevent the sacrifice of an amiable young lady to the
-greatest monster alive in human shape&mdash;his own brother-in-law,
-Lord Primrose!</p>
-
-<p>The story proceeds to say that although Lady Primrose had
-proved her willingness to believe in the magical delineations of the
-mirror by writing down an account of them, yet she was so much
-surprised by discovering them to be the representation of actual
-fact that she almost fainted. Something, however, yet remained<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">{67}</a></span>
-to be ascertained. Did Lord Primrose’s attempted marriage take
-place exactly at the same time with her visit to the conjurer? She
-asked her brother on what day the circumstance which he related
-took place. Having been informed, she took out her key, and
-requested him to go to her chamber, to open a drawer which she
-described, and to bring her a sealed packet which he would find in
-that drawer. On the packet being opened, it was discovered that
-Lady Primrose had seen the shadowy representation of her husband’s
-abortive nuptials on the very evening when they were transacted
-in reality.<a name="FNanchor_49" id="FNanchor_49"></a><a href="#Footnote_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a></p>
-
-<p>Lord Primrose died in 1706, leaving a widow who could scarcely
-be expected to mourn for him. She was still a young and beautiful
-woman, and might have procured her choice among twenty better
-matches. Such, however, was the idea she had formed of the
-marriage state from her first husband that she made a resolution
-never again to become a wife. She kept her resolution for many
-years, and probably would have done so till the last but for a
-singular circumstance. The celebrated Earl of Stair, who resided
-in Edinburgh during the greater part of twenty years, which he
-spent in retirement from all official employments, became deeply
-smitten with her ladyship, and earnestly sued for her hand. If
-she could have relented in favour of any man, it would have
-been for one who had acquired so much public honour, and whose
-private character was also, in general respects, so estimable. But
-to him also she declared her resolution of remaining unmarried.
-In his desperation, he resolved upon an expedient which strongly
-marks the character of the age in respect of delicacy. By dint of
-bribes to her domestics, he got himself insinuated overnight into a
-small room in her ladyship’s house, where she used to say her
-prayers every morning, and the window of which looked out upon
-the principal street of the city. At this window, when the morning
-was a little advanced, he showed himself, <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">en déshabillé</i>, to the people
-passing along the street; an exhibition which threatened to have
-such an effect upon her ladyship’s reputation that she saw fit to
-accept of him for a husband.<a name="FNanchor_50" id="FNanchor_50"></a><a href="#Footnote_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">{68}</a></span></p>
-<p>She was more happy as Countess of Stair than she had been as
-Lady Primrose. Yet her new husband had one failing, which
-occasioned her no small uneasiness. Like most other gentlemen
-at that period, he sometimes indulged too much in the bottle.
-When elevated with liquor, his temper, contrary to the general
-case, was by no means improved. Thus, on reaching home after a
-debauch, he generally had a quarrel with his wife, and sometimes
-even treated her with violence. On one occasion, when quite
-transported beyond the bounds of reason, he gave her so severe a
-blow upon the upper part of the face as to occasion the effusion of
-blood. He immediately after fell asleep, unconscious of what he
-had done. Lady Stair was so overwhelmed by a tumult of bitter
-and poignant feeling that she made no attempt to bind up her
-wound. She sat down on a sofa near her torpid husband, and
-wept and bled till morning. When his lordship awoke, and perceived
-her dishevelled and bloody figure, he was surprised to the
-last degree, and eagerly inquired how she came to be in such an
-unusual condition. She answered by detailing to him the whole
-history of his conduct on the preceding evening; which stung
-him so deeply with regret&mdash;for he naturally possessed the most
-generous feelings&mdash;that he instantly vowed to his wife never afterwards
-to take any species of drink except what was first passed
-through her hands. This vow he kept most scrupulously till the
-day of his death. He never afterwards sat in any convivial
-company where his lady could not attend to sanction his potations.
-Whenever he gave any entertainment, she always sat next him and
-filled his wine, till it was necessary for her to retire; after which,
-he drank only from a certain quantity which she had first laid
-aside.</p>
-
-<p>With much that was respectable in her character, we must
-not be too much surprised that Lady Stair was capable of using
-terms of speech which a subsequent age has learned to look on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">{69}</a></span>
-as objectionable, even in the humblest class of society. The
-Earl of Dundonald, it appears, had stated to the Duke of
-Douglas that Lady Stair had expressed incredulity regarding the
-genuineness of the birth of his nephews, the children of Lady
-Jane Douglas, and did not consider Lady Jane as entitled to
-any allowance from the duke on their account. In support of
-what he reported, Dundonald, in a letter to the Lord Justice-Clerk,
-gave the world leave to think him ‘a damned villain’ if
-he did not speak the truth. This seems to have involved Lady
-Stair unpleasantly with her friends of the house of Douglas, and
-she lost little time in making her way to Holyroodhouse, where,
-before the duke and duchess and their attendants, she declared
-that she had lived to a good old age, and never till now had got
-entangled in any <em>clatters</em>&mdash;that is, scandal. The old dame then
-thrice stamped the floor with her staff, each time calling the
-Earl of Dundonald ‘a damned villain;’ after which she retired
-in great wrath. Perhaps this scene was characteristic, for we
-learn from letters of Lady M. W. Montagu that Lady Stair
-was subject to hysterical ailments, and would be screaming and
-fainting in one room, while her daughter, Miss Primrose, and
-Lady Mary were dancing in another.</p>
-
-<p>This venerable lady, after being long at the head of society
-in Edinburgh, died in November 1759, having survived her
-second husband twelve years. It was remembered of her that
-she had been the first person in Edinburgh, of her time, to keep
-a black domestic servant.<a name="FNanchor_51" id="FNanchor_51"></a><a href="#Footnote_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a></p>
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">{70}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="THE_OLD_BANK_CLOSE" id="THE_OLD_BANK_CLOSE">THE OLD BANK CLOSE.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="chapter_summary"><strong>The Regent Morton&mdash;The Old Bank&mdash;Sir Thomas Hope&mdash;Chiesly of
-Dairy&mdash;Rich Merchants of the Sixteenth Century&mdash;Sir William
-Dick&mdash;The Birth of Lord Brougham.</strong></p>
-
-
-<h3>OLD BANK CLOSE.</h3>
-
-<p>Amongst the buildings removed to make way for George IV.
-Bridge were those of a short blind alley in the Lawnmarket,
-called the Old Bank Close. Composed wholly of solid goodly
-structures, this close had an air of
-dignity that might have almost
-reconciled a modern gentleman to
-live in it. One of these, crossing
-and closing the bottom, had been
-the Bank of Scotland&mdash;the <em>Auld
-Bank</em>, as it used to be half-affectionately
-called in Edinburgh&mdash;previously
-to the erection of the
-present handsome edifice in Bank
-Street. From this establishment
-the close had taken its name;
-but it had previously been
-called <em>Hope’s Close</em>, from
-its being the residence
-of a son of the celebrated
-Sir Thomas
-Hope, King’s Advocate
-in the reign of
-Charles I.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w425">
-<img src="images/illus_p_070.jpg" width="425" height="445" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">House of Robert Gourlay.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The house of oldest
-date in the close was
-one on the west side,
-of substantial and even handsome appearance, long and lofty,
-and presenting some peculiarities of structure nearly unique
-in our city. There was first a door for the ground-floor, about
-which there was nothing remarkable. Then there was a door
-leading by the stair to the <em>first floor</em>, and bearing this legend and
-date upon the architrave:</p>
-
-<p class="center">
-IN THE IS AL MY TRAIST: 1569.
-</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">{71}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Close beside this door was another, leading by a longer, but
-distinct though adjacent stair to the second floor, and presenting
-on the architrave the initials R. G. From this floor
-there was an internal stair contained in a projecting turret,
-which connected it with the higher floor. Thus, it will be
-observed, there were three houses in this building, each having
-a distinct access; a nicety of arrangement which, together with
-the excellence of the masonry, was calculated to create a more
-respectful impression regarding the domestic ideas of our ancestors
-in Queen Mary’s time than most persons are prepared for.
-Finally, in the triangular space surmounting an attic window
-were the initials of a married couple, D. G., M. S.</p>
-
-<p>Our surprise is naturally somewhat increased when we learn
-that the builder and first possessor of this house does not
-appear to have been a man of rank, or one likely to own
-unusual wealth. His name was Robert Gourlay, and his
-profession a humble one connected with the law&mdash;namely, that
-of a messenger-at-arms. In the second book of Charters in the
-Canongate council-house, Adam Bothwell, Bishop of Orkney,
-and commendator of Holyrood, gave the office of messenger or
-officer-at-arms to the Abbey to Robert Gourlay, messenger, ‘our
-lovit familiar servitor,’ with a salary of forty pounds, and other
-perquisites. This was the Robert Gourlay who built the noble
-tenement in the Old Bank Close; and through his official
-functions it came into connection with an interesting historical
-event. In May 1581, when the ex-Regent Morton was brought
-to Edinburgh to suffer death, he was&mdash;as we learn from the
-memoirs of Moyses, a contemporary&mdash;‘lodged in Robert Gourlay’s
-house, and there keeped by the waged men.’ Gourlay had been
-able to accommodate in his house those whom it was his professional
-duty to take in charge as prisoners. Here, then, must
-have taken place those remarkable conferences between Morton
-and certain clergymen, in which, with the prospect of death
-before him, he protested his innocence of Darnley’s death, while
-confessing to a foreknowledge of it. Morton must have resided
-in the house from May 29, when he arrived in Edinburgh, till
-June 2, when he fell under the stroke of the ‘Maiden.’ In the
-ensuing year, as we learn from the authority just quoted, De la
-Motte, the French ambassador, was lodged in ‘Gourlay’s House.’</p>
-
-<p>David Gourlay&mdash;probably the individual whose initials appeared
-on the attic&mdash;described as son of John Gourlay, customer, and
-doubtless grandson of the first man Robert&mdash;disposed of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">{72}</a></span>
-house in 1637 to Sir Thomas Hope of Craighall in liferent, and
-to his second son, Sir Thomas Hope of Kerse.<a name="FNanchor_52" id="FNanchor_52"></a><a href="#Footnote_52" class="fnanchor">[52]</a> We may suppose
-‘the Advocate’ to have thus provided a mansion for one of his
-children. A grandson in 1696 disposed of the upper floor to
-Hugh Blair, merchant in Edinburgh&mdash;the grandfather, I presume,
-of the celebrated Dr Hugh Blair.</p>
-
-<p>This portion of the house was occupied early in the last
-century by Lord Aberuchil, one of King William’s judges,
-remarkable for the large fortune he accumulated. About 1780
-his descendant, Sir James Campbell of Aberuchil, resided in it
-while educating his family. It was afterwards occupied by
-Robert Stewart, writer, extensively known in Perthshire by the
-name of <em>Rob Uncle</em>, on account of the immense number of his
-nephews and nieces, amongst the former of whom was the late
-worthy General Stewart of Garth, author of the work on the
-Highland regiments.</p>
-
-<p>The building used by the bank was also a substantial one.
-Over the architrave was the legend:</p>
-
-<p class="center">
-SPES ALTERÆ VITÆ,
-</p>
-
-<p>with a device emblematising the resurrection&mdash;namely, a couple
-of cross-bones with wheat-stalks springing from them, and the
-date 1588. Latterly it was occupied as the University Printing-office,
-and when I visited it in 1824 it contained an old wooden
-press, which was believed to be the identical one which Prince
-Charles carried with him from Glasgow to Bannockburn to print
-his gazettes, but then used as a <em>proof-press</em>, like a good hunter
-reduced to the sand-cart. This house was removed in 1834,
-having been previously sold by the Commissioners of Improvements
-for £150. The purchaser got a larger sum for a leaden
-roof unexpectedly found upon it. When the house was demolished,
-it was discovered that every window-shutter had a communication
-by wires with an intricate piece of machinery in the
-garret, designed to operate upon a bell hung at a corner on the
-outside, so that not a window could have been forced without
-giving an alarm.</p>
-
-<p>In the Cowgate, little more than fifty yards from the site of
-this building, there is a bulky old mansion, believed to have
-been the residence of the celebrated King’s Advocate Hope,
-himself, the ancestor of all the considerable men of this name
-now in Scotland. One can easily see, amidst all the disgrace<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">{73}</a></span>
-into which it has fallen, something remarkable in this house,
-with two entrances from the street, and two <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">porte-cochères</i> leading
-to other accesses in the rear. Over one door is the legend:</p>
-
-<p class="center">
-TECUM HABITA: 1616;<a name="FNanchor_53" id="FNanchor_53"></a><a href="#Footnote_53" class="fnanchor">[53]</a>
-</p>
-
-<p>over the other a half-obliterated line, known to have been</p>
-
-<p class="center">
-AT HOSPES HUMO.
-</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w350">
-<img src="images/illus_p_073.jpg" width="350" height="475" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Courtyard, Hope House.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>One often finds significant voices proceeding from the builders
-of these old houses, generally to express humility. Sir Thomas
-here quotes a well-known
-passage in Persius, as if to
-tell the beholder to confine
-himself to a criticism of
-his own house; and then,
-with more certain humility,
-uses a passage of the
-Psalms (cxix. 19): ‘I am
-a stranger upon earth,’ the
-latter being an anagram of
-his own name, thus spelt:
-<span class="smcap">Thomas Houpe</span>. It is impossible
-without a passing
-sensation of melancholy to
-behold this house, and to
-think how truly the obscurity
-of its history, and
-the wretchedness into which
-it has fallen, realise the
-philosophy of the anagram.
-Verily, the great statesman
-who once lived here in dignity
-and the respect of men
-was but as a stranger who
-tarried in the place for a
-night, and was gone.</p>
-
-<p>The <cite>Diary of Sir Thomas Hope</cite>, printed for the Bannatyne
-Club (1843), is a curious record of the public duties of a great
-law-officer in the age to which it refers, as well as of the mixture<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">{74}</a></span>
-of worldly and spiritual things in which the venerable dignitary
-was engaged. He is indefatigable in his religious duties and
-his endeavours to advance the interests of his family; at the
-same time full of kindly feeling about his sons’ wives and their
-little family matters, never failing, for one thing, to tell how
-much the midwife got for her attendance on these ladies. There
-are many passages respecting his prayers, and the ‘answers’ he
-obtained to them, especially during the agonies of the opening
-civil war. He prays, for instance, that the Lord would pity his
-people, and then hears the words: ‘I will preserve and saiff my
-people’&mdash;‘but quhither be me or some other, I dar not say.’
-On another occasion, at the time when the Covenanting army
-was mustering for Dunse Law to oppose King Charles, Sir
-Thomas tells that, praying: ‘Lord, pitie thy pure [i.e. poor]
-kirk, for their is no help in man!’ he heard a voice saying: ‘I
-will pitie it;’ ‘for quhilk I blissit the Lord;’ immediately after
-which he goes on: ‘Lent to John my <em>long carabin of rowet wark</em>
-all indentit;’ &amp;c.<a name="FNanchor_54" id="FNanchor_54"></a><a href="#Footnote_54" class="fnanchor">[54]</a></p>
-
-<p>The Countess of Mar, daughter of Esme, Duke of Lennox,
-died of a <em>deadly brash</em> in Sir Thomas’s house in the Cowgate,
-May 11, 1644.</p>
-
-<p>It is worthy of notice that the Hopes are one of several
-Scottish families, possessing high rank and great wealth, which
-trace their descent to merchants in Edinburgh. ‘The Hopes
-are of French extraction, from Picardy. It is said they were
-originally Houblon, and had their name from the plant [hop],
-and not from esperance [the virtue in the mind]. The first that
-came over was a domestic of Magdalene of France, queen of
-James V.; and of him are descended all the eminent families of
-Hopes. This John Hope set up as a merchant of Edinburgh,
-and his son, by Bessie or Elizabeth Cumming, is marked as
-a member of our first Protestant General Assembly, anno
-1560.’<a name="FNanchor_55" id="FNanchor_55"></a><a href="#Footnote_55" class="fnanchor">[55]</a></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">{75}</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>CHIESLY OF DALRY.</h3>
-
-<p>The head of the Old Bank Close was the scene of the assassination
-of President Lockhart by Chiesly of Dalry,<a name="FNanchor_56" id="FNanchor_56"></a><a href="#Footnote_56" class="fnanchor">[56]</a> March 1689.
-The murderer had no provocation besides a simple judicial act
-of the president, assigning an aliment or income of £93 out of
-his estate to his wife and children, from whom it may be presumed
-he had been separated. He evidently was a man abandoned
-to the most violent passions&mdash;perhaps not quite sane. In
-London, half a year before the deed, he told Mr Stuart, an
-advocate, that he was resolved to go to Scotland before Candlemas
-and kill the president; when, on Stuart remarking that the
-very imagination of such a thing was a sin before God, he
-replied: ‘Let God and me alone; we have many things to reckon
-betwixt us, and we will reckon this too.’ The judge was informed
-of the menaces of Chiesly, but despised them.</p>
-
-<p>On a Sunday afternoon, the last day of March&mdash;the town
-being then under the excitement of the siege of the Castle by the
-friends of the new government&mdash;Lockhart was walking home
-from church to his house in this alley, when Chiesly came behind,
-just as he entered the close, and shot him in the back with a
-pistol. A Dr Hay, coming to visit the president’s lady, saw his
-lordship stagger and fall. The ball had gone through the body,
-and out at the right breast. He was taken into his house, laid
-down upon two chairs, and almost immediately was a dead man.
-Some gentlemen passing seized the murderer, who readily owned
-he had done the deed, which he said was ‘to learn the president
-to do justice.’ When immediately after informed that his victim
-had expired, he said ‘he was not used to do things by halves.’
-He boasted of the deed as if it had been some grand exploit.</p>
-
-<p>After torture had been inflicted, to discover if he had any
-accomplices, the wretched man was tried by the magistrates of
-Edinburgh, and sentenced to be carried on a hurdle to the Cross,<a name="FNanchor_57" id="FNanchor_57"></a><a href="#Footnote_57" class="fnanchor">[57]</a>
-and there hanged, with the fatal pistol hung from his neck, after
-which his body was to be suspended in chains at the Gallow
-Lee, and his right hand affixed to the West Port. The body
-was stolen from the gallows, as was supposed, by his friends,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">{76}</a></span>
-and it was never known what had become of it till more than a
-century after, when, in removing the hearthstone of a cottage
-in Dalry Park, near Edinburgh, a human skeleton was found,
-with the remains of a pistol near the situation of the neck. No
-doubt was entertained that these were the remains of Chiesly,
-huddled into this place for concealment, probably in the course
-of the night in which they had been abstracted from the gallows.</p>
-
-
-<h3>RICH MERCHANTS OF THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY&mdash;SIR
-WILLIAM DICK.</h3>
-
-<p>Several houses in the neighbourhood of the Old Bank Close
-served to give a respectful notion of the wealth and domestic
-state of certain merchants of an early age. Immediately to the
-westward, in Brodie’s Close, was the mansion of William Little
-of Liberton, bearing date 1570. This was an eminent merchant,
-and the founder of a family now represented by Mr Little Gilmour
-of the Inch, in whose possession this mansion continued under
-entail, till purchased and taken down by the Commissioners of
-Improvements in 1836. About 1780 it was the residence of the
-notorious Deacon Brodie, of whom something may be said elsewhere.
-Sir William Gray of Pittendrum, mentioned a few pages
-back as the original owner of the old house in Lady Stair’s Close,
-was another affluent trafficker of that age.</p>
-
-<p>In Riddel’s Close, Lawnmarket, there is an enclosed court,
-evidently intended to be capable of defence. It is the place where
-John Macmoran, a rich merchant of the time of James VI., lived
-and carried on his business. In those days even schoolboys
-trusted to violence for attaining their ends. The youths of the
-High School,<a name="FNanchor_58" id="FNanchor_58"></a><a href="#Footnote_58" class="fnanchor">[58]</a> being malcontent about their holidays, barred themselves
-up in the school with some provisions, and threatened not
-to surrender till the magistrates should comply with their demands.
-John Macmoran, who held the office of one of the bailies, came
-with a <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">posse</i> to deal with the boys, but, finding them obdurate,
-ordered the door to be prised open with a joist. One within then<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">{77}</a></span>
-fired a pistol at the bailie, who fell shot through the brain, to
-the horror of all beholders, including the schoolboys themselves,
-who with difficulty escaped
-the vengeance of
-the crowd assembled on
-the spot.</p>
-
-<p>It was ascertained that
-the immediate author of
-the bailie’s death was
-William Sinclair, son of
-the chancellor of Caithness.
-There was a great
-clamour to have justice
-done upon him; but this
-was a point not easily
-attained, where a person
-of gentle blood was concerned,
-in the reign of
-James VI. The boy lived
-to be Sir William Sinclair
-of Mey, and, as such, was
-the ancestor of those who
-have, since 1789, borne
-the title of Earls of
-Caithness.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w400">
-<img src="images/illus_p_077.jpg" width="400" height="589" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Bailie Macmoran’s House, Riddel’s Court.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>A visit to the fine old
-mansion of Bailie Macmoran
-may be recommended.
-Its masonry is
-not without elegance.
-The lower floor of the
-building is now used as
-‘The Mechanics’ Library.’<a name="FNanchor_59" id="FNanchor_59"></a><a href="#Footnote_59" class="fnanchor">[59]</a> Macmoran’s house is in the floor
-above, reached by a stone stair, near the corner of the court.
-This dwelling offers a fine specimen of the better class of
-houses at the end of the sixteenth century. The marble jambs
-of the fireplaces and the carved stucco ceilings are quite entire.
-The larger room (occupied as a warehouse for articles of saddlery)
-is that in which took place two memorable royal banquets in
-1598&mdash;the first on the 24th of April to James VI. with his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">{78}</a></span>
-queen, Anne of Denmark, and her brother the Duke of Holstein;
-and the second on the 2nd of May, more specially to the Duke
-of Holstein, but at which their Majesties were present. These
-banquets, held, as Birrel says, with ‘grate solemnitie and mirrines,’
-were at the expense of the city. It need hardly be said that
-James VI. was fond of this species of entertainment, and the house
-of Macmoran was probably selected for the purpose not only
-because he was treasurer to the corporation and a man of some
-mark, but because his dwelling offered suitable accommodation.
-The general aspect of the enclosed court which affords access to
-Macmoran’s house has undergone little or no alteration since
-these memorable banquets; and in visiting the place, with its
-quietude and seclusion, one almost feels as if stepping back into
-the sixteenth century. Considering the destruction all around
-from city improvements, it is fortunate that this remarkable
-specimen of an old mansion should have been left so singularly
-entire. One of the higher windows continues to exemplify an
-economical arrangement which prevailed about the time of the
-Restoration&mdash;namely, to have the lower half composed of wooden
-shutters.<a name="FNanchor_60" id="FNanchor_60"></a><a href="#Footnote_60" class="fnanchor">[60]</a></p>
-
-<p>The grandest of all these old Edinburgh merchants was William
-Dick, ancestor of the Dicks, baronets of Prestonfield. In his
-youth, and during the lifetime of his father, he had been able to
-lend £6000 to King James, to defray the expense of his journey
-to Scotland. The affairs in which he was engaged would even
-now be considered important. For example, he farmed the customs
-on wine at £6222, and the crown rents of Orkney at £3000.
-Afterwards he farmed the excise. His fleets extended from the
-Baltic to the Mediterranean. The immense wealth he acquired
-enabled him to purchase large estates. He himself reckoned his
-property as at one time equal to two hundred thousand pounds
-sterling.</p>
-
-<p>Strange to say, this great merchant came to poverty, and died
-in a prison. The reader of the Waverley novels may remember
-David Deans telling how his father ‘saw them toom the sacks of
-dollars out o’ Provost Dick’s window intill the carts that carried
-them to the army at Dunse Law’&mdash;‘if ye winna believe his testimony,
-there is the window itsell still standing in the Luckenbooths&mdash;I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">{79}</a></span>
-think it’s a claith-merchant’s buith the day.’ This refers
-to large advances which Dick made to the Covenanters to enable
-them to carry on the war against the king. The house alluded
-to is actually now a claith-merchant’s booth, having long been
-in the possession of Messrs John Clapperton &amp; Company. Two
-years after Dunse Law, Dick gave the Covenanters 100,000 merks
-in one sum. Subsequently, being after all of royalist tendencies,
-he made still larger advances in favour of the Scottish government
-during the time when Charles II. was connected with it; and thus
-provoking the wrath of the English Commonwealth, his ruin was
-completed by the fines to which he was subjected by that party
-when triumphant, amounting in all to £65,000.</p>
-
-<p>Poor Sir William Dick&mdash;for he had been made a baronet by
-Charles I.&mdash;went to London to endeavour to recover some part
-of his lost means. When he represented the indigence to which
-he had been reduced, he was told that he was always able to
-procure pie-crust when other men could not get bread. There
-was, in fact, a prevalent idea that he possessed some supernatural
-means&mdash;such as the philosopher’s stone&mdash;of acquiring money.
-(Pie-crust came to be called <em>Sir William Dick’s Necessity</em>.) The
-contrary was shown when the unfortunate man died soon after in
-a prison in Westminster. There is a picture in Prestonfield
-House, near Edinburgh, the seat of his descendant, representing
-him in this last retreat in a mean dress, surrounded by his
-numerous hapless family. A rare pamphlet, descriptive of his
-case, presents engravings of three such pictures; one exhibiting
-him on horseback, attended by guards as Lord Provost of Edinburgh,
-superintending the unloading of one of his rich ships at
-Leith; another as a prisoner in the hands of the bailiffs; the
-third as dead in prison. A more memorable example of the
-instability of fortune does not occur in our history. It seems
-completely to realise the picture in Job (chap. xxvii.): ‘The rich
-man shall lie down, but he shall not be gathered: he openeth
-his eyes, and he is not. Terrors take hold on him as waters, a
-tempest stealeth him away in the night. The east wind carrieth
-him away, and he departeth: and as a storm, hurleth him out of
-his place. For God shall cast upon him, and not spare: he
-would fain flee out of his hand. Men shall clap their hands at
-him, and shall hiss him out of his place.’</p>
-
-<p>The fortunes of the family were restored by Sir William’s
-grandson, Sir James, a remarkably shrewd man, who was likewise
-a merchant in Edinburgh. There is a traditionary story that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">{80}</a></span>
-this gentleman, observing the utility of manure, and that the
-streets of Edinburgh were loaded with it, to the detriment of the
-comfort of the inhabitants, offered to relieve the town of this
-nuisance on condition that he should be allowed, for a certain
-term of years, to carry it away gratis. Consent was given, and
-the Prestonfield estate became, in consequence, like a garden.
-The Duke of York had a great affection for Sir James Dick, and
-used to walk through the Park to visit him at his house very
-frequently. Hence, according to the report of the family, the
-way his Royal Highness took came to be called <em>The Duke’s
-Walk</em>; afterwards a famous resort for the fighting of duels. Sir
-James became Catholic, and, while provost in 1681, had his house
-burned over his head by the collegianers; but it was rebuilt
-at the public expense. His grandson, Sir Alexander Dick, is
-referred to in kindly terms in Boswell’s <cite>Tour to the Hebrides</cite>
-as a venerable man of studious habits and a friend of men of
-letters. The reader will probably learn with some surprise that
-though Sir William’s descendants never recovered any of the
-money lent by him to the State, a lady of his family, living
-in 1844, was in the enjoyment of a pension with express reference
-to that ancient claim.</p>
-
-
-<h3>THE BIRTH OF LORD BROUGHAM.</h3>
-
-<p>[1868.&mdash;It has been remarked elsewhere that, for a great
-number of years after the general desertion of the Old Town by
-persons of condition, there were many denizens of the New who
-had occasion to look back to the Canongate and Cowgate as the
-place of their birth. The nativity of one person who achieved
-extraordinary greatness and distinction, and whose death was an
-occurrence of yesterday, Henry, Lord Brougham, undoubtedly
-was connected with the lowly place last mentioned.</p>
-
-<p>The Edinburgh tradition on the subject was that Henry
-Brougham, younger, of Brougham Hall, in the county of Cumberland,
-in consequence of a disappointment in love, came to Edinburgh
-for the diversion of his mind. Principal Robertson, to whom he
-bore a letter of introduction, recommended the young man to
-the care of his sister&mdash;Mrs Syme, widow of the minister of Alloa&mdash;who
-occupied what was then considered as a good and spacious
-house at the head of the Cowgate&mdash;strictly the third floor of the
-house now marked No. 8&mdash;a house desirable from its having an
-extraordinary space in front. Here, it would appear, Mr Brougham<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">{81}</a></span>
-speedily consoled himself for his former disappointment by falling
-in love with Eleonora, the daughter of Mrs Syme; and a marriage,
-probably a hurried one, soon united the young pair. They set
-up for themselves (Whitsunday 1778) in an upper floor of a house
-in the then newly built St Andrew Square, where, in the ensuing
-September, their eldest son, charged with so illustrious a destiny,
-first saw the light.<a name="FNanchor_61" id="FNanchor_61"></a><a href="#Footnote_61" class="fnanchor">[61]</a></p>
-
-<p>Mr Brougham conclusively settled in Edinburgh; he subsequently
-occupied a handsome house in George Street. He was
-never supposed to be a man of more than ordinary faculties; but
-any deficiency in this respect was amply made up for by his wife,
-who is represented by all who remember her as a person of uncommon
-mental gifts. The contrast of the pair drew the attention
-of society, and was the subject of a gently satiric sketch in Henry
-Mackenzie’s <cite>Lounger</cite>, No. 45, published on the 10th December
-1785, which, however, would vainly be looked for in the reprinted
-copies, as it was immediately suppressed.]</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">{82}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w500">
-<img src="images/illus_p_082.jpg" width="500" height="484" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="THE_OLD_TOLBOOTH" id="THE_OLD_TOLBOOTH">THE OLD TOLBOOTH.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>The genius of Scott has shed a peculiar interest upon this
-ancient structure, whose cant name of the <cite>Heart of Mid-Lothian</cite>
-has given a title to one of his happiest novels. It stood
-in a singular situation, occupying half the width of the High
-Street, elbow to elbow, as it were, with St Giles’s Church. Antique
-in form, gloomy and haggard in aspect, its black stanchioned
-windows opening through its dingy walls like the apertures of a
-hearse, it was calculated to impress all beholders with a due and
-deep sense of what was meant in Scottish law by the <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">squalor<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">{83}</a></span>
-carceris</i>. At the west end was a projecting ground-floor, formed
-of shops, but presenting a platform on which executions took
-place. The building itself was composed of two parts, one more
-solid and antique than the other, and much resembling, with its
-turret staircase, one of those tall, narrow fortalices which are so
-numerous in the Border counties. Indeed, the probability is that
-this had been a kind of peel or house of defence, required for
-public purposes by the citizens of Edinburgh when liable to predatory
-invasions. Doubtless the house or some part of it was of
-great antiquity, for it was an old and ruinous building in the
-reign of Mary, and only narrowly saved at that time from
-destruction. Most likely it was the very <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">pretorium burgi de
-Edinburgi</i> in which a parliament assembled in 1438 to deliberate
-on the measures rendered necessary by the assassination of the
-poet-king, James I. In those simple days great and humble
-things came close together: the house which contained parliaments
-upstairs, presented shops in the lower story, and thus drew in a
-little revenue to the magistrates. Here met the Court of Session
-in its earliest years. Here Mary assembled her parliaments; and
-here&mdash;on the Tolbooth door&mdash;did citizens affix libels by night,
-charging the Earl of Bothwell with the murder of Darnley.
-Long, long since all greatness had been taken away from the old
-building, and it was condemned to be a jail alone, though still
-with shops underneath. At length, in 1817, the fabric was wholly
-swept away, in consequence of the erection of a better jail on
-the Calton Hill. The gateway, with the door and padlock, was
-transferred to Abbotsford, and, with strange taste on the part of
-the proprietor, built into a conspicuous part of that mansion.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w600">
-<a id="illus_c_009"></a>
-<img src="images/illus_c_009.jpg" width="600" height="622" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">EDINBURGH<br />
-from the Calton Hill.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap"><a href="#Page_83">Page 83.</a></span>
-</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The principal entrance to the Tolbooth, and the only one used
-in later days, was at the bottom of the turret next the church.
-The gateway was of tolerably good carved stone-work, and occupied
-by a door of ponderous massiness and strength, having, besides
-the lock, a flap-padlock, which, however, was generally kept
-unlocked during the day. In front of the door there always
-paraded, or rather loitered, a private of the town-guard, with his
-rusty red clothes and Lochaber axe or musket. The door adjacent
-to the principal gateway was, in the final days of the Tolbooth,
-‘<span class="smcap">Michael Ketten’s Shoe-shop</span>,’ but had formerly been a <em>thief’s
-hole</em>. The next door to that, stepping westward, was the residence
-of the turnkey; a dismal, unlighted den, where the gray old man
-was always to be found, when not engaged in unlocking or closing
-the door. The next door westward was a lock-up house, which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">{84}</a></span>
-in later times was never used. On the north side, towards the
-street, there had once been shops, which were let by the magistrates;
-but these were converted, about the year 1787, into a
-guard-house for the city-guard, on their ancient capitol in the
-High Street being destroyed for the levelling of the streets. The
-ground-floor, thus occupied for purposes in general remote from
-the character of the building, was divided lengthwise by a strong
-partition wall; and communication between the rooms above and
-these apartments below was effectually interdicted by the strong
-arches upon which the superstructure was reared.</p>
-
-<p>On passing the outer door&mdash;where the rioters of 1736 thundered
-with their sledge-hammers, and finally burnt down all that interposed
-between them and their prey&mdash;the keeper instantly involved
-the entrant in darkness by reclosing the gloomy portal. A flight
-of about twenty steps then led to an inner door, which, being duly
-knocked at, was opened by a bottle-nosed personage, denominated
-Peter, who, like his sainted namesake, always carried two or three
-large keys. You then entered <em>the Hall</em>, which, being free to all
-the prisoners except those of the <em>East End</em>, was usually filled with
-a crowd of shabby-looking but very merry loungers. A small rail
-here served as an additional security, no prisoner being permitted
-to come within its pale. Here also a sentinel of the city-guard
-was always walking, having a bayonet or ramrod in his hand. The
-<em>Hall</em>, being also the chapel of the jail, contained an old pulpit of
-singular fashion&mdash;such a pulpit as one could imagine John Knox
-to have preached from; which, indeed, he was traditionally said to
-have actually done. At the right-hand side of the pulpit was a
-door leading up the large turnpike to the apartments occupied
-by the criminals, one of which was of plate-iron. The door was
-always shut, except when food was taken up to the prisoners. On
-the west end of the hall hung a board, on which were inscribed
-the following emphatic lines:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘A prison is a house of care,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">A place where none can thrive,</div>
-<div class="verse">A touchstone true to try a friend,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">A grave for men alive&mdash;</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Sometimes a place of right,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Sometimes a place of wrong,</div>
-<div class="verse">Sometimes a place for jades and thieves,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">And honest men among.’<a name="FNanchor_62" id="FNanchor_62"></a><a href="#Footnote_62" class="fnanchor">[62]</a></div>
-</div></div></div>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">{85}</a></span></p>
-<p>A part of the hall on the north side was partitioned off into
-two small rooms, one of which was the captain’s pantry, the other
-his counting-room. In the latter hung an old musket or two, a
-pair of obsolete bandoleers, and a sheath of a bayonet, intended,
-as one might suppose, for his defence against a mutiny of the
-prisoners. Including the space thus occupied, the hall was
-altogether twenty-seven feet long by about twenty broad. The
-height of the room was twelve feet. Close to the door, and within
-the rail, was a large window, thickly stanchioned; and at the other
-end of the hall, within the captain’s two rooms, was a double
-window of a somewhat extraordinary character. Tradition, supported
-by the appearance of the place, pointed out this as having
-formerly been a door by which royalty entered the hall in the
-days when it was the Parliament House. It is said that a kind
-of bridge was thrown between this aperture and a house on the
-other side of the street, and that the sovereign, having prepared
-himself in that house to enter the hall in his state robes, proceeded
-at the proper time along the arch&mdash;an arrangement by no means
-improbable in those days of straitened accommodation.</p>
-
-<p>The window on the south side of the hall overlooked the outer
-gateway. It was therefore employed by the inner turnkey as a
-channel of communication with his exterior brother when any
-visitor was going out. He used to cry over this window, in the
-tone of a military order upon parade: ‘<em>Turn your hand</em>,’ whereupon
-the gray-haired man on the pavement below opened the door
-and permitted the visitor, who by this time had descended the
-stair, to walk out.</p>
-
-<p>The floor immediately above the hall was occupied by one room
-for felons, having a bar along part of the floor, to which condemned
-criminals were chained, and a square box of plate-iron in the
-centre, called <span class="smcap lowercase">THE CAGE</span>, which was said to have been constructed
-for the purpose of confining some extraordinary culprit who had
-broken half the jails in the kingdom. Above this room was
-another of the same size, also appropriated to felons.</p>
-
-<p>The larger and western part of the edifice, of coarser and
-apparently more modern construction, contained four floors, all of
-which were appropriated to the use of debtors, except a part of
-the lowest one, where a middle-aged woman kept a tavern for the
-sale of malt liquors. A turnpike stair gave access to the different<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">{86}</a></span>
-floors. As it was narrow, steep, and dark, the visitor was assisted
-in his ascent by a greasy rope, which, some one was sure to inform
-him afterwards, had been employed in hanging a criminal. In
-one of the apartments on the second floor was a door leading out
-to the platform whereon criminals were executed, and in another,
-on the floor above, was an ill-plastered part of the wall covering
-the aperture through which the gallows was projected. The
-fourth flat was a kind of barrack, for the use of the poorest
-debtors.</p>
-
-<p>There was something about the Old Tolbooth which would have
-enabled a blindfolded person led into it to say that it was a jail.
-It was not merely odorous from the ordinary causes of imperfect
-drainage, but it had poverty’s own smell&mdash;the odour of human
-misery. And yet it did not seem at first a downcast scene. The
-promenaders in the hall were sometimes rather merry, cutting
-jokes perhaps upon Peter’s nose, or chatting with friends on the
-benches regarding the news of the day. Then Mrs Laing drove a
-good trade in her little tavern; and if any messenger were sent
-out for a bottle of whisky&mdash;why, Peter never searched pockets.
-New men were hailed with:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Welcome, welcome, brother debtor,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">To this poor but merry place;</div>
-<div class="verse">Here nor bailiff, dun, nor fetter,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Dare to show his gloomy face.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>They would be abashed at first, and the first visit of wife or
-daughter, coming shawled and veiled, and with timorous glances,
-into the room where the loved object was trying to become at
-ease with his companions, was always a touching affair. But it
-was surprising how soon, in general, all became familiar, easy, and
-even to appearance happy. Each had his story to tell, and sympathy
-was certain and liberal. The whole management was of a
-good-natured kind, as far as a regard to regulations would allow.
-It did not seem at all an impossible thing that a debtor should
-accommodate some even more desolate friend with a share of his
-lodging for the night, or for many nights, as is said to have been
-done in some noted instances, to which we shall presently come.</p>
-
-<p>It was natural for a jail of such old standing to have passed
-through a great number of odd adventures, and have many strange
-tales connected with it. One of the most remarkable traits of its
-character was a sad liability to the failure of its ordinary powers
-of retention when men of figure were in question. The old house
-had something like that faculty attributed by Falstaff to the lion<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">{87}</a></span>
-and himself&mdash;of knowing men who ought not to be too roughly
-handled. The consequence was that almost every criminal of
-rank confined in it made his escape. Lord Burleigh, an insane
-peer, who, about the time of the Union, assassinated a schoolmaster
-who had married a girl to whom he had paid improper addresses,
-escaped, while under sentence of death, by changing clothes with
-his sister. Several of the rebel gentlemen confined there in 1716
-were equally fortunate; a fact on which there was lately thrown
-a flood of light, when I found, in a manuscript list of subscriptions
-for the relief of the other rebel gentlemen at Carlisle, the name of
-the Guidman of the Tolbooth&mdash;so the chief-keeper was called&mdash;down
-for a good sum. I am uncertain to which of all these
-personages the following anecdote, related to me by Sir Walter
-Scott, refers.</p>
-
-<p>It was contrived that the prisoner should be conveyed out of
-the Tolbooth in a trunk, and carried by a porter to Leith, where
-some sailors were to be ready with a boat to take him aboard a
-vessel about to leave Scotland. The plot succeeded so far as the
-escape from jail was concerned, but was knocked on the head by
-an unlucky and most ridiculous accident. It so happened that
-the porter, in arranging the trunk upon his back, placed the end
-which corresponded with the feet of the prisoner <em>uppermost</em>. The
-head of the unfortunate man was therefore pressed against the
-lower end of the box, and had to sustain the weight of the whole
-body. The posture was the most uneasy imaginable. Yet life
-was preferable to ease. He permitted himself to be taken away.
-The porter trudged along with the trunk, quite unconscious of its
-contents, and soon reached the High Street. On gaining the
-Netherbow he met an acquaintance, who asked him where he was
-going with that large burden. To Leith, was the answer. The
-other inquired if the job was good enough to afford a potation
-before proceeding farther upon so long a journey. This being
-replied to in the affirmative, and the carrier of the box feeling in
-his throat the philosophy of his friend’s inquiry, it was agreed
-that they should adjourn to a neighbouring tavern. Meanwhile,
-the third party, whose inclinations had not been consulted in this
-arrangement, was wishing that it were at once well over with him
-in the Grassmarket. But his agonies were not destined to be of
-long duration. The porter in depositing him upon the causeway
-happened to make the end of the trunk come down with such
-precipitation that, unable to bear it any longer, the prisoner
-screamed out, and immediately after fainted. The consternation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">{88}</a></span>
-of the porter on hearing a noise from his burden was of course
-excessive; but he soon recovered presence of mind enough to conceive
-the occasion. He proceeded to unloose and to burst open
-the trunk, when the hapless nobleman was discovered in a state of
-insensibility. As a crowd collected immediately, and the city-guard
-were not long in coming forward, there was of course no
-further chance of escape. The prisoner did not recover from his
-swoon till he had been safely deposited in his old quarters; but,
-if I recollect rightly, he eventually escaped in another way.</p>
-
-<p>In two very extraordinary instances an escape from justice has,
-strange as it may appear, been effected by <em>means</em> of the Old Tolbooth.
-At the discovery of the Rye-House Plot, in the reign of
-Charles II., the notorious Robert Fergusson, usually styled ‘The
-Plotter,’ was searched for in Edinburgh, with a view to his being
-subjected, if possible, to the extreme vengeance of the law. It
-being known almost certainly that he was in town, the authorities
-shut the gates, and calculated securely upon having him safe
-within their toils. The Plotter, however, by an expedient worthy
-of his ingenious character, escaped by taking refuge in the Old
-Tolbooth. A friend of his happened to be confined there at
-the time, and was able to afford protection and concealment to
-Fergusson, who, at his leisure, came abroad, and betook himself to
-a place of safer shelter on the Continent. The same device was
-practised in 1746 by a gentleman who had been concerned in the
-Rebellion, and for whom a hot search had been carried on in the
-Highlands.</p>
-
-<p>The case of Katherine Nairne, in 1766, excited in no small
-degree the attention of the Scottish public. This lady was allied,
-both by blood and marriage, to some respectable families. Her
-crime was the double one of poisoning her husband and having
-an intrigue with his brother, who was her associate in the murder.
-On her arrival at Leith in an open boat, her whole bearing betrayed
-so much levity, or was so different from what had been expected,
-that the mob raised a cry of indignation, and were on the point of
-pelting her, when she was with some difficulty rescued from their
-hands by the public authorities. In this case the Old Tolbooth
-found itself, as usual, incapable of retaining a culprit of condition.
-Sentence had been delayed by the judges on account of the lady’s
-pregnancy. The midwife employed at her accouchement (who continued
-to practise in Edinburgh so lately as the year 1805) had
-the address to achieve a jail-delivery also. For three or four days
-previous to that concerted for the escape, she pretended to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">{89}</a></span>
-afflicted with a prodigious toothache, went out and in with her
-head enveloped in shawls and flannels, and groaned as if she had
-been about to give up the ghost. At length, when the Peter of
-that day had become so habituated to her appearance as not very
-much to heed her exits and her entrances, Katherine Nairne one
-evening came down in her stead, with her head wrapped all round
-with the shawls, uttering the usual groans, and holding down her
-face upon her hands, as with agony, in the precise way customary
-with the midwife. The inner doorkeeper, not quite unconscious,
-it is supposed, of the trick, gave her a hearty thump upon the
-back as she passed out, calling her at the same time a howling old
-Jezebel, and wishing she would never come back to trouble him
-any more. There are two reports of the proceedings of Katherine
-Nairne after leaving the prison. One bears that she immediately
-left the town in a coach, to which she was handed by a friend
-stationed on purpose. The coachman, it is said, had orders from
-her relations, in the event of a pursuit, to drive into the sea, that
-she might drown herself&mdash;a fate which was considered preferable
-to the ignominy of a public execution. The other story runs
-that she went up the Lawnmarket to the Castle-hill, where lived
-Mr &mdash;&mdash;, a respectable advocate, from whom, as he was her cousin,
-she expected to receive protection. Being ignorant of the town,
-she mistook the proper house, and applied at that of the crown
-agent,<a name="FNanchor_63" id="FNanchor_63"></a><a href="#Footnote_63" class="fnanchor">[63]</a> who was assuredly the last man in the world that could
-have done her any service. As good luck would have it, she was
-not recognised by the servant, who civilly directed her to her
-cousin’s house, where, it is said, she remained concealed many weeks.<a name="FNanchor_64" id="FNanchor_64"></a><a href="#Footnote_64" class="fnanchor">[64]</a>
-Her future life, it has been reported, was virtuous and fortunate.
-She was married to a French gentleman, became the mother of a
-large family, and died at a good old age. Meanwhile, Patrick
-Ogilvie, her associate in the dark crime which threw a shade over
-her younger years, suffered in the Grassmarket. He had been a
-lieutenant in the &mdash;&mdash; regiment, and was so much beloved by his
-fellow-soldiers, who happened to be stationed at that time in
-Edinburgh Castle, that the public authorities judged it necessary<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">{90}</a></span>
-to shut them up in a fortress till the execution was over lest they
-might have attempted a rescue.</p>
-
-<p>The Old Tolbooth was the scene of the suicide of Mungo
-Campbell while under sentence of death (1770) for shooting the
-Earl of Eglintoune. In the district where this memorable event
-took place, it is somewhat remarkable that the fate of the murderer
-was more generally lamented than that of the murdered person.
-Campbell, though what was called ‘a graceless man,’ was rather
-popular in his profession of exciseman, on account of his rough,
-honourable spirit, and his lenity in the matter of smuggling.
-Lord Eglintoune, on the contrary, was not liked, on account of
-his improving mania, which had proved a serious grievance to the
-old-fashioned farmers of Kyle and Cunningham. There was one
-article, called rye-grass, which he brought in amongst them, and
-forced them to cultivate; and black prelacy itself had hardly, a
-century before, been a greater evil. Then, merely to stir them up
-a little, he would cause them to exchange farms with each other;
-thus giving their ancient plenishings, what was doubtless much
-wanted, an airing, but also creating a strong sense that Lord
-Eglintoune was ‘far ower fashious.’ His lordship had excited
-some scandal by his private habits, which helped in no small
-degree to render unpopular one who was in reality an amiable and
-upright gentleman. He was likewise somewhat tenacious about
-matters respecting game&mdash;the besetting weakness of British gentlemen
-in all ages. On the other hand, Campbell, though an austere
-and unsocial man, acted according to popular ideas both in respect
-of the game and excise laws. The people felt that he was on their
-side; they esteemed him for his integrity in the common affairs of
-life, and even in some degree for his birth and connections, which
-were far from mean. It was also universally believed, though
-erroneously, that he had only discharged his gun by accident, on
-falling backward, while retreating before his lordship, who had
-determined to take it from him. In reality, Mungo, after his fall,
-rose on his elbow and wilfully shot the poor earl, who had given
-him additional provocation by bursting into a laugh at his awkward
-fall. The Old Tolbooth was supposed by many, at the time, to
-have had her usual failing in Mungo’s case. The interest of the
-Argyll family was said to have been employed in his favour; and
-the body which was found suspended over the door, instead of
-being his, was thought to be that of a dead soldier from the Castle
-substituted in his place. His relations, however, who were very
-respectable people in Ayrshire, all acknowledged that he died by<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">{91}</a></span>
-his own hand; and this was the general idea of the mob of Edinburgh,
-who, getting the body into their hands, dragged it down
-the street to the King’s Park, and, inspired by different sentiments
-from those of the Ayrshire people, were not satisfied till they got
-it up to the top of Salisbury Crags, from which they precipitated
-it down the <em>Cat Nick</em>.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w175">
-<img src="images/illus_p_091.jpg" width="175" height="320" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Deacon Brodie’s
-Keys and
-Dark-Lantern.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>One of the most remarkable criminals ever confined in the
-Old Tolbooth was the noted William Brodie. This was a man
-of respectable connections, and who had moved in good society
-all his life, unsuspected of any criminal pursuits. It is said that
-a habit of frequenting cock-pits was the first symptom he
-exhibited of a decline from rectitude. His ingenuity as a
-mechanic gave him a fatal facility in the burglarious pursuits to
-which he afterwards addicted himself. It was then customary for
-the shopkeepers of Edinburgh to hang their keys upon a nail at
-the back of their doors, or at least to take no pains in concealing
-them during the day. Brodie used to take impressions of them
-in putty or clay, a piece of which he would carry in the palm of
-his hand. He kept a blacksmith in his pay, who forged exact
-copies of the keys he wanted, and with these it was his custom to
-open the shops of his fellow-tradesmen during the night. He
-thus found opportunities of securely stealing whatever he wished
-to possess. He carried on his malpractices for many years, and
-never was suspected till, having committed a daring
-robbery upon the Excise Office in Chessels’s Court,
-Canongate, some circumstances transpired which induced
-him to disappear from Edinburgh. Suspicion
-then becoming strong, he was pursued to Holland,
-and taken at Amsterdam, standing upright in a press
-or cupboard. At his trial, Henry Erskine, his
-counsel, spoke very eloquently in his behalf, representing,
-in particular, to the jury how strange and improbable a
-circumstance it was that a man whom they had themselves
-known from infancy as a person of good repute
-should have been guilty of such practices as those with
-which he was charged. He was, however, found guilty,
-and sentenced to death, along with his accomplice
-Smith. At the trial he had appeared in a full-dress
-suit of black clothes, the greater part of which was
-of silk, and his deportment throughout the affair was
-composed and gentlemanlike. He continued during
-the period which intervened between his sentence<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">{92}</a></span>
-and execution to dress well and keep up his spirits. A
-gentleman of his acquaintance, calling upon him in the
-condemned room, was surprised to find him singing the song
-from the <cite>Beggars’ Opera</cite>, ‘’Tis woman seduces all mankind.’
-Having contrived to cut out the figure of a draughtboard on the
-stone floor of his dungeon, he amused himself by playing with
-any one who would join him, and, in default of such, with his
-right hand against his left. This diagram remained in the room
-where it was so strangely out of place till the destruction of the
-jail. His dress and deportment at the gallows (October 1, 1788)
-displayed a mind at ease, and gave some countenance to the
-popular notion that he had made certain mechanical arrangements
-for saving his life. Brodie was the first who proved the
-excellence of an improvement he
-had formerly made on the apparatus
-of the gibbet. This was
-the substitution of what is called
-the <em>drop</em> for the ancient practice of
-the double ladder. He inspected
-the thing with a professional air,
-and seemed to view the result of his
-ingenuity with a smile of satisfaction.
-When placed on that insecure
-pedestal, and while the rope
-was adjusted round his neck by the
-executioner, his courage did not
-forsake him. On the contrary, even
-there he exhibited a sort of levity;
-he shuffled about, looked gaily
-around, and finally went out of the
-world with his hand stuck carelessly
-into the open front of his vest.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w300">
-<img src="images/illus_p_092.jpg" width="300" height="503" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Brodie’s Close.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>As its infirmities increased with
-old age, the Tolbooth showed itself
-incapable of retaining prisoners of
-even ordinary rank. Within the
-recollection of people living not
-long ago, a youth named Hay, the son of a stabler in the
-Grassmarket, and who was under sentence of death for burglary,
-effected his escape in a way highly characteristic of the Heart
-of Mid-Lothian, and of the simple and unprecise system upon
-which all public affairs were managed before the present age.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">{93}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>A few days before that appointed for the execution, the father
-went up to the condemned room, apparently to condole with his
-unhappy son. The irons had been previously got quit of by
-files. At nightfall, when most visitors had left the jail, old Hay
-invited the inner turnkey, or man who kept the hall-door, to
-come into the room and partake of some liquor which he had
-brought with him. The man took a few glasses, and became
-mellow just about the time when the bottle was exhausted and
-when the time of locking up the jail (ten o’clock at that period)
-was approaching. Hay expressed unwillingness to part at the
-moment when they were just beginning to enjoy their liquor;
-a sentiment in which the turnkey heartily sympathised. Hay
-took a crown from his pocket, and proposed that his friend
-should go out and purchase a bottle of good rum at a neighbouring
-shop. The man consented, and staggering away downstairs,
-neglected to lock the inner door behind him. Young
-Hay followed close, as had been concerted, and after the man
-had gone out, and the outer turnkey had closed the outer door,
-stood in the stair just within that dread portal, ready to spring
-into the street. Old Hay then put his head to the great window
-of the hall, and cried: ‘Turn your hand!’&mdash;the usual drawling
-cry which brought the outer turnkey to open the door. The
-turnkey came mechanically at the cry, and unclosed the outer
-door, when the young criminal sprang out, and ran as fast as he
-could down Beth’s Wynd, a lane opposite the jail. According
-to the plan which had been previously concerted, he repaired
-to a particular part of the wall of the Greyfriars Churchyard,
-near the lower gate, where it was possible for an agile person to
-climb up and spring over; and so well had every stage of the
-business been planned that a large stone had been thrown down
-at this place to facilitate the leap.</p>
-
-<p>The youth had been provided with a key which could open
-Sir George Mackenzie’s mausoleum&mdash;a place of peculiar horror,
-as it was supposed to be haunted by the spirit of the bloody
-persecutor; but what will not be submitted to for dear life?
-Having been brought up in Heriot’s Hospital, in the immediate
-neighbourhood of the churchyard, Hay had many boyish acquaintances
-still residing in that establishment. Some of these he
-contrived to inform of his situation, enjoining them to be secret,
-and beseeching them to assist him in his distress. The Herioters
-of those days had a very clannish spirit&mdash;insomuch that to have
-neglected the interests or safety of any individual of the community,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">{94}</a></span>
-however unworthy he might be of their friendship, would
-have been looked upon by them as a sin of the deepest dye. Hay’s
-confidants, therefore, considered
-themselves bound
-to assist him by all means
-in their power. They
-kept his secret faithfully,
-spared from their own
-meals as much food as
-supported him, and ran
-the risk of severe punishment,
-as well as of seeing
-eldritch sights, by visiting
-him every night in
-his dismal abode. About
-six weeks after his escape
-from jail, when the hue
-and cry had in a great
-measure subsided, he ventured
-to leave the tomb,
-and it was afterwards
-known that he escaped
-abroad.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w400">
-<img src="images/illus_p_094.jpg" width="400" height="576" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Sir George Mackenzie’s Mausoleum.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>So ends our gossip
-respecting a
-building which has
-witnessed and contained
-the meetings
-of the Scottish
-parliament in the
-romantic days of
-the Jameses&mdash;which
-held the
-first fixed court of
-law established in the country&mdash;which was looked to by the
-citizens in a rude age as a fortified place for defence against
-external danger to their lives and goods&mdash;which has immured
-in its gloomy walls persons of all kinds liable to law, from the
-gallant Montrose and the faithful Guthrie and Argyll down to
-the humblest malefactor in the modern style of crime&mdash;and
-which, finally, has been embalmed in the imperishable pages of
-the greatest writer of fiction our country has produced.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">{95}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="SOME_MEMORIES_OF_THE_LUCKENBOOTHS" id="SOME_MEMORIES_OF_THE_LUCKENBOOTHS">SOME MEMORIES OF THE LUCKENBOOTHS.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="chapter_summary"><strong>Lord Coalstoun and his Wig&mdash;Commendator Bothwell’s House&mdash;Lady
-Anne Bothwell&mdash;Mahogany Lands and Fore-stairs&mdash;The Krames&mdash;Creech’s
-Shop.</strong></p>
-
-
-<p>A portion of the High Street facing St Giles’s Church was
-called the <em>Luckenbooths</em>, and the appellation was shared
-with a middle row of buildings which once burdened the street
-at that spot. The name is
-supposed to have been conferred
-on the shops in that situation
-as being
-<em>close shops</em>, to
-distinguish
-them from the
-open booths
-which then
-lined our great
-street on both
-sides; <em>lucken</em>
-signifying
-closed. This
-would seem to
-imply a certain
-superiority in
-the ancient
-merchants of the Luckenbooths; and it is somewhat remarkable
-that amidst all the changes of the Old Town there is still in this
-limited locality an unusual proportion of mercers and clothiers of
-old standing and reputed substantiality.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w350">
-<img src="images/illus_p_095.jpg" width="350" height="268" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Tolbooth and Luckenbooths&mdash;looking East.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Previous to 1811, there remained unchanged in this place
-two tall massive houses, about two centuries old, one of which
-contained the town mansion of Sir John Byres of Coates, a
-gentleman of figure in Edinburgh in the reign of James VI.,
-and whose faded tombstone may yet be deciphered in the west
-wall of the Greyfriars Churchyard. The Byreses of the Coates
-died out towards the end of the last century, and their estate
-has since become a site for streets, as our city spread westwards.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">{96}</a></span>
-The name alone survives in connection with an alley beneath
-their town mansion&mdash;<em>Byres’s Close</em>.</p>
-
-
-<h3>LORD COALSTOUN AND HIS WIG.</h3>
-
-<p>The <em>fourth floor</em>, constituting the Byres mansion, after being
-occupied by such persons as Lord Coupar, Lord Lindores, and
-Sir James Johnston of Westerhall, fell into the possession of
-Mr Brown of Coalstoun, a judge under the designation of Lord
-Coalstoun, and the father of the late Countess of Dalhousie.
-His lordship lived here in 1757, but then removed to a more
-spacious mansion on the Castle-hill.</p>
-
-<p>A strange accident one morning befell Lord Coalstoun while
-residing in this house. It was at that time the custom for
-advocates, and no less for judges, to dress themselves in gown,
-wig, and cravat at their own houses, and to walk in a sort of
-state, thus rigged out, with their cocked hats in their hands, to
-the Parliament House.<a name="FNanchor_65" id="FNanchor_65"></a><a href="#Footnote_65" class="fnanchor">[65]</a> They usually breakfasted early, and
-when dressed would occasionally lean over their parlour windows,
-for a few minutes before St Giles’s bell sounded the starting peal
-of a quarter to nine, enjoying the morning air, such as it was,
-and perhaps discussing the news of the day, or the convivialities
-of the preceding evening, with a neighbouring advocate on the
-opposite side of the alley. It so happened that one morning,
-while Lord Coalstoun was preparing to enjoy his matutinal treat,
-two girls, who lived in the second floor above, were amusing themselves
-with a kitten, which, in thoughtless sport, they had swung
-over the window by a cord tied round its middle, and hoisted
-for some time up and down, till the creature was getting rather
-desperate with its exertions. In this crisis his lordship popped
-his head out of the window directly below that from which the
-kitten swung, little suspecting, good easy man, what a danger
-impended, like the sword of Damocles, over his head, hung, too,
-by a single&mdash;not <em>hair</em>, ’tis true, but scarcely more responsible
-material&mdash;<em>garter</em>, when down came the exasperated animal at
-full career directly upon his senatorial wig. No sooner did the
-girls perceive what sort of a landing-place their kitten had found
-than, in terror and surprise, they began to draw it up; but this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">{97}</a></span>
-measure was now too late, for along with the animal up also came
-the judge’s wig, fixed full in its determined talons. His lordship’s
-surprise on finding his wig lifted off his head was much increased
-when, on looking up, he perceived it dangling its way upwards,
-without any means visible to him by which its motions might
-be accounted for. The astonishment, the dread, the almost <em>awe</em>
-of the senator below&mdash;the half mirth, half terror of the girls
-above&mdash;together with the fierce and relentless energy of retention
-on the part of Puss between&mdash;altogether formed a scene
-to which language could not easily do justice. It was a joke
-soon explained and pardoned; but assuredly the perpetrators
-of it did afterwards get many lengthened injunctions from their
-parents never again to fish over the window, with such a bait, for
-honest men’s wigs.</p>
-
-
-<h3>COMMENDATOR BOTHWELL’S HOUSE.</h3>
-
-<p>The eastern of the tenements, which has only been renovated
-by a new front, formerly was the lodging of Adam Bothwell,
-Commendator of Holyrood, who is remarkable for having performed
-the Protestant marriage ceremony for Mary and the Earl
-of Bothwell. This ecclesiastic, who belonged to an old Edinburgh
-family of note, and was the uncle of the inventor of
-logarithms,<a name="FNanchor_66" id="FNanchor_66"></a><a href="#Footnote_66" class="fnanchor">[66]</a> is celebrated in his epitaph in Holyrood Chapel as
-a judge, and the son and father of judges. His son was raised
-to the peerage in 1607, under the title of Lord Holyroodhouse,
-the lands of that abbacy, with some others, being erected into
-a temporal lordship in his favour. The title, however, sunk in
-the second generation. The circumstance which now gives
-most interest to the family is one which they themselves would
-probably have regarded as its greatest disgrace. Among the old
-Scottish songs is one which breaks upon the ear with the wail
-of wronged womanhood, mingled with the breathings of its indestructible
-affections:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Baloo, my boy, lie still and sleep,</div>
-<div class="verse">It grieves me sair to see thee weep.</div>
-<div class="verse">If thou’lt be silent, I’ll be glad;</div>
-<div class="verse">Thy mourning makes my heart full sad....</div>
-<div class="verse">Baloo, my boy, weep not for me,</div>
-<div class="verse">Whose greatest grief’s for wranging thee,</div>
-<div class="verse">Nor pity her deserved smart,</div>
-<div class="verse">Who can blame none but her fond heart.</div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">{98}</a></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Baloo, my boy, thy father’s fled,</div>
-<div class="verse">When he the thriftless son hath played;</div>
-<div class="verse">Of vows and oaths forgetful, he</div>
-<div class="verse">Preferred the wars to thee and me:</div>
-<div class="verse">But now perhaps thy curse and mine</div>
-<div class="verse">Makes him eat acorns with the swine.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Nay, curse not him; perhaps now he,</div>
-<div class="verse">Stung with remorse, is blessing thee;</div>
-<div class="verse">Perhaps at death, for who can tell</div>
-<div class="verse">But the great Judge of heaven and hell</div>
-<div class="verse">By some proud foe has struck the blow,</div>
-<div class="verse">And laid the dear deceiver low,’ &amp;c.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Great doubt has long rested on the history of this piteous ditty;
-but it is now ascertained to have been a contemporary effusion
-on the sad love-tale of Anne Bothwell, a sister of the first Lord
-Holyroodhouse. The only error in the setting down of the
-song was in calling it <em>Lady</em> Anne Bothwell’s Lament, as the
-heroine had no pretension to a term implying noble rank. Her
-lover was a youth of uncommon elegance of person, the Honourable
-Alexander Erskine, brother of the Earl of Mar, of the first
-Earl of Buchan, and of Lord Cardross. A portrait of him,
-which belonged to his mother (the countess mentioned a few pages
-back), and which is now in the possession of James Erskine, Esq.
-of Cambo, Lady Mar’s descendant, represents him as strikingly
-handsome, with much vivacity of countenance, dark-blue eyes, a
-peaked beard, and moustaches. The lovers were cousins. The song
-is an evidence of the public interest excited by the affair: a fragment
-of it found its way into an English play of the day, Broom’s
-comedy of <cite>The Northern Lass</cite> (1632). This is somewhat different
-from any of the stanzas in the common versions of the ballad:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="wideverse">‘Peace, wayward bairn. Oh cease thy moan!</div>
-<div class="wideverse">Thy far more wayward daddy’s gone,</div>
-<div class="wideverse">And never will recallèd be,</div>
-<div class="wideverse">By cries of either thee or me;</div>
-<div class="wideverse indent4">For should we cry,</div>
-<div class="wideverse indent4">Until we die,</div>
-<div class="wideverse">We could not scant his cruelty.</div>
-<div class="wideverse indent4">Baloo, baloo, &amp;c.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="wideverse">He needs might in himself foresee</div>
-<div class="wideverse">What thou successively mightst be;</div>
-<div class="wideverse">And could he then (though me forego)</div>
-<div class="wideverse">His infant leave, ere he did know</div>
-<div class="wideverse indent4">How like the dad</div>
-<div class="wideverse indent4">Would prove the lad,</div>
-<div class="wideverse">In time to make fond maidens glad.</div>
-<div class="wideverse indent4">Baloo, baloo,’ &amp;c.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">{99}</a></span></p>
-<p>The fate of the deceiver proved
-a remarkable echo of some of the
-verses of the ballad. Having
-carried his military experience and
-the influence of his rank into the
-party of the Covenanters, he was
-stationed (1640) with his brother-in-law,
-the Earl of Haddington, at Dunglass
-Castle, on the way to Berwick,
-actively engaged in bringing up levies
-for the army, then newly advanced
-across the Tweed; when, by the revenge
-of an offended page, who applied
-a hot poker to the powder
-magazine, the place was blown up.
-Erskine, with his brother-in-law and
-many other persons, perished. A
-branch of the Mar family retained,
-till no remote time, the awe-mingled
-feeling which had been produced by
-this event, which they had been led
-to regard as a punishment inflicted
-for the wrongs of Anne Bothwell.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w200">
-<img src="images/illus_p_099.jpg" width="200" height="401" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Byres’s Close, Back of
-Commendator Bothwell’s House.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>At the back of the Commendator’s
-house there is a projection,<a name="FNanchor_67" id="FNanchor_67"></a><a href="#Footnote_67" class="fnanchor">[67]</a> on the
-top of which is a bartisan or flat
-roof, faced with three lettered stones.
-There is a tradition that Oliver
-Cromwell lived in this house,<a name="FNanchor_68" id="FNanchor_68"></a><a href="#Footnote_68" class="fnanchor">[68]</a> and
-used to come out and sit here to view
-his navy on the Forth, of which,
-together with the whole coast, it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">{100}</a></span>
-commands a view. As this commander is said to have had his
-guard-house in the neighbouring alley called Dunbar’s Close,
-there is some reason to give credit to the story, though it is
-in no shape authenticated by historical record. The same house
-was, for certain, the residence of Sir William Dick, the hapless
-son of Crœsus spoken of in a preceding article.</p>
-
-<p>These houses preserved, until their recent renovation, all the
-characteristics of that ancient mode of architecture which has
-procured for the edifices constructed upon it the dignified appellative
-of <em>Mahogany Lands</em>. Below were the booths or piazzas,
-once prevalent throughout the whole town, in which the merchants
-of the laigh shops, or cellars, were permitted to exhibit their goods
-to the passengers. The merchant himself took his seat at the
-head of the stair to attend to the wants of passing customers.
-By the ancient laws of the burgh, it was required that each should
-be provided with ‘lang wappinis, sick as a spear or a Jeddart
-staff,’ with which he was to sally forth and assist the magistrates
-in time of need; for example, when a <em>tulzie</em> took place between
-the retainers of rival noblemen meeting in the street.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w300">
-<img src="images/illus_p_100.jpg" width="300" height="194" alt="Picture of two pigs at bottom of staircase." />
-</div>
-
-<p>This house could also boast of that distinguished feature in all
-ancient wooden structures, a <em>fore-stair</em>, an antiquated convenience,
-or inconvenience, now almost extinct, consisting of a flight of
-steps, ascending from the
-pavement to the first floor
-of the mansion, and protruding
-a considerable way
-into the street. Nuisances
-as they still are, they were
-once infinitely worse. What
-will my readers think when
-they are informed that
-under these projections our
-ancestors kept their swine?
-Yes; <em>outside stairs</em> was formerly
-but a term of outward
-respect for what were
-as frequently denominated
-<em>swine’s cruives</em>; and the rude inhabitants of these narrow mansions
-were permitted, through the day, to stroll about the ‘High Gait,’
-seeking what they might devour among the heaps of filth which
-then encumbered the street,<a name="FNanchor_69" id="FNanchor_69"></a><a href="#Footnote_69" class="fnanchor">[69]</a> as barn-door fowls are at the present<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">{101}</a></span>
-day suffered to go abroad in country towns; and, like them (or
-like the town-geese of Musselburgh, which to this day are privileged
-to feed upon the race-ground), the sullen porkers were regularly
-called home in the evening by their respective proprietors.</p>
-
-<p>These circumstances will be held as sufficient evidence, notwithstanding
-all the enactments for the ‘policy of bigginis’ and
-‘decoring the tounes,’ that the stranger’s constant reproach of
-the Scots for want of cleanliness was not unmerited. Yet, to
-show that our countrymen did not lack a taste for decent appearances,
-let it be recollected that on every occasion of a public
-procession, entry of a sovereign, or other ceremonial, these fore-stairs
-were hung with carpets, tapestry, or arras, and were the
-principal places for the display of rank and fashion; while the
-windows, like the galleries of a theatre compared with the boxes,
-were chiefly occupied by spectators of a lower degree.<a name="FNanchor_70" id="FNanchor_70"></a><a href="#Footnote_70" class="fnanchor">[70]</a> The
-strictest proclamations were always issued, before any such occasion,
-ordaining the ‘middinis’ and the ‘swine’ to be removed, and the
-stairs to be decorated in the manner mentioned.</p>
-
-<p>Beneath the stair of the house now under review there abode
-in later times an old man named Bryce, in whose life and circumstances
-there was something characteristic of a pent-up city like<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">{102}</a></span>
-Edinburgh, where every foot of space was valuable. A stock of
-small hardwares and trinkets was piled up around him, leaving
-scarcely sufficient room for the accommodation of his own person,
-which completely filled the vacant space, as a hermit-crab fills its
-shell. There was not room for the admission of a customer; but
-he had a <em>half-door</em>, over which he sold any article that was
-demanded; and there he sat from morning till night, with his
-face turned to this door, looking up the eternal Lawnmarket.
-The place was so confined that he could not stand upright in it;
-nor could he stretch out his legs. Even while he sat, there was
-an uneasy obliquity of the stair, which compelled him to shrink
-a little aside; and by accustoming himself to this posture for a
-long series of years, he had insensibly acquired a twist in his
-shoulders, nearly approaching to a humpback, and his head
-swung a little to one side. This was <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">l’air boutiquier</i> in a most
-distressing sense.</p>
-
-<p>In the description of this old tenement given in the title-deeds,
-it is called ‘All and haill that Lodging or Timber Land lying in
-the burgh of Edinburgh, on the north side of the High Street
-thereof, forgainst the place of the Tolbooth, commonly called
-the Poor Folks’ Purses.’ The latter place was a part of the
-northern wall of the prison, deriving its name from a curious
-circumstance. It was formerly the custom for the privileged
-beggars, called <em>Blue-gowns</em>, to assemble in the palace yard, where
-a small donation from the king, consisting of as many pennies as
-he was years old, was conferred on each of them; after which they
-moved in procession up the High Street, till they came to this
-spot, where the magistrates gave each a <em>leathern purse</em> and a small
-sum of money; the ceremony concluding by their proceeding to
-the High Church to hear a sermon from one of the king’s
-chaplains.<a name="FNanchor_71" id="FNanchor_71"></a><a href="#Footnote_71" class="fnanchor">[71]</a></p>
-
-
-<h3>THE KRAMES.</h3>
-
-<p>The central row of buildings&mdash;the <em>Luckenbooths proper</em>&mdash;was
-not wholly taken away till 1817. The narrow passage left
-between it and the church will ever be memorable to all who
-knew Edinburgh in those days, on account of the strange scene<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">{103}</a></span>
-of traffic which it presented&mdash;each recess, angle, and coign of
-vantage in the wall of the church being occupied by little shops,
-of the nature of Bryce’s, devoted to the sale of gloves, toys,
-lollipops, &amp;c. These were the <em>Krames</em>, so famous at Edinburgh
-firesides. Singular places of business they assuredly were; often
-not presenting more space than a good church-pew, yet supporting
-by their commerce respectable citizenly families, from which would
-occasionally come men of some consequence in society. At the
-same spot the constable (Earl of Errol) was wont to sit upon a
-chair at the ridings of the parliament, when ceremonially receiving
-the members as they alighted.</p>
-
-<p>I am told that one such place, not more than seven feet by
-three, had been occupied by a glover named Kennedy, who with
-his gentle dame stood there retailing their wares for a time
-sufficient to witness the rise and fall of dynasties, never enjoying
-all that time the comfort of a fire, even in the coldest weather!
-This was a specimen of the life led by these patient creatures;
-many of whom, upon the demolition of their lath and plaster
-tenements, retired from business with little competencies. Their
-rents were from £3 to £6 per annum; and it appears that,
-huddled as the town then was around them, they had no inconsiderable
-custom. At the end of the row, under the angle of the
-church, was a brief stair, called <em>The Lady’s Steps</em>, thought to be
-a corruption of <em>Our Lady’s Steps</em>, with reference to a statue of
-the Virgin, the niche for which was seen in the east wall of
-the church till the renovation of the building in 1830. Sir
-George Mackenzie, however, in his <cite>Observations on the Statutes</cite>,
-states that the Lady’s Steps were so called from the infamous
-Lady March (wife of the Earl of Arran, James VI.’s profligate
-chancellor), from whom also the nine o’clock evening-bell, being
-ordered by her to an hour later, came to be called <em>The Lady’s Bell</em>.
-When men made bargains at the Cross, it was customary for them
-to go up to the Lady’s Steps, and there consummate the negotiation
-by wetting thumbs or paying <em>arles</em>.</p>
-
-
-<h3>CREECH’S SHOP.</h3>
-
-<p>The building at the east end of the Luckenbooths proper had
-a front facing down the High Street, and commanding not only
-a view of the busy scene there presented, but a prospect of
-Aberlady Bay, Gosford House, and other objects in Haddingtonshire.
-The shop in the east front was that of Mr Creech, a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">{104}</a></span>
-bookseller of facete memory, who had published many books by
-the principal literary men of his day, to all of whom he was
-known as a friend and equal. From this place had issued works
-by Kames, Smith, Hume, Mackenzie, and finally the poems of
-Burns. It might have been called the Lounger’s Observatory,
-for seldom was the doorway free of some group of idlers, engaged
-in surveying and commenting on the crowd in front; Creech
-himself, with his black silk breeches and powdered head, being
-ever a conspicuous member of the corps. The flat above had
-been the shop of Allan Ramsay, and the place where, in 1725,
-he set up the first example of a circulating library known in
-Scotland.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w500">
-<a id="illus_c_010"></a>
-<img src="images/illus_c_010.jpg" width="500" height="699" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">ST GILES, WEST WINDOW.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap"><a href="#Page_105">Page 105.</a></span>
-</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">{105}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="SOME_MEMORANDA_OF_THE_OLD" id="SOME_MEMORANDA_OF_THE_OLD">SOME MEMORANDA OF THE OLD
-KIRK OF ST GILES.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>The central portion or transept of St Giles’s Church, opening
-from the south, formed a distinct place of worship, under
-the name of the Old Church, and this seems
-to have been the first arranged for Protestant
-worship after the Reformation. It was the
-scene of the prelections of John Knox (who,
-it will be remembered, was the first minister
-of the city under the reformed religion),
-until a month before his death, when it appears
-that another portion of the building&mdash;styled
-the Tolbooth Kirk&mdash;was fitted up for
-his use.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w200">
-<img src="images/illus_p_105a.jpg" width="200" height="228" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">John Knox’s Pulpit.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>It also happened to be in the Old Kirk that
-the celebrated riot of the 23rd of July 1637
-took place, when, on the opening of the new
-Episcopal service-book, Jenny Geddes, of
-worthy memory, threw her cutty-stool at the
-dean who read it&mdash;the first weapon, and a formidable one it was,
-employed in the great civil war.<a name="FNanchor_72" id="FNanchor_72"></a><a href="#Footnote_72" class="fnanchor">[72]</a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w200">
-<img src="images/illus_p_105b.jpg" width="200" height="131" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Jenny Geddes’s Stool.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Jenny Geddes was an herbwoman&mdash;<em>Scottice</em>, <em>a greenwife</em>&mdash;at
-the Tron Church, where, in former as well as in recent times,
-that class of merchants kept their stalls. It
-seems that, in the midst of the hubbub,
-Jenny, hearing the bishop call upon the dean
-to read the <em>collect</em> of the day, cried out, with
-unintentional wit: ‘Deil colic the wame o’
-ye!’<a name="FNanchor_73" id="FNanchor_73"></a><a href="#Footnote_73" class="fnanchor">[73]</a> and threw at the dean’s head the
-small stool on which she sat; ‘a ticket of
-remembrance,’ as a Presbyterian annalist
-merrily terms it, so well aimed that the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">{106}</a></span>
-clergyman only escaped it by jouking;<a name="FNanchor_74" id="FNanchor_74"></a><a href="#Footnote_74" class="fnanchor">[74]</a> that is, by [ducking or]
-suddenly bending his person.</p>
-
-<p>Jenny, like the originators of many other insurrections, appears
-to have afterwards repented of her exertions on this occasion.
-We learn from the simple diarist, Andrew Nichol, that when
-Charles II. was known, in June 1650, to have arrived in the
-north of Scotland, amidst other rejoicings, ‘the pure [<i lang="la" xml:lang="la"><abbr title="quasi dicitur">q.d.</abbr></i> poor]
-kaill-wyves at the Trone [Jenny Geddes, no doubt, among the
-number] war sae overjoyed, that they sacrificed their standis and
-creellis, yea, the verie <em>stoollis</em> they sat on, in ane fyre.’ What
-will give, however, a still more unequivocal proof of the repentance
-of honest Jenny (after whom, by the way, Burns named a
-favourite mare), is the conduct expressly attributed to herself on
-the occasion of the king’s coronation in 1661 by the <cite>Mercurius
-Caledonius</cite>:</p>
-
-<p>‘But among all our bontados and caprices,’ says that curious
-register of events,<a name="FNanchor_75" id="FNanchor_75"></a><a href="#Footnote_75" class="fnanchor">[75]</a> ‘that of the immortal Jenet Geddis, Princesse
-of the Trone adventurers, was most pleasant; for she was not
-only content to assemble all her Creels, Basquets, <em>Creepies</em>,<a name="FNanchor_76" id="FNanchor_76"></a><a href="#Footnote_76" class="fnanchor">[76]</a>
-Furmes, and other ingredients that composed the Shope of her
-Sallets, Radishes, Turnips, Carrots, Spinage, Cabbage, with all
-other sorts of Pot Merchandise that belongs to the garden, but
-even her Leather Chair of State, where she used to dispense
-Justice to the rest of her Langkale Vassals, were all very orderly
-burned; she herself countenancing the action with a high-flown
-flourish and vermilion majesty.’</p>
-
-<p>The Scottish Society of Antiquaries nevertheless exhibit in their
-museum a clasp-stool, for which there is good evidence that it
-was the actual stool thrown by Mrs Geddes at the dean.</p>
-
-<p>In the southern aisle of this church, the Regent Murray, three
-weeks after his assassination at Linlithgow, February 14, 1569-70,
-was interred:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">{107}</a></span> ‘his head placed south, contrair the ordour usit;
-the sepulchre laid with hewin wark maist curiously, and on the
-head ane plate of brass.’ John Knox preached a funeral-sermon
-over the remains of his friend, and drew tears from the eyes of
-all present. In the Tolbooth Church, immediately adjoining to
-the west, sat the convention which chose the Earl of Lennox
-as his successor in the regency. Murray’s monument was not
-inelegant for the time; and its inscription, written by Buchanan,
-is remarkable for emphatic brevity.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w350">
-<img src="images/illus_p_107.jpg" width="350" height="447" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Modern Monument to the Marquis of Montrose
-(see <a href="#Page_108">p. 108</a>).</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>This part of the church appears to have formerly been an
-open lounge. French Paris, Queen Mary’s servant, in his confession
-respecting
-the murder of Darnley,
-mentions that,
-during the communings
-which took
-place before that
-deed was determined
-on, he one day
-‘took his mantle
-and sword, and went
-to walk (<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">promener</i>)
-in the High Church.’
-Probably, in consequence
-of the veneration
-entertained
-for the memory of
-‘the Good Regent,’
-or else, perhaps,
-from some simple
-motive of conveniency,
-the Earl of
-Murray’s tomb was
-a place frequently
-assigned in bills for
-the payment of the
-money. It also appears
-to have been
-the subject of a
-similar jest to that
-respecting the tomb
-of Duke Humphrey.
-Robert Sempill, in his <cite>Banishment of Poverty</cite>, a poem referring to
-the year 1680 or 1681, thus expresses himself:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">{108}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Then I knew no way how to fen’;</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">My guts rumbled like a <em>hurle-barrow</em>;</div>
-<div class="verse">I dined with saints and noblemen,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Even sweet Saint Giles and Earl of Murray.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>In the immediate neighbourhood of the Earl of Murray’s tomb,
-to the east, is the sepulchre of the Marquis of Montrose, executed
-in 1650, and here interred most sumptuously, June 1661, after the
-various parts of his body had been dispersed for eleven years in
-different directions, according to his sentence.<a name="FNanchor_77" id="FNanchor_77"></a><a href="#Footnote_77" class="fnanchor">[77]</a></p>
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">{109}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="THE_PARLIAMENT_CLOSE" id="THE_PARLIAMENT_CLOSE">THE PARLIAMENT CLOSE.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="chapter_summary"><strong>Ancient Churchyard&mdash;Booths attached to the High Church&mdash;Goldsmiths&mdash;George
-Heriot&mdash;The Deid-Chack.</strong></p>
-
-
-<p>Previous to the seventeenth century, the ground now occupied
-by the Parliament House, and the buildings adjacent to the
-south and west, was the churchyard of St Giles’s, from the south
-side of which edifice it extended down a steep declivity to the
-Cowgate. This might formerly be considered the metropolitan
-cemetery of Scotland; as, together with the internal space of the
-church, it contained the ashes of many noble and remarkable
-personages, John Knox amongst the number. After the Reformation,
-when Queen Mary conferred the gardens of the Greyfriars
-upon the town, the churchyard of St Giles’s ceased to be much
-used as a burying-ground; and that extensive and more appropriate
-place of sepulture succeeded to this in being made <em>the Westminster
-Abbey of Scotland</em>.</p>
-
-<p>The west side of the cemetery of St Giles’s was bounded by the
-house of the provost of the church, who, in 1469, granted part of
-the same to the citizens for the augmentation of the burying-ground.
-From the charter accompanying the grant, it appears
-that the provost’s house then also contained the public school of
-Edinburgh.</p>
-
-<p>In the lower part of the churchyard<a name="FNanchor_78" id="FNanchor_78"></a><a href="#Footnote_78" class="fnanchor">[78]</a> there was a small place of
-worship denominated the <em>Chapel of Holyrood</em>. Walter Chapman,
-the first printer in Edinburgh, in 1528 endowed an altar in this
-chapel with his tenement in the Cowgate; and, by the tenor of
-the charter, I am enabled to point out very nearly the residence
-of this interesting person, who, besides being a printer, was a
-respectable merchant in Edinburgh, and, it would appear, a very
-pious man. The tenement is thus described: ‘All and haill this
-tenement of land, back and foir, with houses, biggings, yards, and
-well<a name="FNanchor_79" id="FNanchor_79"></a><a href="#Footnote_79" class="fnanchor">[79]</a> thereof, lying in the Cowgate of Edinburgh, on the south<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">{110}</a></span>
-side thereof, near the said chapel, betwixt the lands of James Lamb
-on the east, and the lands of John Aber on the west, the arable
-lands called Wairam’s Croft on the south, and the said street on
-the north part.’</p>
-
-
-<h3>BOOTHS.</h3>
-
-<p>The precincts of St Giles’s being now secularised, the church
-itself was, in 1628, degraded by numerous wooden booths being
-stuck up around it. Yet, to show that
-some reverence was still paid to the
-sanctity of the place, the Town-council
-decreed that no tradesmen should be
-admitted to these shops except bookbinders,
-mortmakers (watchmakers),
-jewellers, and goldsmiths. <em>Bookbinders</em>
-must here be meant to signify booksellers,
-the latter term not being then
-known in Scotland. Of
-mortmakers there could
-not be many, for watches
-were imported from Germany
-till about the conclusion
-of the seventeenth
-century. The goldsmiths
-were a much more numerous
-tribe than either of
-their companions; for at
-that time there prevailed
-in Scotland, amongst the
-aristocracy, a sort of rude
-magnificence and taste for
-show extremely favourable
-to these tradesmen.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w300">
-<img src="images/illus_p_110.jpg" width="300" height="349" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Old St Giles’s.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In 1632, the present great hall of the Parliament House was
-founded upon the site of the houses formerly occupied by the
-ministers of St Giles’s. It was finished in 1639, at an expense of
-£11,630 sterling, and devoted to the use of parliament.</p>
-
-<p>It does not appear to have been till after the Restoration
-that the Parliament Close was formed, by the erection of a line
-of private buildings, forming a square with the church. These
-houses, standing on a declivity, were higher on one side than the
-other; one is said to have been fifteen stories altogether in height.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">{111}</a></span>
-All, however, were burned down in a great fire which happened
-in 1700, after which buildings of twelve stories in height were
-substituted.<a name="FNanchor_80" id="FNanchor_80"></a><a href="#Footnote_80" class="fnanchor">[80]</a></p>
-
-<p>Among the noble inhabitants of the Parliament Close at an
-early period, the noble family of Wemyss were not the least
-considerable. At the time of Porteous’s affair, when Francis, the
-fifth earl, was a boy, his sisters persuaded him to act the part of
-Captain Porteous in a sort of drama which they got up in imitation
-of that strange scene. The foolish romps actually went the length
-of tucking up their brother, the heir of the family, by the neck,
-over a door; and their sports had well-nigh ended in a real tragedy,
-for the helpless representative of Porteous was black in the face
-before they saw the necessity of cutting him down.<a name="FNanchor_81" id="FNanchor_81"></a><a href="#Footnote_81" class="fnanchor">[81]</a></p>
-
-<p>The small booths around St Giles’s continued, till 1817, to
-deform the outward appearance of the church. Long before their
-destruction, the booksellers at least had found the space of six or
-seven feet too small for the accommodation of their fast-increasing
-wares, and removed to larger shops in the elegant tenements of the
-square. One of the largest of the booths, adjacent to the south
-side of the New or High Church, and having a second story, was
-occupied, during a great part of the last century, by Messrs Kerr
-and Dempster, goldsmiths. The first of these gentlemen had been
-member of parliament for the city, and was the last citizen who
-ever held that office [in the Scottish parliament]. Such was the
-humility of people’s wishes in those days respecting their houses,
-that this respectable person actually lived, and had a great number
-of children, in the small space of the flat over the shop and the
-cellar under it, which was lighted by a grating in the pavement of
-the square. The subterraneous part of his house was chiefly devoted
-to the purposes of a nursery, and proved so insalubrious that all
-his children died successively at a particular age, with the exception
-of his son Robert, who, being born much more weakly than
-the rest, had the good luck to be sent to the country to be nursed,
-and afterwards grew up to be the author of a work entitled <cite>The
-Life of Robert Bruce</cite>, and the editor of a large collection of voyages
-and travels.</p>
-
-
-<h3>GOLDSMITHS.</h3>
-
-<p>The goldsmiths of those days were considered a superior class of
-tradesmen; they appeared in public with scarlet cloak, cocked hat,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">{112}</a></span>
-and cane, as men of some consideration. Yet in their shops every
-one of them would have been found working with his own hands
-at some light labour, in a little recess near the window, generally
-in a very plain dress, but ready to come forth at a moment’s notice
-to serve a customer. Perhaps, down to 1780, there was not a
-goldsmith in Edinburgh who did not condescend to manual labour.</p>
-
-<p>As the whole trade was collected in the Parliament Close, this
-was of course the place to which country couples resorted, during
-the last century, in order to make the purchase of silver tea-spoons,
-which always preceded their nuptials. It was then as customary
-a thing in the country for the intending bridegroom to take a
-journey, a few weeks before his marriage, to the Parliament Close,
-in order to buy the <em>silver spoons</em>, as it was for the bride to have
-all her clothes and stock of bed-furniture inspected by a committee
-of matrons upon the wedding eve. And this important transaction
-occasioned two journeys: one, in order to select the spoons, and
-prescribe the initials which were to be marked upon them; the
-other, to receive and pay for them. It must be understood that
-the goldsmiths of Edinburgh then kept scarcely any goods on hand
-in their shops, and that the smallest article had to be bespoken
-from them some time before it was wanted. A goldsmith, who
-entered as an apprentice about the beginning of the reign of
-George III., informed me that they were beginning only at that
-time to keep a few trifling articles on hand. Previously another
-old custom had been abolished. It had been usual, upon both the
-occasions above mentioned, for the goldsmith to adjourn with his
-customer to John’s Coffee-house,<a name="FNanchor_82" id="FNanchor_82"></a><a href="#Footnote_82" class="fnanchor">[82]</a> or to the Baijen-hole,<a name="FNanchor_83" id="FNanchor_83"></a><a href="#Footnote_83" class="fnanchor">[83]</a> and to
-receive the order or the payment, in a comfortable manner, over a
-dram and a <em>caup</em> of small ale; which were upon the first occasion
-paid for by the customer, and upon the second by the trader;
-and the goldsmith then was perhaps let into the whole secret
-counsels of the rustic, including a history of his courtship&mdash;in
-return for which he would take pains to amuse his customer with
-a sketch of the city news. In time, as the views and capitals of
-the Parliament Close goldsmiths became extended, all these pleasant
-customs were abandoned.<a name="FNanchor_84" id="FNanchor_84"></a><a href="#Footnote_84" class="fnanchor">[84]</a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w500">
-<a id="illus_c_011"></a>
-<img src="images/illus_c_011.jpg" width="500" height="678" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">HERIOT’S HOSPITAL<br />
-from Greyfriars’ Churchyard.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap"><a href="#Page_113">Page 113.</a></span><br />
-</p></div>
-</div><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">{113}</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>GEORGE HERIOT.</h3>
-
-<p>The shop and workshop of George Heriot existed in this
-neighbourhood till 1809, when the extension of the Advocates’
-Library occasioned the destruction of some interesting old <em>closes</em> to
-the west of St Giles’s Kirk, and altered all the features of this part
-of the town. There was a line of three small shops, with wooden
-superstructures above them, extending between the door of the
-Old Tolbooth and that of the <em>Laigh Council-house</em>, which occupied
-the site of the present lobby of the Signet Library. A narrow
-passage led between these shops and the west end of St Giles’s;
-and George Heriot’s shop, being in the centre of the three, was
-situated exactly opposite to the south window of the Little Kirk.
-The back windows looked into an alley behind, called Beith’s or
-Bess Wynd. In confirmation of this tradition, George Heriot’s
-name was discovered upon the architrave of the door, being carved
-in the stone, and apparently having served as his <em>sign</em>. Besides
-this curious memorial, the booth was also found to contain his
-forge and bellows, with a hollow stone, fitted with a stone cover or
-lid, which had been used as a receptacle for and a means of extinguishing
-the living embers of the furnace, upon closing the
-shop at night. All these curiosities were bought by the late Mr
-E. Robertson of the Commercial Bank, who had been educated in
-Heriot’s Hospital, and by him presented to the governors, who
-ordered them to be carefully deposited and preserved in the house,
-where they now remain. George Heriot’s shop was only about
-seven feet square! Yet his master, King James, is said to have
-sometimes visited him and been treated by him here. There is a
-story that one day, when the goldsmith visited His Majesty at
-Holyrood, he found him sitting beside a fire, which, being composed
-of perfumed wood, cast an agreeable smell through the room.
-Upon George Heriot remarking its pleasantness, the king told him
-that it was quite as costly as it was fine. Heriot said that if His
-Majesty would come and pay him a visit at his shop, he would
-show him a still more costly fire.</p>
-
-<p>‘Indeed!’ said the king; ‘and I will.’ He accordingly paid
-the goldsmith a visit, but was surprised to find only an ordinary
-fire. ‘Is this, then, your fine fire?’ said he.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">{114}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>‘Wait a little,’ said George, ‘till I get my fuel.’ So saying, he
-took from his bureau a bond for two thousand pounds which
-he had lent to the king, and laying it in the fire, added: ‘Now,
-whether is your Majesty’s fire or mine most expensive?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Yours most certainly, Master Heriot,’ said the king.</p>
-
-<p>Adjacent to George Heriot’s shop, and contiguous to the
-Laigh Council-house, there was a tavern, in which a great deal of
-small legal business used to be transacted in bygone times. Peter
-Williamson, an original and singular person, who had long been
-in North America, and therefore designated himself ‘from the
-other world,’ kept this house for many years.<a name="FNanchor_85" id="FNanchor_85"></a><a href="#Footnote_85" class="fnanchor">[85]</a> It served also as
-a sort of vestry to the Tolbooth Church, and was the place where
-the magistrates took what was called the <em>Deid-chack</em>&mdash;that is, a
-refreshment or dinner, of which those dignitaries always partook
-after having attended an execution. The <em>Deid-chack</em> is now
-abjured, like many other of those fashions which formerly rendered
-the office of a magistrate so much more comfortable than it now is.<a name="FNanchor_86" id="FNanchor_86"></a><a href="#Footnote_86" class="fnanchor">[86]</a></p>
-
-<p>The various kirks which compose St Giles’s had all different
-characters in former times. The High Kirk had a sort of dignified
-aristocratic character, approaching somewhat to prelacy, and was
-frequented only by sound church-and-state men, who did not care
-so much for the sermon as for the gratification of sitting in the
-same place with His Majesty’s Lords of Council and Session and
-the magistrates of Edinburgh, and who desired to be thought men
-of sufficient liberality and taste to appreciate the prelections of
-Blair. The Old Kirk, in the centre of the whole, was frequented<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">{115}</a></span>
-by people who wished to have a sermon of good divinity, about
-three-quarters of an hour long, and who did not care for the
-darkness and dreariness of their temple. The Tolbooth Kirk was
-the peculiar resort of a set of rigid Calvinists from the Lawnmarket
-and the head of the Bow, termed the <em>Towbuith-Whigs</em>,
-who loved nothing but <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">extempore</i> evangelical sermons, and would
-have considered it sufficient to bring the house down about their
-ears if the precentor had ceased, for one verse, the old hillside
-fashion of reciting the lines of the psalm before singing them. Dr
-Webster, of convivial memory, was long one of the clergymen of
-this church, and deservedly admired as a pulpit orator; though
-his social habits often ran nigh to scandalise his devout and self-denying
-congregation.</p>
-
-<p>The inhabitants and shopkeepers of the Parliament Square were
-in former times very sociable and friendly as neighbours, and
-formed themselves into a sort of society, which was long known by
-the name of <em>The Parliament-Close Council</em>. Of this association
-there were from fifty to a hundred members, who met once or
-twice a year at a dinner, when they usually spent the evening, as
-the newspaper phrase goes, ‘in the utmost harmony.’ The whim
-of this club consisted in each person assuming a titular dignity at
-the dinner, and being so called all the year after by his fellow-members.
-One was Lord Provost of Edinburgh, another was
-Dean of Guild, some were bailies, others deacons, and a great
-proportion state-officers. Sir William Forbes, who, with the
-kindness of heart which characterised him, condescended to hold a
-place in this assemblage of mummers, was for a long time <em>Member
-for the City</em>.</p>
-
-<p>Previous to the institution of the police-court, a bailie of
-Edinburgh used to sit, every Monday, at that part of the Outer
-Parliament House where the statue of Lord Melville now stands,
-to hear and decide upon small causes&mdash;such as prosecutions for
-scandals and defamation, or cases of quarrels among the vulgar and
-the infamous. This judicature, commonly called the <em>Dirt Court</em>,
-was chiefly resorted to by washerwomen from Canonmills and the
-drunken ale-wives of the Canongate. A list of Dirt-Court
-processes used always to be hung up on a board every Monday
-morning at one of the pillars in the piazza at the outside of the
-Parliament Square; and that part of the piazza, being the lounge
-of two or three low pettifoggers who managed such pleas, was
-popularly called the <em>Scoundrels’ Walk</em>. Early on Monday, it was
-usual to see one or two threadbare personages, with prodigiously<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">{116}</a></span>
-clean linen, bustling about with an air of importance, and
-occasionally accosted by viragoes with long-eared caps flying behind
-their heads. These were the agents of the Dirt Court, undergoing
-conference with their clients.</p>
-
-<p>There was something lofty and august about the Parliament
-Close, which we shall scarcely ever see revived in any modern part
-of the town; so dark and majestic were the buildings all round,
-and so finely did the whole harmonise with the ancient cathedral
-which formed one of its sides! Even the echoes of the Parliament
-Square had something grand in them. Such, perhaps, were the
-feelings of William Julius Mickle when he wrote a poem on
-passing through the Parliament Close of Edinburgh at midnight,<a name="FNanchor_87" id="FNanchor_87"></a><a href="#Footnote_87" class="fnanchor">[87]</a>
-of which the following is one of the best passages:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="wideverse indent4">‘In the pale air sublime,</div>
-<div class="wideverse">St Giles’s column rears its ancient head,</div>
-<div class="wideverse">Whose builders many a century ago</div>
-<div class="wideverse">Were mouldered into dust. Now, O my soul,</div>
-<div class="wideverse">Be filled with sacred awe&mdash;I tread</div>
-<div class="wideverse">Above our brave forgotten ancestors. Here lie</div>
-<div class="wideverse">Those who in ancient days the kingdom ruled,</div>
-<div class="wideverse">The counsellors and favourites of kings,</div>
-<div class="wideverse">High lords and courtly dames, and valiant chiefs,</div>
-<div class="wideverse">Mingling their dust with those of lowest rank</div>
-<div class="wideverse">And basest deeds, and now unknown as they.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<div class="figcenter w500">
-<a id="illus_c_012"></a>
-<img src="images/illus_c_012.jpg" width="500" height="691" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">A SUGGESTION OF THE NORTH LOCH AND ST CUTHBERT’S<br />
-from Allan Ramsay’s Garden.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap"><a href="#Page_117">Page 117.</a></span>
-</p></div>
-</div><hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">{117}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="MEMORIALS_OF_THE_NOR_LOCH" id="MEMORIALS_OF_THE_NOR_LOCH">MEMORIALS OF THE NOR’ LOCH.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>He who now sees the wide hollow space between the Old and
-New Towns, occupied by beautiful gardens, having their
-continuity only somewhat curiously broken up by a transverse
-earthen mound and a line of railway, must be at a loss to realise
-the idea of the same space presenting in former times a lake,
-which was regarded as a portion of the physical defences of the
-city. Yet many, in common with myself, must remember the by
-no means distant time when the remains of this sheet of water,
-consisting of a few pools, served as excellent sliding and skating
-ground in winter, while their neglected grass-green precincts too
-frequently formed an arena whereon the high and mighty quarrels
-of Old and New Town <em>cowlies</em><a name="FNanchor_88" id="FNanchor_88"></a><a href="#Footnote_88" class="fnanchor">[88]</a> [etymology of the word unknown]
-were brought to a lapidarian arbitration.</p>
-
-<p>The lake, it after all appears, was artificial, being fed by springs
-under the Castle Rock, and retained by a dam at the foot of
-Halkerston’s Wynd;<a name="FNanchor_89" id="FNanchor_89"></a><a href="#Footnote_89" class="fnanchor">[89]</a> which dam was a passable way from the city
-to the fields on the north. Bower, the continuator of Fordun,
-speaks of a tournament held on the ground, <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">ubi nunc est lacus</i>, in
-1396, by order of the queen [of Robert III.], at which her eldest
-son, Prince David, then in his twentieth year, presided. At the
-beginning of the sixteenth century a ford upon the North Loch
-is mentioned. Archbishop Beatoun escaped across that ford in
-1517, when flying from the unlucky street-skirmish called <em>Cleanse
-the Causeway</em>. In those early times the town corporation kept
-ducks and swans upon the loch for ornament’s sake, and various
-acts occur in their register for preserving those birds. An act,
-passed in council between the years 1589 and 1594, ordained ‘a
-boll of oats to be bought for feeding the swans in the North
-Loch;’ and a person was unlawed at the same time for shooting
-a swan in the said loch, and obliged to find another in its place.
-The lake seems to have been a favourite scene for boating. Various
-houses in the neighbourhood had servitudes of the use of a boat
-upon it; and these, in later times, used to be employed to no little
-purpose in smuggling whisky into the town.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">{118}</a></span></p>
-<p>The North Loch was the place in which our pious ancestors
-used to dip and drown offenders against morality, especially of
-the female sex. The Reformers, therefore, conceived that they
-had not only done a very proper, but also a very witty thing,
-when they threw into this lake, in 1558, the statue of St Giles,
-which formerly adorned their High Church, and which they had
-contrived to abstract.</p>
-
-<p>It was also the frequent scene of suicide, and on this point one
-or two droll anecdotes are related. A man was deliberately proceeding
-to drown himself in the North Loch, when a crowd of the
-townspeople rushed down to the water-side, venting cries of horror
-and alarm at the spectacle, yet without actually venturing into
-the water to prevent him from accomplishing the rash act. Hearing
-the tumult, the father of the late Lord Henderland threw up
-his window in James’s Court, and leaning out, cried down the brae
-to the people: ‘What’s all the noise about? Can’t ye e’en let
-the honest man gang to the de’il his ain gate?’ Whereupon the
-honest man quietly walked out of the loch, to the no small amusement
-of his lately appalled neighbours. It is also said that a
-poor woman, having resolved to put an end to her existence,
-waded a considerable way into the water, designing to take the
-fatal plunge when she should reach a place where the lake was
-sufficiently deep. Before she could satisfy herself on that point,
-her hoop caught the water, and lifted her off her feet. At the
-same time the wind caught her figure, and blew her, whether she
-would or not, into the centre of the pool, as if she had been
-sailing upon an inverted tub. She now became <em>alarmed</em>, screamed
-for help, and waved her arms distractedly; all of which signs
-brought a crowd to the shore she had just left, who were unable,
-however, to render her any assistance, before she had landed on
-the other side&mdash;fairly cured, it appeared, of all desire of quitting
-the uneasy coil of mortal life.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">{119}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="THE_PARLIAMENT_HOUSE" id="THE_PARLIAMENT_HOUSE">THE PARLIAMENT HOUSE.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="chapter_summary"><strong>Old Arrangements of the House&mdash;Justice in Bygone Times&mdash;Court
-of Session Garland&mdash;Parliament House Worthies.</strong></p>
-
-
-<p>The Parliament House, a spacious hall with an oaken arched
-roof, finished in 1639 for the meetings of the Estates or
-native parliament, and used for that purpose till the Union,
-has since then, as is well known, served exclusively as a material
-portion of the suite of buildings required for the supreme civil
-judicatory&mdash;the Court of Session. This hall, usually styled the
-<em>Outer House</em>, is now a nearly empty space, but it was in a very
-different state within the recollection of aged practitioners. So
-lately as 1779, it retained the divisions, furnishings, and other
-features which it had borne in the days when we had a national
-legislature&mdash;excepting only that the portraits of sovereigns which
-then adorned the walls had been removed by the Earl of Mar, to
-whom Queen Anne had given them as a present when the Union
-was accomplished.</p>
-
-<p>The divisions and furniture, it may be remarked, were understood
-to be precisely those which had been used for the Court
-of Session from an early time; but it appears that such changes
-were made when the parliament was to sit as left the room one
-free vacant space. The southern portion, separated from the rest
-by a screen, accommodated the Court of Session. The northern
-portion, comprising a sub-section used for the Sheriff-court, was
-chiefly a kind of lobby of irregular form, surrounded by little
-booths, which were occupied as taverns, booksellers’ shops, and
-toy-shops, all of very flimsy materials.<a name="FNanchor_90" id="FNanchor_90"></a><a href="#Footnote_90" class="fnanchor">[90]</a> These <em>krames</em>, or boxes,
-seem to have been established at an early period, the idea being
-no doubt taken from the former condition of Westminster Hall.
-John Spottiswoode of Spottiswoode, who, in 1718, published the
-<cite>Forms of Process before the Court of Session</cite>, mentions that there
-were ‘two keepers of the session-house, who had small salaries to
-do all the menial offices in the house, and that no small part of
-their annual perquisites came from the <em>kramers</em> in the outer hall.’</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">{120}</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>JUSTICE IN BYGONE TIMES.</h3>
-
-<p>The memories which have been preserved of the administration
-of justice by the Court of Session in its earlier days are not such
-as to increase our love for past times.<a name="FNanchor_91" id="FNanchor_91"></a><a href="#Footnote_91" class="fnanchor">[91]</a> This court is described
-by Buchanan as extremely arbitrary, and by a nearly contemporary
-historian (Johnston) as infamous for its dishonesty. An advocate
-or barrister is spoken of by the latter writer as taking money from
-his clients, and dividing it among the judges for their votes. At
-this time we find the chancellor (Lord Fyvie) superintending the
-lawsuits of a friend, and writing to him the way and manner in
-which he proposed they should be conducted. But the strongest
-evidence of the corruption of ‘the lords’ is afforded by an act of
-1579, prohibiting them ‘be thame selffis or be their wiffis or
-servandes, to tak in ony time cuming, <em>buddis</em>, <em>bribes</em>, <em>gudes</em>, <em>or
-geir</em>, fra quhatever persone or persons presentlie havand, or that
-heirefter sall happyne to have, <em>any actionis or caussis pursewit
-befoir thame</em>, aither fra the persewer or defender,’ under pain of
-confiscation. Had not bribery been common amongst the judges,
-such an act as this could never have been passed.</p>
-
-<p>In the curious history of the family of Somerville there is a
-very remarkable anecdote illustrative of the course of justice at
-that period. Lord Somerville and his kinsman, Somerville of
-Cambusnethan, had long carried on a litigation. The former was
-at length advised to use certain means for the advancement of his
-cause with the Regent Morton, it being then customary for the
-sovereign to preside in the court. Accordingly, having one evening
-caused his agents to prepare all the required papers, he went
-next morning to the palace, and being admitted to the regent,
-informed him of the cause, and entreated him to order it to be
-called that forenoon. He then took out his purse, as if to give
-a few pieces to the pages or servants, and slipping it down upon
-the table, hurriedly left the presence-chamber. The earl cried
-several times after him: ‘My lord, you have left your purse;’
-but he had no wish to stop. At length, when he was at the
-outer porch, a servant overtook him with a request that he would
-go back to breakfast with the regent. He did so, was kindly
-treated, and soon after was taken by Morton in his coach to the
-court-room in the city. ‘Cambusnethan, by accident, as the coach<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">{121}</a></span>
-passed, was standing at Niddry’s Wynd head, and having inquired
-who was in it with the regent, he was answered: “None but Lord
-Somerville and Lord Boyd;” upon which he struck his breast, and
-said: “This day my cause is lost!” and indeed it proved so.’ By
-twelve o’clock that day, Lord Somerville had gained a cause which
-had been hanging in suspense for years.</p>
-
-<p>In those days both civil and criminal procedure was conducted
-in much the same spirit as a suit at war. When a great noble
-was to be tried for some monstrous murder or treason, he appeared
-at the bar with as many of his retainers, and as many of his
-friends and their retainers, as he could muster, and justice only
-had its course if the government chanced to be the strongest,
-which often was not the case. It was considered dishonourable
-not to countenance a friend in troubles of this kind, however black
-might be his moral guilt. The trial of Bothwell for the assassination
-of Darnley is a noted example of a criminal outbraving his
-judges and jury. Relationship, friendly connection, solicitation
-of friends, and direct bribes were admitted and recognised influences
-to which the civil judge was expected to give way. If a
-difficulty were found in inducing a judge to vote against his
-conscience, he might at least perhaps be induced by some of those
-considerations to absent himself, so as to allow the case to go in
-the desired way. The story of the abduction of Gibson of Durie
-by Christie’s Will, and his immurement in a Border tower for
-some weeks, that his voice might be absent in the decision of a
-case&mdash;as given in the <cite>Border Minstrelsy</cite> by Scott&mdash;is only incorrect
-in some particulars. (As the real case is reported in Pitcairn’s
-<cite>Criminal Trials</cite>, it appears that, in September 1601, Gibson was
-carried off from the neighbourhood of St Andrews by George
-Meldrum, younger of Dumbreck, and hastily transported to the
-castle of Harbottle in Northumberland, and kept there for eight
-days.) But, after all, Scotland was not singular among European
-nations in these respects. In Molière’s <cite>Misanthrope</cite>, produced in
-1666, we find the good-natured Philinte coolly remonstrating with
-Alceste on his unreasonable resolution to let his lawsuit depend
-only on right and equity.</p>
-
-<p>‘Qui voulez-vous donc, qui pour vous sollicite?’ says Philinte.
-‘Aucun juge par vous ne sera visité?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Je ne remuerai point,’ returns the misanthrope.</p>
-
-<p><em>Philinte.</em> Votre partie est forte, et peut par sa cabale entrainer....</p>
-
-<p><em>Alceste.</em> Il n’importe....</p>
-
-<p><em>Philinte.</em> Quel homme!... On se riroit de vous, Alceste, si on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">{122}</a></span>
-vous entendoit parler de la façon. (<em>People would laugh at you if
-they heard you talk in this manner.</em>)</p>
-
-<p>It is a general tradition in Scotland that the English judges
-whom Cromwell sent down to administer the law in Scotland,
-for the first time made the people acquainted with impartiality
-of judgment. It is added that, after the Restoration, when
-native lords were again put upon the bench, some one, in presence
-of the President Gilmour, lauding the late English judges for the
-equity of their proceedings, his lordship angrily remarked: ‘De’il
-thank them; a wheen kinless loons!’ That is, no thanks to
-them; a set of fellows without relations in the country, and who,
-consequently, had no one to please by their decisions.</p>
-
-<p>After the Restoration there was no longer direct bribing, but
-other abuses still flourished. The judges were tampered with by
-private solicitation. Decisions went in favour of the man of most
-personal or family influence. The following anecdote of the reign
-of Charles II. rests on excellent authority: ‘A Scotch gentleman
-having entreated the Earl of Rochester to speak to the Duke of
-Lauderdale upon the account of a business that seemed to be
-supported by a clear and undoubted right, his lordship very
-obligingly promised to do his utmost endeavours to engage the
-duke to stand his friend in a concern so just and reasonable as
-his was; and accordingly, having conferred with his grace about
-the matter, the duke made him this very odd return, that though
-he questioned not the right of the gentleman he recommended to
-him, yet he could not promise him a helping hand, and far less
-success in business, if he knew not first the man, whom perhaps
-his lordship had some reason to conceal; “because,” said he to
-the earl, “if your lordship were as well acquainted with the
-customs of Scotland as I am, you had undoubtedly known this
-among others&mdash;<em>Show me the man, and I’ll show you the law</em>;” giving
-him to understand that the law in Scotland could protect no man
-if either his purse were empty or his adversaries great men, or
-supported by great ones.’<a name="FNanchor_92" id="FNanchor_92"></a><a href="#Footnote_92" class="fnanchor">[92]</a></p>
-
-<p>One peculiar means of favouring a particular party was then
-in the power of the presiding judge: he could call a cause when
-he pleased. Thus he would watch till one or more judges who
-took the opposite view to his own were out of the way&mdash;either
-in attendance on other duties or from illness&mdash;and then calling
-the cause, would decide it according to his predilection. Even<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">{123}</a></span>
-the first President Dalrymple, afterwards Viscount Stair, one of
-the most eminent men whom the Scottish law-courts have ever
-produced, condescended to favour a party in this way. An act
-enjoining the calling of causes according to their place in a
-regular roll was passed in the reign of Charles II.; but the
-practice was not enforced till the days of President Forbes, sixty
-years later. We have a remarkable illustration of the partiality
-of the bench in a circumstance which took place about the time
-of the Revolution. During the pleadings in a case between
-Mr Pitilloch, an advocate, and Mr Aytoun of Inchdairnie, the
-former applied the term <em>briber</em> to Lord Harcarse, a judge seated
-at the moment on the bench, and who was father-in-law to the
-opposite party. The man was imprisoned for contempt; but this
-is not the point. Not long after, in this same cause, Lord
-Harcarse went down to the bar in his gown, and pleaded for his
-son-in-law Aytoun!</p>
-
-<p>About that period a curious indirect means of influencing the
-judges began to be notorious. Each lord had a dependant or
-favourite, generally some young relative, practising in the court,
-through whom it was understood that he could be prepossessed
-with a favourable view of any cause. This functionary was called
-a <em>Peat</em> or <em>Pate</em>, from a circumstance thus related in Wilkes’s <cite>North
-Briton</cite>: ‘One of the former judges of the Court of Session, of
-the first character, knowledge, and application to business, had a
-son at the bar whose name was Patrick; and when the suitors
-came about, soliciting his favour, his question was: “Have you
-consulted <em>Pat</em>?” If the answer was affirmative, the usual reply
-of his lordship was: “I’ll inquire of <em>Pat</em> about it; I’ll take care
-of your cause; go home and mind your business.” The judge in
-that case was even as good as his word, for while his brother-judges
-were robing, he would tell them what pains his son had
-taken, and what trouble he had put himself to, by his directions,
-in order to find out the real circumstances of the dispute;
-and as no one on the bench would be so unmannerly as to question
-the veracity of the son or the judgment of the father, the decree
-always went according to the information of <em>Pat</em>. At the present
-era, in case a judge has no son at the bar, his nearest relation
-(and he is sure to have one there) officiates in that station.
-But, as it frequently happens, if there are <em>Pats</em> employed on each
-side, the judges differ, and the greatest interest&mdash;that is, the
-longest purse&mdash;is sure to carry it.’</p>
-
-<p>I bring the subject to a conclusion by a quotation from the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">{124}</a></span>
-<cite>Court of Session Garland</cite>: ‘Even so far down as 1737 traces of
-the ancient evil may be found. Thus, in some very curious letters
-which passed between William Foulis, Esq. of Woodhall, and his
-agent, Thomas Gibson of Durie, there is evidence that private
-influence could even then be resorted to. The agent writes to his
-client, in reference to a pending lawsuit (23rd November 1735):
-“I have spoken to Strachan and several of the lords, who are all
-surprised Sir F[rancis Kinloch] should stand that plea. By Lord
-St Clair’s advice, Mrs Kinloch is to wait on Lady Cairnie to-morrow,
-to cause her ask the favour of Lady St Clair to solicit Lady Betty
-Elphingston and Lady Dun. My lord promises to back his lady,
-and to ply both their lords, also Leven and his cousin Murkle.<a name="FNanchor_93" id="FNanchor_93"></a><a href="#Footnote_93" class="fnanchor">[93]</a>
-He is your good friend, and wishes success; he is jealous Mrs
-Mackie will side with her cousin Beatie. St Clair says <em>Leven<a name="FNanchor_94" id="FNanchor_94"></a><a href="#Footnote_94" class="fnanchor">[94]</a> has
-only once gone wrong upon his hand since he was a Lord of Session</em>.
-Mrs Kinloch has been with Miss Pringle, Newhall. Young Dr
-Pringle is <em>a good agent there</em>, and discourses Lord Newhall<a name="FNanchor_95" id="FNanchor_95"></a><a href="#Footnote_95" class="fnanchor">[95]</a>
-<em>strongly on the law of nature</em>,” &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>‘Again, upon the 23rd of January 1737, he writes: “I can
-assure you that when Lord Primrose left this town, he stayed all
-that day with Lord J[ustice] C[lerk],<a name="FNanchor_96" id="FNanchor_96"></a><a href="#Footnote_96" class="fnanchor">[96]</a> and went to Andrew
-Broomfield at night, and went off post next morning; and what
-made him despair of getting anything done was, that it has been
-so long delayed, after promising so frankly, when he knew the one
-could cause the other trot to him like a penny-dog when he
-pleased. But there’s another hindrance: I suspect much Penty<a name="FNanchor_97" id="FNanchor_97"></a><a href="#Footnote_97" class="fnanchor">[97]</a>
-has not been in town as yet, and I fancy it’s by him the other
-must be managed. The Ld. J[ustice] C[lerk] is frank enough, but
-the other two are &mdash;&mdash; clippies. I met with Bavelaw and Mr
-William on Tuesday last. I could not persuade the last to go to
-a wine-house, so away we went to an aquavity-house, where I told
-Mr Wm. what had passed, as I had done before that to Bavelaw.
-They seemed to agree nothing could be done just now, but to know<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">{125}</a></span>
-why Lord Drummore<a name="FNanchor_98" id="FNanchor_98"></a><a href="#Footnote_98" class="fnanchor">[98]</a> dissuaded bringing in the plea last winter.
-<em>I have desired Lord Haining to speak</em>, but only expect his answer
-against Tuesday or Wednesday.”</p>
-
-<p>‘It is not our intention to pursue these remarks further, although
-we believe that judicial corruption continued long after the Union.
-We might adduce Lord President Forbes as a witness on this point,
-who, one of the most upright lawyers himself, did not take any
-pains to conceal his contempt for many of his brethren. A
-favourite toast of his is said to have been: “Here’s to such of the
-judges as don’t deserve the gallows.” Latterly, the complaint
-against the judges was not so much for corrupt dealing, with the
-view of enriching themselves or their “pet” lawyer, but for weak
-prejudices and feelings, which but ill accorded with the high office
-they filled.</p>
-
-<p>‘These abuses, the recapitulation of which may amuse and
-instruct, are now only matter of history&mdash;the spots that once
-sullied the garments of justice are effaced, and the old compend,
-“Show me the man, and I’ll show you the law,” is out of date.’</p>
-
-
-<h3>COURT OF SESSION GARLAND.</h3>
-
-<p>A curious characteristic view of the Scottish bench about the
-year 1771 is presented in a doggerel ballad, supposed to have been
-a joint composition of James Boswell and John Maclaurin,<a name="FNanchor_99" id="FNanchor_99"></a><a href="#Footnote_99" class="fnanchor">[99]</a>
-advocates, and professedly the history of a process regarding a bill
-containing a clause of penalty in case of failure. This <cite>Court of
-Session Garland</cite>, as it is called, is here subjoined, with such notes
-on persons and things as the reader may be supposed to require or
-care for.</p>
-
-
-<h4>PART FIRST.</h4>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">The bill charged on was payable at sight,</div>
-<div class="verse">And decree was craved by Alexander Wight;<a name="FNanchor_100" id="FNanchor_100"></a><a href="#Footnote_100" class="fnanchor">[100]</a></div>
-<div class="verse">But because it bore a penalty in case of failzie,</div>
-<div class="verse">It therefore was null, contended Willie Baillie.<a name="FNanchor_101" id="FNanchor_101"></a><a href="#Footnote_101" class="fnanchor">[101]</a></div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">The Ordinary, not choosing to judge it at random,</div>
-<div class="verse">Did with the minutes make <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">avisandum</i>;</div>
-<div class="verse">And as the pleadings were vague and windy,</div>
-<div class="verse">His lordship ordered memorials <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">hinc inde</i>.</div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">{126}</a></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">We, setting a stout heart to a stay brae,</div>
-<div class="verse">Took into the cause Mr David Rae.<a name="FNanchor_102" id="FNanchor_102"></a><a href="#Footnote_102" class="fnanchor">[102]</a></div>
-<div class="verse">Lord Auchinleck,<a name="FNanchor_103" id="FNanchor_103"></a><a href="#Footnote_103" class="fnanchor">[103]</a> however, repelled our defence,</div>
-<div class="verse">And, over and above, decerned for expense.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">However, of our cause not being ashamed,</div>
-<div class="verse">Unto the whole lords we straightway reclaimed;</div>
-<div class="verse">And our Petition was appointed to be seen,</div>
-<div class="verse">Because it was drawn by Robbie Macqueen.<a name="FNanchor_104" id="FNanchor_104"></a><a href="#Footnote_104" class="fnanchor">[104]</a></div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">The Answer by Lockhart<a name="FNanchor_105" id="FNanchor_105"></a><a href="#Footnote_105" class="fnanchor">[105]</a> himself it was wrote,</div>
-<div class="verse">And in it no argument nor fact was forgot.</div>
-<div class="verse">He is the lawyer that from no cause will flinch,</div>
-<div class="verse">And on this occasion divided the bench.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Alemore<a name="FNanchor_106" id="FNanchor_106"></a><a href="#Footnote_106" class="fnanchor">[106]</a> the judgment as illegal blames;</div>
-<div class="verse">‘’Tis equity, you bitch,’ replies my Lord Kames.<a name="FNanchor_107" id="FNanchor_107"></a><a href="#Footnote_107" class="fnanchor">[107]</a></div>
-<div class="verse">‘This cause,’ cries Hailes,<a name="FNanchor_108" id="FNanchor_108"></a><a href="#Footnote_108" class="fnanchor">[108]</a> ‘to judge I can’t pretend,</div>
-<div class="verse">For <em>justice</em>, I perceive, wants an <em>e</em> at the end.’</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Lord Coalstoun<a name="FNanchor_109" id="FNanchor_109"></a><a href="#Footnote_109" class="fnanchor">[109]</a> expressed his doubts and his fears;</div>
-<div class="verse">And Strichen<a name="FNanchor_110" id="FNanchor_110"></a><a href="#Footnote_110" class="fnanchor">[110]</a> threw in his <em>weel-weels</em> and <em>oh dears</em>.</div>
-<div class="verse">‘This cause much resembles the case of Mac-Harg,</div>
-<div class="verse">And should go the same way,’ says Lordie Barjarg.<a name="FNanchor_111" id="FNanchor_111"></a><a href="#Footnote_111" class="fnanchor">[111]</a></div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Let me tell you, my lords, this cause is no joke!’</div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">{127}</a></span>
-<div class="verse">Says, with a horse-laugh, my Lord Elliock.<a name="FNanchor_112" id="FNanchor_112"></a><a href="#Footnote_112" class="fnanchor">[112]</a></div>
-<div class="verse">‘To have read all the papers I pretend not to brag!’</div>
-<div class="verse">Says my Lord Gardenstone<a name="FNanchor_113" id="FNanchor_113"></a><a href="#Footnote_113" class="fnanchor">[113]</a> with a snuff and a wag.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Up rose the President,<a name="FNanchor_114" id="FNanchor_114"></a><a href="#Footnote_114" class="fnanchor">[114]</a> and an angry man was he&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">‘To alter the judgment I can never agree!’</div>
-<div class="verse">The east wing cried ‘<span class="smcap">Yes</span>,’ and the west wing cried ‘<span class="smcap">Not</span>;’</div>
-<div class="verse">And it was carried ‘<span class="smcap">Adhere</span>’<a name="FNanchor_115" id="FNanchor_115"></a><a href="#Footnote_115" class="fnanchor">[115]</a> by my lord’s casting vote.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">The cause being somewhat knotty and perplext,</div>
-<div class="verse">Their lordships did not know how they’d determine next;</div>
-<div class="verse">And as the session was to rise so soon,</div>
-<div class="verse">They superseded extract till the 12th of June.<a name="FNanchor_116" id="FNanchor_116"></a><a href="#Footnote_116" class="fnanchor">[116]</a></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-<h4>PART SECOND.</h4>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Having lost it so nigh, we prepare for the summer,</div>
-<div class="verse">And on the 12th of June presented a reclaimer;</div>
-<div class="verse">But dreading a refuse, we gave Dundas<a name="FNanchor_117" id="FNanchor_117"></a><a href="#Footnote_117" class="fnanchor">[117]</a> a fee,</div>
-<div class="verse">And though it run nigh, it was carried ‘<span class="smcap">To See</span>.’<a name="FNanchor_118" id="FNanchor_118"></a><a href="#Footnote_118" class="fnanchor">[118]</a></div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">In order to bring aid from usage bygone,</div>
-<div class="verse">The Answers were drawn by <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">quondam</i> Mess John.<a name="FNanchor_119" id="FNanchor_119"></a><a href="#Footnote_119" class="fnanchor">[119]</a></div>
-<div class="verse">He united with such art our law with the civil,</div>
-<div class="verse">That the counsel on both sides wished him to the devil.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">The cause being called, my Lord Justice-clerk,<a name="FNanchor_120" id="FNanchor_120"></a><a href="#Footnote_120" class="fnanchor">[120]</a></div>
-<div class="verse">With all due respect, began a loud bark:</div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">{128}</a></span>
-<div class="verse">He appealed to his conscience, his heart, and from thence</div>
-<div class="verse">Concluded&mdash;‘<span class="smcap">To Alter</span>,’ but to give no expense.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Lord Stonefield,<a name="FNanchor_121" id="FNanchor_121"></a><a href="#Footnote_121" class="fnanchor">[121]</a> unwilling his judgment to pother,</div>
-<div class="verse">Or to be <em>anticipate</em>, agreed with his brother:</div>
-<div class="verse">But Monboddo<a name="FNanchor_122" id="FNanchor_122"></a><a href="#Footnote_122" class="fnanchor">[122]</a> was clear the bill to enforce</div>
-<div class="verse">Because, he observed, it was the price of a horse.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Says Pitfour,<a name="FNanchor_123" id="FNanchor_123"></a><a href="#Footnote_123" class="fnanchor">[123]</a> with a wink, and his hat all a-jee,</div>
-<div class="verse">‘I remember a case in the year twenty-three&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">The Magistrates of Banff <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">contra</i> Robert Carr;</div>
-<div class="verse">I remember weel&mdash;I was then at the bar.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Likewise, my lords, in the case of Peter Caw,</div>
-<div class="verse"><i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Superflua non nocent</i> was found to be law.’</div>
-<div class="verse">Lord Kennet<a name="FNanchor_124" id="FNanchor_124"></a><a href="#Footnote_124" class="fnanchor">[124]</a> also quoted the case of one Lithgow,</div>
-<div class="verse">Where a penalty in a bill was held <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">pro non scripto</i>.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">The Lord President brought his chair to the plumb,</div>
-<div class="verse">Laid hold of the bench, and brought forward his bum;</div>
-<div class="verse">‘In these Answers, my lords, some freedoms are used,</div>
-<div class="verse">Which I could point out, provided I choosed.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">I was for the interlocutor, my lords, I admit,</div>
-<div class="verse">But am open to conviction as long’s I here do sit.</div>
-<div class="verse">To oppose your precedents, I quote a few cases;’</div>
-<div class="verse">And Tait<a name="FNanchor_125" id="FNanchor_125"></a><a href="#Footnote_125" class="fnanchor">[125]</a> <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">à priori</i>, hurried up the causes.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">He proved it as clear as the sun in the sky,</div>
-<div class="verse">That their maxims of law could not here apply;</div>
-<div class="verse">That the writing in question was neither bill nor band,</div>
-<div class="verse">But something unknown in the law of the land.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">The question&mdash;‘Adhere,’ or ‘Alter,’ being put,</div>
-<div class="verse">It was carried&mdash;‘To Alter,’ by a casting vote;</div>
-<div class="verse">Baillie then moved&mdash;‘In the bill there’s a raze;’</div>
-<div class="verse">But by this time their lordships had called a new cause.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>A few additions to the notes, in a more liberal space, will
-complete what I have to set down regarding the lawyers of the
-last age.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w500">
-<a id="illus_c_013"></a>
-<img src="images/illus_c_013.jpg" width="500" height="686" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">THE PARLIAMENT HOUSE.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap"><a href="#Page_128">Page 128.</a></span>
-
-</p></div>
-</div><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">{129}</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>LOCKHART OF COVINGTON.<a name="FNanchor_126" id="FNanchor_126"></a><a href="#Footnote_126" class="fnanchor">[126]</a></h3>
-
-<p>Lockhart used to be spoken of by all old men about the Court
-of Session as a paragon. He had been at the bar from 1722, and
-had attained the highest eminence long before going upon the
-bench, which he did at an unusually late period of life; yet so
-different were those times from the present that, according to the
-report of Sir William Macleod Bannatyne to myself in 1833,
-Lockhart realised only about a thousand a year by his exertions,
-then thought a magnificent income. The first man at the Scottish
-bar in our day is believed to gain at least six times this sum
-annually. Lockhart had an isolated house behind the Parliament
-Close, which was afterwards used as the Post-office.<a name="FNanchor_127" id="FNanchor_127"></a><a href="#Footnote_127" class="fnanchor">[127]</a> It was
-removed some years ago to make way for the extension of the
-buildings connected with the court; leaving only its coach-house
-surviving, now occupied as a broker’s shop in the Cowgate.</p>
-
-<p>Mr Lockhart and Mr Fergusson (afterwards Lord Pitfour) were
-rival barristers&mdash;agreeing, however, in their politics, which were of
-a Jacobite complexion. While the trials of the poor <em>forty-five</em>
-men were going on at Carlisle, these Scottish lawyers heard with
-indignation of the unscrupulous measures adopted to procure convictions.
-They immediately set off for Carlisle, arranging with
-each other that Lockhart should examine evidence, while Fergusson
-pleaded and addressed the jury; and offering their services, they
-were gladly accepted as counsel by the unfortunates whose trials
-were yet to take place. Each exerted his abilities, in his respective
-duties, with the greatest solicitude, but with very little effect.
-The jurors of Carlisle had been so frightened by the Highland
-army that they thought everything in the shape or hue of tartan
-a damning proof of guilt; and, in truth, there seemed to be no
-discrimination whatever exerted in inquiring into the merits of any<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">{130}</a></span>
-particular criminal; and it might have been just as fair, and much
-more convenient, to try them by wholesale or in companies. At
-length one of our barristers fell upon an ingenious expedient, which
-had a better effect than all the eloquence he had expended. He
-directed his man-servant to dress himself in some tartan habiliments,
-to skulk about for a short time in the neighbourhood of the town,
-and then permit himself to be taken. The man did so, and was
-soon brought into court, and accused of the crime of high treason,
-and would have been condemned to death had not his master
-stood up, claimed him as his servant, and proved beyond dispute
-that the supposed criminal had been in immediate attendance upon
-his person during the whole time of the Rebellion. This staggered
-the jury, and, with the aid of a little amplification from the mouth
-of the young advocate, served to make them more cautious afterwards
-in the delivery of their important fiat.</p>
-
-<p>To show the estimation in which Lockhart of Covington was
-held as an advocate, the late Lord Newton, when at the bar, wore
-his gown till it was in tatters, and at last had a new one made,
-with a fragment of the neck of the original sewed into it, whereby
-he could still make it his boast that he wore ‘Covington’s gown.’</p>
-
-
-<h3>LORD KAMES.</h3>
-
-<p>This able judge and philosopher in advance of his time&mdash;for
-such he was&mdash;is described by his biographer, Lord Woodhouselee,
-as indulging in a certain humorous playfulness, which, to those
-who knew him intimately, detracted nothing from the feeling of
-respect due to his eminent talents and virtues. To strangers, his
-lordship admits, it might convey ‘the idea of lightness.’ The
-simple fact here shadowed forth is that Lord Kames had a roughly
-playful manner, and used phrases of an ultra-eccentric character.
-Among these was a word only legitimately applicable to the female
-of the canine species. The writer of the <cite>Garland</cite> introduces this
-characteristic phrase. When his lordship found his end approaching
-very near, he took a public farewell of his brethren. I was informed
-by an ear-and-eye witness, who is certain that he could not
-be mistaken, that, after addressing them in a solemn speech and
-shaking their hands all round, in going out at the door of the court-room
-he turned about, and casting them a last look, cried in his
-usual familiar tone: ‘Fare ye a’ weel, ye bitches!’ He died eight
-days after.</p>
-
-<p>It was remarked that a person called <em>Sinkum the Cawdy</em>, who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">{131}</a></span>
-had a short and a long leg and was excessively addicted to swearing,
-used to lie in wait for Lord Kames almost every morning, and walk
-alongside of him up the street to the Parliament House. The
-mystery of Sterne’s little, flattering Frenchman, who begged so
-successfully from the ladies, was scarcely more wonderful than this
-intimacy, which arose entirely from Lord Kames’s love of the
-gossip which Sinkum made it his business to cater for him.</p>
-
-<p>These are not follies of the wise. They are only the tribute
-which great genius pays to simple nature. The serenity which
-marked the close of the existence of Kames was most creditable to
-him, though it appeared, perhaps, in somewhat whimsical forms to
-his immediate friends. For three or four days before his death, he
-was in a state of great debility. Some one coming in, and finding
-him, notwithstanding his weakness, engaged in dictating to an
-amanuensis, expressed surprise. ‘How, man,’ said the declining
-philosopher, ‘would you ha’e me stay wi’ my tongue in my cheek
-till death comes to fetch me?’</p>
-
-
-<h3>LORD HAILES.</h3>
-
-<p>When Lord Hailes died, it was a long time before any will could
-be found. The heir-male was about to take possession of his
-estates, to the exclusion of his eldest daughter. Some months
-after his lordship’s death, when it was thought that all further
-search was vain, Miss Dalrymple prepared to retire from New
-Hailes, and also from the mansion-house in New Street, having lost
-all hope of a will being discovered in her favour. Some of her
-domestics, however, were sent to lock up the house in New Street,
-and in closing the window-shutters, Lord Hailes’s will dropped out
-upon the floor from behind a panel, and was found to secure her in
-the possession of his estates, which she enjoyed for upwards of
-forty years.</p>
-
-<p>The literary habits of Lord Hailes were hardly those which
-would have been expected from his extreme nicety of phrase. The
-late Miss Dalrymple once did me the honour to show me the place
-where he wrote the most of his works&mdash;not the fine room which
-contained, and still contains, his books&mdash;no secluded boudoir, or
-den, where he could shut out the world, but the parlour fireside,
-where sat his wife and children.</p>
-
-<p>[1868.&mdash;Now that the grave has for thirty years closed over Miss
-Dalrymple, it may be allowable to tell that she was of dwarfish and
-deformed figure, while amiable and judicious above the average of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">{132}</a></span>
-her sex. Taking into view her beautiful place of residence and her
-large wealth, she remarked to a friend one day: ‘I can say, for the
-honour of man, that I never got an offer in my life.’]</p>
-
-
-<h3>LORD GARDENSTONE.</h3>
-
-<p>This judge had a predilection for pigs. One, in its juvenile
-years, took a particular fancy for his lordship, and followed him
-wherever he went, like a dog, reposing in the same bed. When it
-attained the mature years and size of swinehood, this of course was
-inconvenient. However, his lordship, unwilling to part with his
-friend, continued to let it sleep at least in the same room, and,
-when he undressed, laid his clothes upon the floor as a bed to it.
-He said that he liked it, for it kept his clothes warm till the
-morning. In his mode of living he was full of strange, eccentric
-fancies, which he seemed to adopt chiefly with a view to his health,
-which was always that of a valetudinarian.<a name="FNanchor_128" id="FNanchor_128"></a><a href="#Footnote_128" class="fnanchor">[128]</a></p>
-
-
-<h3>LORD PRESIDENT DUNDAS.</h3>
-
-<p>This distinguished judge was, in his latter years, extremely subject
-to gout, and used to fall backwards and forwards in his chair&mdash;whence
-the ungracious expression in the <cite>Garland</cite>. He used to
-characterise his six clerks thus: ‘Two of them cannot <em>read</em>, two
-of them cannot <em>write</em>, and the other two can neither <em>read</em> nor
-<em>write</em>!’ The eccentric Sir James Colquhoun was one of those who
-could not <em>read</em>. In former times it was the practice of the Lord
-President to have a sand-glass before him on the bench, with which
-he used to measure out the utmost time that could be allowed to
-a judge for the delivery of his opinion. Lord President Dundas
-would never allow a single moment after the expiration of the sand,
-and he has often been seen to shake his old-fashioned chronometer
-ominously in the faces of his brethren when their ‘ideas upon the
-subject’ began, in the words of the <cite>Garland</cite>, to get vague and
-windy.</p>
-
-
-<h3>LORD MONBODDO.</h3>
-
-<p>Lord Monboddo’s motion for the enforcement of the bill, on
-account of its representing the value of a horse, is partly an allusion
-to his Gulliverlike admiration of that animal, but more particularly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">{133}</a></span>
-to his having once embroiled himself in an action respecting a
-horse which belonged to himself. His lordship had committed the
-animal, when sick, to the charge of a farrier, with directions for the
-administration of a certain medicine. The farrier gave the medicine,
-but went beyond his commission, in as far as he mixed it in a
-liberal <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">menstruum</i> of treacle in order to make it palatable. The
-horse dying next morning, Lord Monboddo raised a prosecution
-for its value, and actually pleaded his own cause at the bar. He
-lost the case, however; and is said to have been so enraged in consequence
-at his brethren that he never afterwards sat with them
-upon the bench, but underneath amongst the clerks. The report
-of this action is exceedingly amusing, on account of the great
-quantity of Roman law quoted by the judges, and the strange
-circumstances under which the case appeared before them.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Monboddo, with all his oddities, and though generally
-hated or despised by his brethren, was by far the most learned and
-not the least upright judge of his time. His attainments in
-classical learning and in the study of the ancient philosophers
-were singular in his time in Scotland, and might have qualified him
-to shine anywhere. He was the earliest patron of one of the best
-scholars of his age, the late Professor John Hunter of St Andrews,
-who was for many years his secretary, and who chiefly wrote the
-first and best volume of his lordship’s <cite>Treatise on the Origin of
-Languages</cite>.</p>
-
-<p>The manners of Lord Monboddo were not more odd than his
-personal appearance. He looked rather like an old stuffed monkey
-dressed in a judge’s robes than anything else. His face, however,
-‘sicklied o’er’ with the pale cast of thought, bore traces of high
-intellect. So convinced is he said to have been of the truth of his
-fantastic theory of human tails, that whenever a child happened to
-be born in his house, he would watch at the chamber-door in
-order to see it in its first state, having a notion that the midwives
-pinched off the infant tails.</p>
-
-<p>There is a tradition that Lord Monboddo attended and witnessed
-the catastrophe of Captain Porteous in 1736. He had just that
-day returned from completing his law education at Leyden, and
-taken lodgings near the foot of the West Bow, where at that time
-many of the greatest lawyers resided. When the rioters came
-down the Bow with their hapless victim, Mr Burnet was roused
-from bed by the noise, came down in his night-gown with a candle
-in his hand, and stood in a sort of stupor, looking on, till the
-tragedy was concluded.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">{134}</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>PARLIAMENT HOUSE WORTHIES.</h3>
-
-<p>Scott has sketched in <cite>Peter Peebles</cite> the type of a class of crazy
-and half-crazy litigants who at all times haunt the Parliament
-House. Usually they are rustic men possessing small properties,
-such as a house and garden, which they are constantly talking
-of as their ‘subject.’ Sometimes a faded shawl and bonnet is
-associated with the case&mdash;objects to be dreaded by every good-natured
-member of the bar. But most frequently it is simple
-countrymen who become pests of this kind. That is to say, simple
-men of difficult and captious tempers, cursed with an overstrong
-sense of right or an overstrong sense of wrong, under which they
-would, by many degrees, prefer utter ruin to making the slightest
-concession to a neighbour. Ruined these men often are; and yet
-it seems ruin well bought, since they have all along had the pleasure
-of seeing themselves and their little affairs the subject of consideration
-amongst men so much above themselves in rank.</p>
-
-<p>Peebles was, as we are assured by the novelist himself, a real
-person, who frequented the Edinburgh courts of justice about
-the year 1792, and ‘whose voluminous course of litigation served
-as a sort of essay piece to most young men who were called to
-the bar.’<a name="FNanchor_129" id="FNanchor_129"></a><a href="#Footnote_129" class="fnanchor">[129]</a> Many persons recollect him as a tall, thin, slouching
-man, of homely outworn attire, understood to be a native of
-Linlithgow. Having got into law about a small house, he became
-deranged by the cause going against him, and then peace was no
-more for him on earth. He used to tell his friends that he had
-at present thirteen causes in hand, but was only going to ‘move
-in’ seven of them this session. When anxious for a consultation
-on any of his affairs, he would set out from his native burgh at
-the time when other people were going to bed, and reaching
-Edinburgh at four in the morning, would go about the town
-ringing the bells of the principal advocates, in the vain hope of
-getting one to rise and listen to him, to the infinite annoyance
-of many a poor serving-girl, and no less of the Town-guard, into
-whose hands he generally fell.</p>
-
-<p>Another specimen of the class was Campbell of Laguine, who
-had perhaps been longer at law than any man of modern times.
-He was a store-farmer in Caithness, and had immense tracts of
-land under lease. When he sold his wool, he put the price in
-his pocket (no petty sum), and came down to waste it in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">{135}</a></span>
-Court of Session. His custom&mdash;an amusing example of method
-in madness&mdash;was to pay every meal which he made at the inns
-on the road <em>double</em>, that he might have a <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">gratis</i> meal on his
-return, knowing he would not bring a cross away in his pocket
-from the courts of justice. Laguine’s figure was very extraordinary.
-His legs were like two circumflexes, both curving
-outward in the same direction; so that, relative to his body, they
-took the direction of the blade of a reaping-hook, supposing the
-trunk of his person to be the handle. These extraordinary legs
-were always attired in Highland trews, as his body was generally
-in a gray or tartan jacket, with a bonnet on his head; and duly
-appeared he at the door of the Parliament House, bearing a
-tin case, fully as big as himself, containing a plan of his farms.
-He paid his lawyers highly, but took up a great deal of their
-time. One gentleman, afterwards high in official situation,
-observed him coming up to ring his bell, and not wishing that
-he himself should throw away his time or Laguine his fee,
-directed that he should be denied. Laguine, however, made his
-way to the lady of the learned counsel, and sitting down in the
-drawing-room, went at great length into the merits of his cause,
-and exhibited his plans; and when he had expatiated for a couple
-of hours, he departed, but not without leaving a handsome fee,
-observing that he had as much satisfaction as if he had seen the
-learned counsel himself. He once told a legal friend of the writer
-that his laird and he were nearly agreed now&mdash;there was only
-about <em>ten miles of country</em> contested betwixt them! When finally
-this great cause was adjusted, his agent said: ‘Well, Laguine,
-what will ye do now?’ rashly judging that one who had, in a
-manner, lived upon law for a series of years would be at a loss
-how to dispose of himself now. ‘No difficulty there,’ answered
-Laguine; ‘I’ll dispute your account, and go to law with <em>you</em>!’
-Possessed as he was by a demon of litigation, Campbell is said to
-have been, apart from his disputes, a shrewd and sensible, and,
-moreover, an honourable and worthy man. He was one of the
-first who introduced sheep-farming into Ross-shire and Caithness,
-where he had farms as large as some whole Lowland or English
-counties; and but for litigation, he had the opportunity of
-making much money.</p>
-
-<p>A person usually called, from his trade, the Heckler was
-another Parliament House worthy. He used to work the whole
-night at his trade; then put on a black suit, curled his hair
-behind and powdered it, so as to resemble a clergyman, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">{136}</a></span>
-came forth to attend to the great business of the day at the
-Parliament House. He imagined that he was deputed by Divine
-Providence as a sort of controller of the Court of Session; but
-as if that had not been sufficient, he thought the charge of the
-General Assembly was also committed to him; and he used to
-complain that that venerable body was ‘much worse to keep in
-good order’ than the lawyers. He was a little, smart, well-brushed,
-neat-looking man, and used to talk to himself, smile, and nod with
-much vivacity. Part of his lunacy was to believe himself a clergyman;
-and it was chiefly the Teind Court which he haunted, his
-object there being to obtain an augmentation of his stipend. The
-appearance and conversation of the man were so plausible that he
-once succeeded in imposing himself upon Dr Blair as a preacher,
-and obtained permission to hold forth in the High Church on the
-ensuing Sunday. He was fortunately recognised when about to
-mount the pulpit. Some idle boys about the Parliament House,
-where he was a constant attendant, persuaded him that, as he held
-two such dignified offices as his imagination shaped out, there
-must be some salary attached to them, payable, like others upon
-the Establishment, in the Exchequer. This very nearly brought
-about a serious catastrophe; for the poor madman, finding his
-applications slighted at the Exchequer, came there one day with a
-pistol heavily loaded to shoot Mr Baird, a very worthy man, an
-officer of that court. This occasioned the Heckler being confined
-in durance vile for a long time; though, I think, he was at length
-emancipated.</p>
-
-<p>Other insane fishers in the troubled waters of the law were the
-following:</p>
-
-<p>Macduff of Ballenloan, who had two cases before the court
-at once. His success in the one depended upon his showing
-that he had capacity to manage his own affairs; and in the
-other, upon his proving himself incapable of doing so. He
-used to complain, with some apparent reason, that he lost them
-both!</p>
-
-<p>Andrew Nicol, who was at law thirty years about a <em>midden-stead</em>&mdash;<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Anglicé</i>,
-the situation of a dunghill. This person was a
-native of Kinross, a sensible-looking countryman, with a large,
-flat, blue bonnet, in which guise Kay has a very good portrait of
-him, displaying, with chuckling pride, a plan of his precious
-midden-stead. He used to frequent the Register House as well
-as the courts of law, and was encouraged in his foolish pursuits
-by the roguish clerks of that establishment, by whom he was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">{137}</a></span>
-denominated <em>Muck Andrew</em>, in allusion to the object of his
-litigation. This wretched being, after losing property and credit
-and his own senses in following a valueless phantom, died at last
-(1817) in Cupar jail, where he was placed by one of his legal
-creditors.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">{138}</a></span></p>
-<div class="figcenter w200">
-<img src="images/illus_p_138a.jpg" width="200" height="242" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-
-<h2><a name="CONVIVIALIA" id="CONVIVIALIA">CONVIVIALIA.</a></h2>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="wideverse indent6">‘Auld Reekie! wale o’ ilka toon</div>
-<div class="wideverse">That Scotland kens beneath the moon;</div>
-<div class="wideverse">Where coothy chields at e’enin’ meet,</div>
-<div class="wideverse">Their bizzin’ craigs and mous to weet,</div>
-<div class="wideverse">And blithely gar auld care gae by,</div>
-<div class="wideverse">Wi’ blinkin’ and wi’ bleerin’ eye.’</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Robert Fergusson.</span>
-</p></div></div>
-
-
-<p>Tavern dissipation, now so rare amongst the respectable classes
-of the community, formerly prevailed in Edinburgh to an
-incredible extent, and engrossed the leisure hours of all professional
-men, scarcely excepting even the most stern and dignified. No
-rank, class, or profession, indeed, formed an exception to this
-rule. Nothing was so common in the morning as to meet men
-of high rank and official dignity reeling home from a close in the
-High Street, where they had spent the night in drinking. Nor
-was it unusual to find two or three of His Majesty’s most honourable
-Lords of Council and Session mounting the bench in the
-forenoon in a crapulous state. A gentleman one night stepping
-into Johnnie Dowie’s, opened a side-door, and looking
-into the room, saw a sort of <em>agger</em> or heap of
-snoring lads upon the floor, illumined by the gleams
-of an expiring candle. ‘Wha may thae be, Mr
-Dowie?’ inquired the visitor. ‘Oh,’ quoth John in
-his usual quiet way, ‘just twa-three o’ Sir Willie’s
-drucken clerks!’&mdash;meaning the young gentlemen
-employed in Sir William Forbes’s banking-house,
-whom of all earthly mortals one would have expected
-to be observers of the decencies.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w125">
-<img src="images/illus_p_138b.jpg" width="125" height="296" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Johnnie Dowie.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>To this testimony may be added that of all
-published works descriptive of Edinburgh during
-the last century. Even in the preceding century,
-if we are to believe Taylor the Water-poet, there
-was no superabundance of sobriety in the town.
-‘The worst thing,’ says that sly humorist in his
-<cite>Journey</cite> (1623),<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">{139}</a></span> ‘was, that wine and ale were so
-scarce, and the people such misers of it, that every night, before
-I went to bed, if any man had asked me a civil question, all the
-wit in my head could not have made him a sober answer.’</p>
-
-<p>The <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">diurnal</i> of a Scottish judge<a name="FNanchor_130" id="FNanchor_130"></a><a href="#Footnote_130" class="fnanchor">[130]</a> of the beginning of the last
-century, which I have perused, presents a striking picture of the
-habits of men of business in that age. Hardly a night passes
-without some expense being incurred at taverns, not always of
-very good fame, where his lordship’s associates on the bench were
-his boon-companions in the debauch. One is at a loss to understand
-how men who drugged their understandings so habitually
-could possess any share of vital faculty for the consideration
-or transaction of business, or how they contrived to make a decent
-appearance in the hours of duty. But, however difficult to be
-accounted for, there seems no room to doubt that deep drinking
-was compatible in many instances with good business talents, and
-even application. Many living men connected with the Court of
-Session can yet look back to a juvenile period of their lives when
-some of the ablest advocates and most esteemed judges were
-noted for their convivial habits. For example, a famous counsel
-named Hay, who became a judge under the designation of Lord
-Newton, was equally remarkable as a bacchanal and as a lawyer.<a name="FNanchor_131" id="FNanchor_131"></a><a href="#Footnote_131" class="fnanchor">[131]</a>
-He considered himself as only the better fitted for business that
-he had previously imbibed six bottles of claret; and one of his
-clerks afterwards declared that the best paper he ever knew his
-lordship dictate was done after a debauch where that amount of
-liquor had fallen to his share. It was of him that the famous
-story is told of a client calling for him one day at four o’clock,
-and being surprised to find him at dinner; when, on the client
-saying to the servant that he had understood five to be Mr Hay’s
-dinner-hour&mdash;‘Oh, but, sir,’ said the man, ‘it is his <em>yesterday’s
-dinner</em>!’ M. Simond, who, in 1811, published a <cite>Tour in Scotland</cite>,
-mentions his surprise, on stepping one morning into the Parliament
-House, to find in the dignified capacity of a judge, and displaying
-all the gravity suitable to the character, the very gentleman with
-whom he had spent most of the preceding night in a fierce
-debauch. This judge was Lord Newton.</p>
-
-<p>Contemporary with this learned lord was another of marvellous
-powers of drollery, of whom it is told, as a fact too notorious at
-the time to be concealed, that he was one Sunday morning, not
-long before church-time, found asleep among the paraphernalia<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">{140}</a></span>
-of the sweeps, in a shed appropriated to the keeping of these
-articles at the end of the Town Guard-house in the High Street.
-His lordship, in staggering homeward alone from a tavern during
-the night, had tumbled into this place, where consciousness did
-not revisit him till next day. Of another group of clever but
-over-convivial lawyers of that age, it is related that, having set
-to wine and cards on a Saturday evening, they were so cheated
-out of all sense of time that the night passed before they thought
-of separating. Unless they are greatly belied, the people passing
-along Picardy Place next forenoon, on their way to church, were
-perplexed by seeing a door open, and three gentlemen issue forth,
-in all the disorder to be expected after a night of drunken vigils,
-while a fourth, in his dressing-gown, held the door in one hand
-and a lighted candle in the other, by way of showing them out!<a name="FNanchor_132" id="FNanchor_132"></a><a href="#Footnote_132" class="fnanchor">[132]</a></p>
-
-<p>The <em>High Jinks</em> of Counsellor Pleydell, in <cite>Guy Mannering</cite>,
-must have prepared many for these curious traits of a bypast
-age; and Scott has further illustrated the subject by telling, in
-his notes to that novel, an anecdote, which he appears to have
-had upon excellent authority, respecting the elder President
-Dundas of Arniston, father of Lord Melville. ‘It had been
-thought very desirable, while that distinguished lawyer was king’s
-counsel, that his assistance should be obtained in drawing up an
-appeal case, which, as occasion for such writings then rarely
-occurred, was held to be a matter of great nicety. The solicitor
-employed for the appellant, attended by my informant, acting
-as his clerk, went to the Lord Advocate’s chambers in the Fishmarket
-Close, as I think. It was Saturday at noon, the court was
-just dismissed, the Lord Advocate had changed his dress and
-booted himself, and his servant and horses were at the foot of the
-close to carry him to Arniston. It was scarcely possible to get
-him to listen to a word respecting business. The wily agent,
-however, on pretence of asking one or two questions, which would
-not detain him half-an-hour, drew his lordship, who was no less
-an eminent <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">bon-vivant</i> than a lawyer of unequalled talent, to take
-a whet at a celebrated tavern, when the learned counsel became
-gradually involved in a spirited discussion of the law points of the
-case. At length it occurred to him that he might as well ride to
-Arniston in the cool of the evening. The horses were directed
-to be put into the stable, but not to be unsaddled. Dinner was
-ordered, the law was laid aside for a time, and the bottle circulated<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">{141}</a></span>
-very freely. At nine o’clock at night, after he had been honouring
-Bacchus for so many hours, the Lord Advocate ordered his horses
-to be unsaddled&mdash;paper, pen, and ink were brought&mdash;he began
-to dictate the appeal case, and continued at his task till four
-o’clock the next morning. By next day’s post the solicitor sent
-the case to London&mdash;a <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">chef-d’œuvre</i> of its kind; and in which, my
-informant assured me, it was not necessary, on revisal, to correct
-five words.’</p>
-
-<p>It was not always that business and pleasure were so successfully
-united. It is related that an eminent lawyer, who was
-confined to his room by indisposition, having occasion for the
-attendance of his clerk at a late hour, in order to draw up a
-paper required on an emergency next morning, sent for and
-found him at his usual tavern. The man, though remarkable
-for the preservation of his faculties under severe application to
-the bottle, was on this night further gone than usual. He was
-able, however, to proceed to his master’s bedroom, and there
-take his seat at the desk with the appearance of a sufficiently
-collected mind, so that the learned counsel, imagining nothing
-more wrong than usual, began to dictate from his couch. This
-went on for two or three hours, till, the business being finished,
-the barrister drew his curtain&mdash;to behold <em>Jamie</em> lost in a profound
-sleep upon the table, with the paper still in virgin whiteness
-before him!</p>
-
-<p>One of the most notable jolly fellows of the last age was
-James Balfour, an accountant, usually called <em>Singing Jamie
-Balfour</em>, on account of his fascinating qualities as a vocalist.
-There used to be a portrait of him in the Leith Golf-house,
-representing him in the act of commencing the favourite song
-of <em>When I ha’e a saxpence under my thoom</em>, with the suitable
-attitude and a merriness of countenance justifying the traditionary
-account of the man. Of Jacobite leanings, he is said to have
-sung <cite>The wee German lairdie</cite>, <cite>Awa, Whigs, awa</cite>, and <cite>The sow’s
-tail to Geordie</cite> with a degree of zest which there was no resisting.</p>
-
-<p>Report speaks of this person as an amiable, upright, and able
-man; so clever in business matters that he could do as much
-in one hour as another man in three; always eager to quench
-and arrest litigation rather than to promote it; and consequently
-so much esteemed professionally that he could get business
-whenever he chose to undertake it, which, however, he only did
-when he felt himself in need of money. Nature had given him
-a robust constitution, which enabled him to see out three sets of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">{142}</a></span>
-boon-companions, but, after all, gave way before he reached
-sixty. His custom, when anxious to repair the effects of intemperance,
-was to wash his head and hands in cold water; this, it
-is said, made him quite cool and collected almost immediately.
-Pleasure being so predominant an object in his life, it was thought
-surprising that at his death he was found in possession of some
-little money.</p>
-
-<p>The powers of Balfour as a singer of the Scotch songs of all
-kinds, tender and humorous, are declared to have been marvellous;
-and he had a happy gift of suiting them to occasions. Being a
-great peacemaker, he would often accomplish his purpose by
-introducing some ditty pat to the purpose, and thus dissolving
-all rancour in a hearty laugh. Like too many of our countrymen,
-he had a contempt for foreign music. One evening, in a company
-where an Italian vocalist of eminence was present, he professed to
-give a song in the manner of that country. Forth came a ridiculous
-cantata to the tune of <cite>Aiken Drum</cite>, beginning: ‘There was
-a wife in Peebles,’ which the wag executed with all the proper
-graces, shakes, and appoggiaturas, making his friends almost expire
-with suppressed laughter at the contrast between the style of
-singing and the ideas conveyed in the song. At the conclusion,
-their mirth was doubled by the foreigner saying very simply:
-‘De music be very fine, but I no understand de words.’ A lady,
-who lived in the Parliament Close, told a friend of mine that she
-was wakened from her sleep one summer morning by a noise as
-of singing, when, going to the window to learn what was the
-matter, guess her surprise at seeing Jamie Balfour and some of
-his boon-companions (evidently fresh from their wonted orgies),
-singing <cite>The king shall enjoy his own again</cite>, on their knees,
-around King Charles’s statue! One of Balfour’s favourite haunts
-was a humble kind of tavern called <em>Jenny Ha’s</em>, opposite to
-Queensberry House, where, it is said, Gay had boosed during his
-short stay in Edinburgh, and to which it was customary for
-gentlemen to adjourn from dinner-parties, in order to indulge in
-claret from the butt, free from the usual domestic restraints.
-Jamie’s potations here were principally of what was called <em>cappie
-ale</em>&mdash;that is, ale in little wooden bowls&mdash;with wee thochts of
-brandy in it. But, indeed, no one could be less exclusive than
-he as to liquors. When he heard a bottle drawn in any house
-he happened to be in, and observed the cork to give an unusually
-smart report, he would call out: ‘Lassie, gi’e me a glass o’ <em>that</em>;’
-as knowing that, whatever it was, it must be good of its kind.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">{143}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Sir Walter Scott says, in one of his droll little missives to his
-printer Ballantyne: ‘When the press does not follow me, I get
-on slowly and ill, and put myself in mind of Jamie Balfour, who
-could run, when he could not stand still.’ He here alludes to a
-matter of fact, which the following anecdote will illustrate: Jamie,
-in going home late from a debauch, happened to tumble into the
-pit formed for the foundation of a
-house in James’s Square. A gentleman
-passing heard his complaint, and
-going up to the spot, was entreated
-by our hero to help him out.
-‘What would be the use of helping
-you out,’ said the passer-by, ‘when
-you could not stand though you
-<em>were</em> out?’ ‘Very true, perhaps;
-yet if you help me up, I’ll <em>run</em> you
-to the Tron Kirk for a bottle of
-claret.’ Pleased with his humour,
-the gentleman placed him upon his
-feet, when instantly he set off for
-the Tron Church at a pace distancing
-all ordinary competition; and
-accordingly he won the race, though,
-at the conclusion, he had to sit down
-on the steps of the church, being
-quite unable to stand. After taking
-a minute or two to recover his
-breath&mdash;‘Well, another race to
-Fortune’s for another bottle of
-claret!’ Off he went to the tavern
-in question, in the Stamp-office
-Close, and this bet he gained also.
-The claret, probably with continuations,
-was discussed in Fortune’s; and the end of the story is,
-Balfour sent his new friend home in a chair, utterly done up, at
-an early hour in the morning.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w200">
-<img src="images/illus_p_143.jpg" width="200" height="404" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Stamp-office Close.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>It is hardly surprising that habits carried to such an extravagance
-amongst gentlemen should have in some small degree
-affected the fairer and purer part of creation also. It is an old
-story in Edinburgh that three ladies had one night a merry-meeting
-in a tavern near the Cross, where they sat till a very
-late hour. Ascending at length to the street, they scarcely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">{144}</a></span>
-remembered where they were; but as it was good moonlight,
-they found little difficulty in walking along till they came to the
-Tron Church. Here, however, an obstacle occurred. The moon,
-shining high in the south, threw the shadow of the steeple directly
-across the street from the one side to the other; and the ladies,
-being no more clear-sighted than they were clear-headed, mistook
-this for a broad and rapid river, which they would require to cross
-before making further way. In this delusion, they sat down upon
-the brink of the imaginary stream, deliberately took off their shoes
-and stockings, <em>kilted</em> their lower garments, and proceeded to wade
-through to the opposite side; after which, resuming their shoes
-and stockings, they went on their way rejoicing, as before!
-Another anecdote (from an aged nobleman) exhibits the bacchanalian
-powers of our ancestresses in a different light. During the
-rising of 1715, the officers of the crown in Edinburgh, having
-procured some important intelligence respecting the motions and
-intentions of the Jacobites, resolved upon despatching the same
-to London by a faithful courier. Of this the party whose interests
-would have been so materially affected got notice; and that
-evening, as the messenger (a man of rank) was going down the
-High Street, with the intention of mounting his horse in the
-Canongate and immediately setting off, he met two tall, handsome
-ladies, in full dress, and wearing black velvet masks, who accosted
-him with a very easy demeanour and a winning sweetness of
-voice. Without hesitating as to the quality of these damsels, he
-instantly proposed to treat them with a pint of claret at a
-neighbouring tavern; but they said that, instead of accepting his
-kindness, they were quite willing to treat <em>him</em> to his heart’s
-content. They then adjourned to the tavern, and sitting down,
-the whole three drank plenteously, merrily, and long, so that the
-courier seemed at last to forget entirely the mission upon which
-he was sent, and the danger of the papers which he had about
-his person. After a pertinacious debauch of several hours, the
-luckless messenger was at length fairly drunk under the table;
-and it is needless to add that the fair nymphs then proceeded
-to strip him of his papers, decamped, and were no more heard
-of; though it is but justice to the Scottish ladies of that period
-to say that the robbers were generally believed at the time to
-be young men disguised in women’s clothes.<a name="FNanchor_133" id="FNanchor_133"></a><a href="#Footnote_133" class="fnanchor">[133]</a></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">{145}</a></span></p>
-<p>The custom which prevailed among ladies, as well as gentlemen,
-of resorting to what were called <em>oyster-cellars</em>, is in itself a striking
-indication of the state of manners during the last century. In
-winter, when the evening had set in, a party of the most fashionable
-people in town, collected by appointment, would adjourn in
-carriages to one of those abysses of darkness and comfort, called
-in Edinburgh <em>laigh shops</em>, where they proceeded to regale themselves
-with raw oysters and porter, arranged in huge dishes upon
-a coarse table, in a dingy room, lighted by tallow candles. The
-rudeness of the feast, and the vulgarity of the circumstances under
-which it took place, seem to have given a zest to its enjoyment,
-with which more refined banquets could not have been accompanied.
-One of the chief features of an oyster-cellar entertainment was
-that full scope was given to the conversational powers of the
-company. Both ladies and gentlemen indulged, without restraint,
-in sallies the merriest and the wittiest; and a thousand remarks
-and jokes, which elsewhere would have been suppressed as improper,
-were here sanctified by the oddity of the scene, and appreciated
-by the most dignified and refined. After the table was cleared of
-the oysters and porter, it was customary to introduce brandy or
-rum-punch&mdash;according to the pleasure of the ladies&mdash;after which
-dancing took place; and when the female part of the assemblage
-thought proper to retire, the gentlemen again sat down, or
-adjourned to another tavern to crown the pleasures of the evening
-with unlimited debauch. It is not (1824) more than thirty years
-since the late Lord Melville, the Duchess of Gordon, and some
-other persons of distinction, who happened to meet in town after
-many years of absence, made up an oyster-cellar party, by way
-of a frolic, and devoted one winter evening to the revival of this
-almost forgotten entertainment of their youth.<a name="FNanchor_134" id="FNanchor_134"></a><a href="#Footnote_134" class="fnanchor">[134]</a></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">{146}</a></span></p>
-<p>It seems difficult to reconcile all these things with the staid
-and somewhat square-toed character which our country has obtained
-amongst her neighbours. The fact seems to be that a kind of
-Laodicean principle is observable in Scotland, and we oscillate
-between a rigour of manners on the one hand, and a laxity on
-the other, which alternately acquire an apparent paramouncy. In
-the early part of the last century, rigour was in the ascendant;
-but not to the prevention of a respectable minority of the free-and-easy,
-who kept alive the flame of conviviality with no small
-degree of success. In the latter half of the century&mdash;a dissolute
-era all over civilised Europe&mdash;the minority became the majority,
-and the characteristic sobriety of the nation’s manners was only
-traceable in certain portions of society. Now we are in a sober,
-perhaps tending to a rigorous stage once more. In Edinburgh,
-seventy years ago (1847), intemperance was the rule to such an
-degree that exception could hardly be said to exist. Men appeared
-little in the drawing-room in those days; when they did, not
-infrequently their company had better have been dispensed with.
-When a gentleman gave an entertainment, it was thought necessary
-that he should press the bottle as far as it could be made to go.
-A particularly good fellow would lock his outer door to prevent
-any guest of dyspeptic tendencies or sober inclinations from
-escaping. Some were so considerate as to provide shake-down
-beds for a general bivouac in a neighbouring apartment. When
-gentlemen were obliged to appear at assemblies where decency
-was enforced, they of course wore their best attire. This it was
-customary to change for something less liable to receive damage,
-ere going, as they usually did, to conclude the evening by a
-scene of conviviality. Drinking entered into everything. As Sir
-Alexander Boswell has observed:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘O’er draughts of wine the beau would moan his love,</div>
-<div class="verse">O’er draughts of wine the cit his bargain drove,</div>
-<div class="verse">O’er draughts of wine the writer penned the will,</div>
-<div class="verse">And legal wisdom counselled o’er a gill.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Then was the time when men, despising and neglecting the company<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">{147}</a></span>
-of women, always so civilising in its influence, would yet
-half-kill themselves with bumpers in order, as the phrase went, to
-<em>save them</em>. Drinking to save the ladies is said to have originated
-with a catch-club, which issued tickets for gratuitous concerts.
-Many tickets with the names of ladies being prepared, one was
-taken up and the name announced. Any member present was
-at liberty to toast the health of this lady in a bumper, and this
-ensured her ticket being reserved for her use. If no one came
-forward to honour her name in this manner, the lady was said to
-be damned, and her ticket was thrown under the table. Whether
-from this origin or not, the practice is said to have ultimately had
-the following form. One gentleman would give out the name of
-some lady as the most beautiful object in creation, and, by way
-of attesting what he said, drink one bumper. Another champion
-would then enter the field, and offer to prove that a certain other
-lady, whom he named, was a great deal more beautiful than she
-just mentioned&mdash;supporting his assertion by drinking two bumpers.
-Then the other would rise up, declare this to be false, and in
-proof of his original statement, as well as by way of turning the
-scale upon his opponent, drink four bumpers. Not deterred or
-repressed by this, the second man would reiterate, and conclude
-by drinking as much as the challenger, who would again start up
-and drink eight bumpers; and so on, in geometrical progression,
-till one or other of the heroes fell under the table; when of course
-the fair Delia of the survivor was declared the queen supreme
-of beauty by all present. I have seen a sonnet addressed
-on the morning after such a scene of contention to the lady
-concerned by the unsuccessful hero, whose brains appear to have
-been woefully muddled by the claret he had drunk in her behalf.</p>
-
-<p>It was not merely in the evenings that taverns were then
-resorted to. There was a petty treat, called a ‘meridian,’ which
-no man of that day thought himself able to dispense with; and
-this was generally indulged in at a tavern. ‘A cauld cock and
-a feather’ was the metaphorical mode of calling for a glass of
-brandy and a bunch of raisins, which was the favourite regale of
-many. Others took a glass of whisky, some few a lunch. Scott
-very amusingly describes, from his own observation, the manner
-in which the affair of the meridian was gone about by the writers
-and clerks belonging to the Parliament House. ‘If their proceedings
-were watched, they might be seen to turn fidgety about
-the hour of noon, and exchange looks with each other from their
-separate desks, till at length some one of formal and dignified<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">{148}</a></span>
-presence assumed the honour of leading the band; when away
-they went, threading the crowd like a string of wild-fowl, crossed
-the square or close, and following each other into the [John’s]
-coffee-house, drank the meridian, which was placed ready at the
-bar. This they did day by day; and though they did not speak
-to each other, they seemed to attach a certain degree of sociability
-to performing the ceremony in company.’</p>
-
-<p>It was in the evening, of course, that the tavern debaucheries
-assumed their proper character of unpalliated fierceness and
-destructive duration. In the words of Robert Fergusson:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="wideverse">‘Now night, that’s cunzied chief for fun,</div>
-<div class="wideverse">Is with her usual rites begun.</div>
-<div class="wideverse indent8">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
-<div class="wideverse indent8">Some to porter, some to punch,</div>
-<div class="wideverse">Retire; while noisy ten-hours’ drum</div>
-<div class="wideverse">Gars a’ the trades gang danderin’ hame.</div>
-<div class="wideverse">Now, mony a club, jocose and free,</div>
-<div class="wideverse">Gi’e a’ to merriment and glee;</div>
-<div class="wideverse">Wi’ sang and glass they fley the power</div>
-<div class="wideverse">O’ care, that wad harass the hour.</div>
-<div class="wideverse indent8">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</div>
-<div class="wideverse indent8">Chief, <span class="smcap">O Cape</span>! we crave thy aid,</div>
-<div class="wideverse">To get our cares and poortith laid.</div>
-<div class="wideverse">Sincerity and genius true,</div>
-<div class="wideverse">O’ knights have ever been the due.</div>
-<div class="wideverse">Mirth, music, porter deepest-dyed,</div>
-<div class="wideverse">Are never here to worth denied.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>All the shops in the town were then shut at eight o’clock; and
-from that hour till ten&mdash;when the drum of the Town-guard
-announced at once a sort of license for the deluging of the streets
-with nuisances,<a name="FNanchor_135" id="FNanchor_135"></a><a href="#Footnote_135" class="fnanchor">[135]</a> and a warning of the inhabitants home to their
-beds&mdash;unrestrained scope was given to the delights of the table.
-No tradesman thought of going home to his family till after he
-had spent an hour or two at his club. This was universal and
-unfailing. So lately as 1824, I knew something of an old-fashioned
-tradesman who nightly shut his shop at eight o’clock, and then
-adjourned with two old friends, who called upon him at that hour,
-to a quiet old public-house on the opposite side of the way,
-where they each drank precisely one bottle of Edinburgh ale, ate
-precisely one halfpenny roll, and got upon their legs precisely
-at the first stroke of ten o’clock.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">{149}</a></span></p>
-<p>The <span class="smcap">Cape Club</span> alluded to by Fergusson aspired to a refined
-and classical character, comprising amongst its numerous members
-many men of talents, as well as of private worth. Fergusson
-himself was a member; as were Mr Thomas Sommers, his friend
-and biographer; Mr Woods, a player of eminence on the humble
-boards of Edinburgh, and an intimate companion of the poet;
-and Mr Runciman the painter. The name of the club had its
-foundation in one of those weak jokes such as ‘gentle dullness
-ever loves.’ A person who lived in the Calton was in the custom
-of spending an hour or two every evening with one or two city
-friends, and being sometimes detained till after the regular period
-when the Netherbow Port was shut, it occasionally happened that
-he had either to remain in the city all night, or was under the
-necessity of bribing the porter who attended the gate. This
-difficult <em>pass</em>&mdash;partly on account of the rectangular corner which
-he turned immediately on getting out of the Port, as he went
-homewards down Leith Wynd&mdash;the Calton burgher facetiously
-called <em>doubling the Cape</em>; and as it was customary with his friends
-every evening when they assembled to inquire ‘how he turned
-the Cape last night,’ and indeed to make that circumstance and
-that phrase, night after night, the subject of their conversation
-and amusement, ‘the Cape’ in time became so assimilated with
-their very existence that they adopted it as a title; and it was
-retained as such by the organised club into which shortly after
-they thought proper to form themselves. The Cape Club owned
-a regular institution from 1763. It will scarcely be credited in
-the present day that a jest of the above nature could keep an
-assemblage of rational citizens, and, we may add, professed wits,
-merry after a thousand repetitions. Yet it really is true that
-the patron-jests of many a numerous and enlightened association
-were no better than this, and the greater part of them worse.
-As instance the following:</p>
-
-<p>There was the <span class="smcap">Antemanum Club</span>, of which the members used to
-boast of the state of their hands, <em>before-hand</em>, in playing at ‘Brag.’
-The members were all men of respectability, some of them gentlemen
-of fortune. They met every Saturday and dined. It was at
-first a purely convivial club; but latterly, the Whig party gaining
-a sort of preponderance, it degenerated into a political association.</p>
-
-<p>The <span class="smcap">Pious Club</span> was composed of decent, orderly citizens, who
-met every night, Sundays not excepted, in a <em>pie-house</em>, and whose
-joke was the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">équivoque</i> of these expressions&mdash;similar in sound, but
-different in signification. The agreeable uncertainty as to whether<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">{150}</a></span>
-their name arose from their <em>piety</em>, or the circumstance of their
-eating <em>pies</em>, kept the club hearty for many years. At their Sunday
-meetings the conversation usually took a serious turn&mdash;perhaps
-upon the sermons which they had
-respectively heard during the day:
-this they considered as rendering
-their title of <em>Pious</em> not altogether
-undeserved. Moreover, they were
-all, as the saying was, <em>ten o’clock
-men</em>, and of good character. Fifteen
-persons were considered as
-constituting a full night. The
-whole allowable debauch was a gill
-of toddy to each person, which was
-drunk, like wine, out of a common
-decanter. One of the members of
-the Pious Club was a Mr Lind, a
-man of at least twenty-five stone
-weight, immoderately fond of good
-eating and drinking. It was generally
-believed of him that were all
-the oxen he had devoured ranged in
-a line, they would reach from the Watergate to the Castle-hill, and
-that the wine he had drunk would swim a seventy-four. His most
-favourite viand was a very strange one&mdash;salmon skins. When
-dining anywhere, with salmon on the table, he made no scruple of
-raking all the skins off the plates of the rest of the guests. He
-had only one toast, from which he never varied: ‘Merry days to
-honest fellows.’ A Mr Drummond was esteemed poet-laureate to
-this club. He was a facetious, clever man. Of his poetical talents,
-take a specimen in the following lines on Lind:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘In going to dinner, he ne’er lost his way,</div>
-<div class="verse">Though often, when done, he was carted away.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>He made the following impromptu on an associate of small figure
-and equally small understanding, who had been successful in the
-world:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘O thou of genius slow,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Weak by nature;</div>
-<div class="verse">A rich fellow,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">But a poor creature.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<div class="figcenter w200">
-<img src="images/illus_p_150.jpg" width="200" height="249" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">The Watergate.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The <span class="smcap">Spendthrift Club</span> took its name from the extravagance of
-the members in spending no less a sum than fourpence halfpenny<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">{151}</a></span>
-each night! It consisted of respectable citizens of the middle
-class, and continued in 1824 to exist in a modified state. Its
-meetings, originally nightly, were then reduced to four a week.
-The men used to play at whist for a halfpenny&mdash;one, two, three&mdash;no
-rubbers; but latterly they had, with their characteristic
-extravagance, doubled the stake! Supper originally cost no less
-than twopence; and half a bottle of strong ale, with a dram, stood
-every member twopence halfpenny; to all which sumptuous profusion
-might be added still another halfpenny, which was given to
-the maid-servant&mdash;in all, fivepence! Latterly the dram had been
-disused; but such had been the general increase, either in the
-cost or the quantity of the indulgences, that the usual nightly
-expense was ultimately from a shilling to one and fourpence. The
-winnings at whist were always thrown into the reckoning. A large
-two-quart bottle or tappit-hen was introduced by the landlady,
-with a small measure, out of which the company helped themselves;
-and the members made up their own bill with chalk upon the table.
-In 1824, in the recollection of the senior members, some of whom
-were of fifty years’ standing, the house was kept by the widow of
-a Lieutenant Hamilton of the army, who recollected having
-attended the theatre in the Tennis Court at Holyroodhouse, when
-the play was the <cite>Spanish Friar</cite>, and when many of the members
-of the <em>Union Parliament</em> were present in the house.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w250">
-<img src="images/illus_p_151.jpg" width="250" height="391" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Tappit-hen.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The <span class="smcap">Boar Club</span> was an association of a different sort, consisting
-chiefly of wild, fashionable young men; and the place of meeting
-was not in any of the snug profundities of the Old Town,
-but in a modern tavern in Shakspeare Square, kept by
-one Daniel Hogg. The <em>joke</em> of this club consisted in
-the supposition that all the members were <em>boars</em>, that
-their room was a <em>sty</em>, that their talk was <em>grunting</em>,
-and in the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">double-entendre</i> of the small piece of stone-ware
-which served as a repository of all the fines being
-a <em>pig</em>. Upon this they lived twenty years. I have, at
-some expense of eyesight and with no small exertion of
-patience, perused the soiled and blotted records of the
-club, which in 1824 were preserved by an old vintner,
-whose house was their last place of meeting; and
-the result has been the following memorabilia.
-The Boar Club commenced its meetings in 1787,
-and the original members were J. G. C. Schetky,
-a German musician; David Shaw; Archibald
-Crawfuird; Patrick Robertson; Robert Aldridge,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">{152}</a></span>
-a famed pantomimist and dancing-master; James Neilson;
-and Luke Cross. Some of these were remarkable men, in particular
-Mr Schetky. He had come to Edinburgh about the beginning of
-the reign of George III. He used to tell that on alighting at
-Ramsay’s inn, opposite the Cowgate Port, his first impression of
-the city was so unfavourable that he was on the point of leaving
-it again without further acquaintance, and was only prevented
-from doing so by the solicitations of his fellow-traveller, who was
-not so much alarmed at the dingy and squalid appearance of this
-part of Auld Reekie.<a name="FNanchor_136" id="FNanchor_136"></a><a href="#Footnote_136" class="fnanchor">[136]</a> He was first employed at St Cecilia’s Hall,
-where the concerts were attended by all the ‘rank, beauty, and
-fashion’ of which Edinburgh could then boast, and where, besides
-the professional performers, many amateurs of great musical skill
-and enthusiasm, such as Mr Tytler of Woodhouselee,<a name="FNanchor_137" id="FNanchor_137"></a><a href="#Footnote_137" class="fnanchor">[137]</a> were pleased
-to exhibit themselves for the entertainment of their friends, who
-alone were admitted by tickets. Mr Schetky composed the march
-of a body of volunteers called the Edinburgh Defensive Band,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">{153}</a></span>
-which was raised out of the citizens of Edinburgh at the time of
-the American war, and was commanded by the eminent advocate
-Crosbie. One of the verses to which the march was set may be
-given as an admirable specimen of <em>militia poetry</em>:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Colonel Crosbie takes the field;</div>
-<div class="verse">To France and Spain he will not yield;</div>
-<div class="verse">But still maintains his high command</div>
-<div class="verse">At the head of the noble Defensive Band.’<a name="FNanchor_138" id="FNanchor_138"></a><a href="#Footnote_138" class="fnanchor">[138]</a></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<div class="figcenter w500">
-<a id="illus_c_014"></a>
-<img src="images/illus_c_014.jpg" width="500" height="658" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">‘AULD REEKIE’<br />
-from Largo.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap"><a href="#Page_152">Page 152.</a></span>
-
-</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Mr Schetky was primarily concerned in the founding of the Boar
-Club. He was in the habit of meeting every night with Mr
-Aldridge and one or two other professional men, or gentlemen
-who affected the society of such persons, in Hogg’s tavern; and it
-was the host’s name that suggested the idea of calling their society
-the ‘<em>Boar</em> Club.’ Their laws were first written down in proper
-form in 1790. They were to meet every evening at seven o’clock;
-each <em>boar</em>, on his entry, to contribute a halfpenny to the <em>pig</em>. Mr
-Aldridge was to be perpetual <em>Grand-boar</em>, with Mr Schetky for his
-deputy; and there were other officers, entitled Secretary, Treasurer,
-and Procurator-fiscal. A fine of one halfpenny was imposed upon
-every person who called one of his brother-boars by his proper out-of-club
-name&mdash;the term ‘sir’ being only allowed. The entry-moneys,
-fines, and other pecuniary acquisitions were hoarded for a
-grand annual dinner. The laws were revised in 1799, when some
-new officials were constituted, such as Poet-laureate, Champion,
-Archbishop, and Chief-grunter. The fines were then rendered
-exceedingly severe, and in their exaction no one met with any
-mercy, as it was the interest of all the rest that the <em>pig</em> should
-bring forth as plenteous a <em>farrow</em> as possible at the grand dinner-day.
-This practice at length occasioning a violent insurrection in
-the <em>sty</em>, the whole fraternity was broken up, and never again
-returned to ‘wallow in the mire.’</p>
-
-<p>The <span class="smcap">Hell-fire Club</span>, a terrible and infamous association of wild
-young men about the beginning of the last century, met in various
-profound places throughout Edinburgh, where they practised
-orgies not more fit for seeing the light than the Eleusinian<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">{154}</a></span>
-Mysteries. I have conversed with old people who had seen the
-last worn-out members of the Hell-fire Club, which in the country
-is to this day believed to have been an association in compact with
-the Prince of Darkness.</p>
-
-<p>Many years afterwards, a set of persons associated for the purpose
-of purchasing goods condemned by the Court of Exchequer.
-For what reason I cannot tell, they called themselves the Hell-fire
-Club, and their president was named the Devil. My old friend,
-Henry Mackenzie, whose profession was that of an attorney before
-the Court of Exchequer, wrote me a note on this subject, in which
-he says very naïvely: ‘In my youngest days, I knew the Devil.’</p>
-
-<p>The <span class="smcap">Sweating Club</span> flourished about the middle of the last
-century. They resembled the Mohocks mentioned in the <cite>Spectator</cite>.
-After intoxicating themselves, it was their custom to sally forth at
-midnight, and attack whomsoever they met upon the streets. Any
-luckless wight who happened to fall into their hands was chased,
-jostled, pinched, and pulled about, till he not only perspired, but
-was ready to drop down and die with exhaustion. Even so late as
-the early years of this century, it was unsafe to walk the streets of
-Edinburgh at night on account of the numerous drunken parties
-of young men who then reeled about, bent on mischief, at all hours,
-and from whom the Town-guard were unable to protect the sober
-citizen.</p>
-
-<p>A club called the <span class="smcap">Industrious Company</span> may serve to show how
-far the system of drinking was carried by our fathers. It was a
-sort of joint-stock company, formed by a numerous set of porter-drinkers,
-who thought fit to club towards the formation of a stock
-of that liquor, which they might partly profit by retailing, and
-partly by the opportunity thus afforded them of drinking their
-own particular tipple at the wholesale price. Their cellars were
-in the Royal Bank Close, where they met every night at eight
-o’clock. Each member paid at his entry £5, and took his turn
-monthly of the duty of superintending the general business of the
-company. But the curse of joint-stock companies&mdash;negligence on
-the part of the managers&mdash;ultimately occasioned the ruin of the
-Industrious Company.</p>
-
-<p>About 1790, a club of first-rate citizens used to meet each
-Saturday afternoon for a <em>country dinner</em>, in a tavern which still
-exists in the village of Canonmills, a place now involved within
-the limits of the New Town. To quote a brief memoir on the
-subject, handed to me many years ago by a veteran friend, who
-was a good deal of the <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">laudator temporis acti</i>:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">{155}</a></span> ‘The club was
-pointedly attended; it was too good a thing to miss being present
-at. They kept their own claret, and managed all matters as to
-living perfectly well.’ Originally the fraternity were contented
-with a very humble room; but in time they got an addition built
-to the house for their accommodation, comprehending one good-sized
-room with two windows, in one of which is a pane containing
-an olive-dove; in the other, one containing a wheat-sheaf, both
-engraved with a diamond. ‘This,’ continues Mr Johnston, ‘was
-the doing of William Ramsay [banker], then residing at Warriston&mdash;the
-tongue of the trump to the club. Here he took great
-delight to drink claret on the Saturdays, though he had such a
-paradise near at hand to retire to; but then there were Jamie
-Torry, Jamie Dickson, Gilbert Laurie, and other good old council
-friends with whom to crack [that is, chat]; and the said cracks
-were of more value in this dark, unseemly place than the enjoyments
-of home. I never pass these two engraved panes of glass
-but I venerate them, and wonder that, in the course of fifty years,
-they have not been destroyed, either from drunkenness within or
-from misrule without.’<a name="FNanchor_139" id="FNanchor_139"></a><a href="#Footnote_139" class="fnanchor">[139]</a></p>
-
-<p>Edinburgh boasted of many other associations of the like nature,
-which it were perhaps best merely to enumerate in a tabular form,
-with the appropriate joke opposite each, as</p>
-
-<div class="center">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Dirty Club</span></td><td align="left" colspan="2">No gentleman to appear in clean linen.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Black Wigs</span></td><td align="left" colspan="2">Members wore black wigs.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Odd Fellows</span></td><td align="left" colspan="2">Members wrote their names upside down.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Bonnet Lairds</span></td><td align="left" colspan="2">Members wore blue bonnets.</td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"><span class="smcap">The Doctors of Faculty Club</span></td><td align="left"><span class="xxlargebracket">{</span></td><td align="left">Members regarded as Physicians, and so
-styled; wearing, moreover, gowns and wigs.</td></tr>
-</table></div>
-
-<p>And so forth. There were the <span class="smcap">Caledonian Club</span> and the <span class="smcap">Union
-Club</span>, of whose foundation history speaketh not. There was the
-<span class="smcap">Wig Club</span>, the president of which wore a wig of extraordinary
-materials, which had belonged to the Moray family for three
-generations, and each new <em>entrant</em> of which drank to the fraternity
-in a quart of claret without pulling bit. The Wigs usually drank
-twopenny ale, on which it was possible to get satisfactorily drunk
-for a groat; and with this they ate souters’ clods,<a name="FNanchor_140" id="FNanchor_140"></a><a href="#Footnote_140" class="fnanchor">[140]</a> a coarse,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">{156}</a></span>
-lumpish kind of loaf.<a name="FNanchor_141" id="FNanchor_141"></a><a href="#Footnote_141" class="fnanchor">[141]</a> There was also the <span class="smcap">Brownonian System
-Club</span>, which, oddly enough, bore no reference to the license which
-that system had given for a phlogistic regimen&mdash;for it was a douce
-citizenly fraternity, venerating ten o’clock as a sacred principle&mdash;but
-in honour of the founder of that system, who had been a
-constituent member.</p>
-
-<p>The <span class="smcap">Lawnmarket Club</span> was composed chiefly of the woollen-traders
-of that street, a set of whom met every morning about
-seven o’clock, and walked down to the Post-office, where they
-made themselves acquainted with the news of the morning. After
-a plentiful discussion of the news, they adjourned to a public-house
-and got a dram of brandy. As a sort of ironical and self-inflicted
-satire upon the strength of their potations, they sometimes
-called themselves the <em>Whey Club</em>. They were always the first
-persons in the town to have a thorough knowledge of the foreign
-news; and on Wednesday mornings, when there was no post from
-London, it was their wont to meet as usual, and, in the absence
-of real news, amuse themselves by the invention of what was
-imaginary; and this they made it their business to circulate
-among their uninitiated acquaintances in the course of the forenoon.
-Any such unfounded articles of intelligence, on being
-suspected or discovered, were usually called <em>Lawnmarket Gazettes</em>,
-in allusion to their roguish originators.</p>
-
-<p>In the year 1705, when the Duke of Argyll was commissioner
-in the Scottish parliament, a singular kind of fashionable club, or
-coterie of ladies and gentlemen, was instituted, chiefly by the
-exertions of the Earl of Selkirk, who was the distinguished beau
-of that age. This was called the <span class="smcap">Horn Order</span>, a name which, as
-usual, had its origin in the whim of a moment. A horn-spoon
-having been used at some merry-meeting, it occurred to the club,
-which was then in embryo, that this homely implement would be
-a good badge for the projected society; and this being proposed,
-it was instantly agreed by all the party that the ‘Order of the
-Horn’ would be a good caricature of the more ancient and better-sanctioned<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">{157}</a></span>
-honorary dignities. The phrase was adopted; and the
-members of the <em>Horn Order</em> met and caroused for many a day
-under this strange designation, which, however, the common
-people believed to mean more than met the ear. Indeed, if all
-accounts of it be true, it must have been a species of masquerade,
-in which the sexes were mixed and all ranks confounded.<a name="FNanchor_142" id="FNanchor_142"></a><a href="#Footnote_142" class="fnanchor">[142]</a></p>
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">{158}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="TAVERNS_OF_OLD_TIMES" id="TAVERNS_OF_OLD_TIMES">TAVERNS OF OLD TIMES.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>When the worship of Bacchus held such sway in our city, his
-peculiar temples&mdash;the taverns&mdash;must, one would suppose,
-have been places of some importance. And so they were, comparatively
-speaking; and yet, absolutely, an Edinburgh tavern of
-the last century was no very fine or inviting place. Usually these
-receptacles were situated in obscure places&mdash;in courts or closes,
-away from the public thoroughfares; and often they presented
-such narrow and stifling accommodations as might have been
-expected to repel rather than attract visitors. The truth was,
-however, that a coarse and darksome snugness was courted by
-the worshippers. Large, well-lighted rooms, with a look-out to a
-street, would not have suited them. But allow them to dive
-through some Erebean alley, into a cavern-like house, and there
-settle themselves in a cell unvisited of Phœbus, with some dingy
-flamen of either sex to act as minister, and their views as to
-circumstances and properties were fulfilled.</p>
-
-<p>The city traditions do not go far back into the eighteenth
-century with respect to taverns; but we obtain some notion of the
-principal houses in Queen Anne’s time from the Latin lyrics of
-Dr Pitcairn, which Ruddiman published, in order to prove that
-the Italian muse had not become extinct in our land since the
-days of Buchanan. In an address <cite>To Strangers</cite>, the wit tells
-those who would acquire some notion of our national manners to
-avoid the triple church of St Giles’s:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Tres ubi Cyclopes fanda nefanda boant’&mdash;</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>where three horrible monsters bellow forth sacred and profane discourse&mdash;and
-seek the requisite knowledge in the sanctuaries of the
-rosy god, whose worship is conducted by night and by day. ‘At
-one time,’ says he, ‘you may be delighted with the bowls of Steil
-of the <em>Cross Keys</em>; then other heroes, at the <em>Ship</em>, will show you
-the huge cups which belonged to mighty bibbers of yore. Or you
-may seek out the sweet-spoken Katy at <em>Buchanan’s</em>, or <em>Tennant’s</em>
-commodious house, where scalloped oysters will be brought in with
-your wine. But <em>Hay</em> calls us, than whom no woman of milder
-disposition or better-stored cellar can be named in the whole town.
-Now it will gratify you to make your way into the Avernian<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">{159}</a></span>
-grottoes and caves never seen of the sun; but remember to make
-friends with the dog which guards the threshold. Straightway
-Mistress Anne will bring the native liquor. Seek the innermost
-rooms and the snug seats: these know the sun, at least, when
-Anne enters. What souls joying in the Lethæan flood you may
-there see! what frolics, God willing, you may partake of! Mindless
-of all that goes on in the outer world, joys not to be
-told to mortal do they there imbibe. But perhaps you may
-wish by-and-by to get back into the world&mdash;which is indeed no
-easy matter. I recommend you, when about to descend, to take
-with you a trusty Achates [a caddy]: say to Anne, “Be sure you
-give him no drink.” By such means it was that Castor and Pollux
-were able to issue forth from Pluto’s domain into the heavenly
-spaces. Here you may be both merry and wise; but beware how
-you toast kings and their French retreats,’ &amp;c. The sites of
-these merry places of yore are not handed down to us; but
-respecting another, which Pitcairn shadows forth under the
-mysterious appellation of <em>Greppa</em>, it chances that we possess some
-knowledge. It was a suite of dark underground apartments in
-the Parliament Close, opening by a descending stair opposite the
-oriel of St Giles’s, in a mass of building called the Pillars. By the
-wits who frequented it, it was called the <em>Greping-office</em>, because
-one could only make way through its dark passages by groping.
-It is curious to see how Pitcairn works this homely Scottish idea
-into his Sapphics, talking, for example, by way of a good case of
-bane and antidote, of</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Fraudes Egidii, venena Greppæ.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>A venerable person has given me an anecdote of this singular
-mixture of learning, wit, and professional skill in connection with
-the Greping-office. Here, it seems, according to a custom which
-lasted even in London till a later day, the clever physician used
-to receive visits from his patients. On one occasion a woman
-from the country called to consult him respecting the health of
-her daughter, when he gave a shrewd hygienic advice in a pithy
-metaphor not be mentioned to ears polite. When, in consequence
-of following the prescription, the young woman had recovered her
-health, the mother came back to the Greping-office to thank Dr
-Pitcairn and give him a small present. Seeing him in precisely
-the same place and circumstances, and surrounded by the same
-companions as on the former occasion, she lingered with an
-expression of surprise. On interrogation, she said she had only<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">{160}</a></span>
-one thing to speer at him (ask after), and she hoped he would not
-be angry.</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh no, my good woman.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, sir, have you been sitting here ever since I saw you
-last?’</p>
-
-<p>According to the same authority, small claret was then sold at
-twentypence the Scottish pint, equivalent to tenpence a bottle.
-Pitcairn once or twice sent his servant for a regale of this liquor
-on the Sunday forenoon, and suffered the disappointment of having
-it intercepted by the <em>seizers</em>, whose duty it was to make capture
-of all persons found abroad in time of service, and appropriate
-whatever they were engaged in carrying that smelled of the
-common enjoyments of life. To secure his claret for the future
-from this interference, the wit caused the wine on one occasion to
-be drugged in such a manner as to produce consequences more
-ludicrous than dangerous to those drinking it. The triumph he
-thus attained over a power which there was no reaching by any
-appeal to common-sense or justice must have been deeply relished
-in the Greping-office.</p>
-
-<p>Pitcairn was professedly an Episcopalian, but he allowed himself
-a latitude in wit which his contemporaries found some difficulty
-in reconciling with any form of religion. Among the popular
-charges against him was that he did not believe in the existence
-of such a place as hell; a point of heterodoxy likely to be sadly
-disrelished in Scotland. Being at a book-sale, where a copy of
-Philostratus sold at a good price and a copy of the Bible was not
-bidden for, Pitcairn said to some one who remarked the circumstance:
-‘Not at all wonderful; for is it not written, “<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Verbum Dei
-manet in eternum</i>”?’ For this, one of the <em>Cyclopes</em>, a famous Mr
-Webster, called him publicly an atheist. The story goes on to
-state that Pitcairn prosecuted Webster for defamation in consequence,
-but failed in the action from the following circumstance:
-The defender, much puzzled what to do in the case, consulted a
-shrewd-witted friend of his, a Mr Pettigrew, minister of Govan,
-near Glasgow. Pettigrew came to Edinburgh to endeavour to
-get him out of the scrape. ‘Strange,’ he said, ‘since he has
-caught so much at your mouth, if we can catch nothing at his.’
-Having laid his plan, he came bustling up to the physician at
-the Cross, and tapping him on the shoulder, said: ‘Are you Dr
-Pitcairn the atheist?’</p>
-
-<p>The doctor, in his haste, overlooking the latter part of the
-query, answered:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">{161}</a></span> ‘Yes.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Very good,’ said Pettigrew; ‘I take you all to witness that he
-has confessed it himself.’</p>
-
-<p>Pitcairn, seeing how he had been outwitted, said bitterly to the
-minister of Govan, whom he well knew: ‘Oh, Pettigrew, that
-skull of yours is as deep as hell.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, man,’ replied Pettigrew, ‘I’m glad to find you have come
-to believe there is a hell.’ The prosecutor’s counsel, who stood
-by at the time, recommended a compromise, which accordingly
-took place.</p>
-
-<p>A son of Pitcairn was minister of Dysart; a very good kind
-of man, who was sometimes consulted in a medical way by his
-parishioners. He seems to have had a little of the paternal
-humour, if we may judge from the following circumstance: A lady
-came to ask what her maid-servant should do for sore or tender
-eyes. The minister, seeing that no active treatment could be
-recommended, said: ‘She must do naething wi’ them, but just
-rub them wi’ her elbucks [elbows].’</p>
-
-<p>Allan Ramsay mentions, of Edinburgh taverns in his day,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Cumin’s, Don’s, and Steil’s,’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>as places where one may be as well served as at <em>The Devil</em> in
-London.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘’Tis strange, though true, he who would shun all evil,</div>
-<div class="verse">Cannot do better than go to the Devil.’</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">John Maclaurin.</span>
-</p></div></div>
-
-<p>One is disposed to pause a moment on Steil’s name, as it is
-honourably connected with the history of music in Scotland.
-Being a zealous lover of the divine science and a good singer of
-the native melodies, he had rendered his house a favourite resort
-of all who possessed a similar taste, and here actually was formed
-(1728) the first regular society of amateur musicians known in
-our country. It numbered seventy persons, and met once a
-week, the usual entertainments consisting in playing on the
-harpsichord and violin the concertos and sonatas of Handel,
-then newly published. Apparently, however, this fraternity did
-not long continue to use Steil’s house, if I am right in supposing
-his retirement from business as announced in an advertisement
-of February 1729, regarding ‘a sale by auction, of the haill
-pictures, prints, music-books, and musical instruments, belonging
-to Mr John Steill’ (<cite>Caledonian Mercury</cite>).</p>
-
-<p>Coming down to a later time&mdash;1760-1770&mdash;we find the tavern
-in highest vogue to have been <em>Fortune’s</em>, in the house which the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">{162}</a></span>
-Earl of Eglintoune had once occupied in the Stamp-office Close.
-The gay men of rank, the scholarly and philosophical, the common
-citizens, all flocked hither; and the royal commissioner for the
-General Assembly held his levees here, and hence proceeded to
-church with his cortège, then additionally splendid from having
-ladies walking in it in their court-dresses as well as gentlemen.<a name="FNanchor_143" id="FNanchor_143"></a><a href="#Footnote_143" class="fnanchor">[143]</a>
-Perhaps the most remarkable set of men who met here was the
-<span class="smcap">Poker Club</span>,<a name="FNanchor_144" id="FNanchor_144"></a><a href="#Footnote_144" class="fnanchor">[144]</a> consisting of Hume, Robertson, Blair, Fergusson, and
-many others of that brilliant galaxy, but whose potations were
-comparatively of a moderate kind.</p>
-
-<p>The <em>Star and Garter</em>, in Writers’ Court, kept by one Clerihugh
-(the <em>Clerihugh’s</em> alluded to in <cite>Guy Mannering</cite>), was another
-tavern of good consideration, the favourite haunt of the magistrates
-and Town-council, who in those days mixed much more
-of private enjoyments with public duties than would now be
-considered fitting.<a name="FNanchor_145" id="FNanchor_145"></a><a href="#Footnote_145" class="fnanchor">[145]</a> Here the Rev. Dr Webster used to meet them
-at dinner, in order to give them the benefit of his extensive knowledge
-and great powers of calculation when they were scheming
-out the New Town.</p>
-
-<p>A favourite house for many of the last years of the bygone
-century was <em>Douglas’s</em>, in the Anchor Close, near the Cross, a
-good specimen of those profound retreats which have been spoken
-of as valued in the inverse ratio of the amount of daylight which
-visited them. You went a few yards down the dark, narrow alley,
-passing on the left hand the entry to a scale stair, decorated with
-‘<span class="smcap lowercase">THE LORD IS ONLY MY SVPORT</span>;’ then passed another door,
-bearing the still more antique legend: ‘<span class="smcap lowercase">O LORD, IN THE IS AL MY
-TRAIST</span>;’ immediately beyond, under an architrave calling out
-‘<span class="smcap lowercase">BE MERCIFVL TO ME</span>,’ you entered the hospitable mansion of
-Dawney Douglas, the scene of the daily and nightly orgies of the
-Pleydells and Fairfords, the Hays, Erskines, and Crosbies, of the
-time of our fathers. Alas! how fallen off is now that temple<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">{163}</a></span>
-of Momus and the Bacchanals! You find it divided into a
-multitude of small lodgings, where, instead of the merry party,
-vociferous with toasts and catches, you are most likely to be struck
-by the spectacle of some poor lone female, pining under a parochial
-allowance, or a poverty-struck family group, one-half of whom are
-disposed on sick-beds of straw mingled with rags&mdash;the terrible
-exponents of our peculiar phasis of civilisation.</p>
-
-<p>The frequenter of Douglas’s, after ascending a few steps, found
-himself in a pretty large kitchen&mdash;a dark, fiery Pandemonium,
-through which numerous ineffable ministers of flame were continually
-flying about, while beside the door sat the landlady, a large,
-fat woman, in a towering head-dress and large-flowered silk gown,
-who bowed to every one passing. Most likely on emerging from
-this igneous region, the party would fall into the hands of Dawney
-himself, and so be conducted to an apartment. A perfect contrast
-was he to his wife: a thin, weak, submissive man, who spoke in a
-whisper, never but in the way of answer, and then, if possible,
-only in monosyllables. He had a habit of using the word
-‘quietly’ very frequently, without much regard to its being
-appropriate to the sense; and it is told that he one day made the
-remark that ‘the Castle had been firing to-day&mdash;<em>quietly</em>;’ which,
-it may well be believed, was not soon forgotten by his customers.
-Another trait of Dawney was that some one lent him a volume of
-Clarendon’s history to read, and daily frequenting the room
-where it lay, used regularly, for some time, to put back the reader’s
-mark to the same place; whereupon, being by-and-by asked how
-he liked the book, Dawney answered: ‘Oh, very weel; but dinna
-ye think it’s gay mickle the same thing o’er again?’ The house
-was noted for suppers of tripe, rizzared haddocks, mince collops,
-and <em>hashes</em>, which never cost more than sixpence a head. On
-charges of this moderate kind the honest couple grew extremely
-rich before they died.</p>
-
-<p>The principal room in this house was a handsome one of good
-size, having a separate access by the second of the entries which
-have been described, and only used for large companies, or for
-guests of the first importance. It was called <em>the Crown Room</em>, or
-<em>the Crown</em>&mdash;so did the guests find it distinguished on the tops of
-their bills&mdash;and this name it was said to have acquired in consequence
-of its having once been used by Queen Mary as a council-room,
-on which occasions the emblem of sovereignty was disposed
-in a niche in the wall, still existing. How the queen should have
-had any occasion to hold councils in this place tradition does not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">{164}</a></span>
-undertake to explain; but assuredly, when we consider the nature
-of all public accommodations in that time, we cannot say there is
-any decided improbability in the matter. The house appears of
-sufficient age for the hypothesis. Perhaps we catch a hint on the
-general possibility from a very ancient house farther down the
-close, of whose original purpose or owners we know nothing, but
-which is adumbrated by this legend:</p>
-
-<p class="center">ANGVSTA AD VSVM AVGVSTA[M]</p>
-<p class="center">W F<span class="w12">&nbsp;</span>B G</p>
-
-<p>The Crown Room, however, is elegant enough to have graced
-even the presence of Queen Mary, so that she only had not had
-to reach it by the Anchor Close. It is handsomely panelled,
-with a decorated fireplace, and two tall windows towards the alley.
-At present this supposed seat of royal councils, and certain seat
-of the social enjoyments of many men of noted talents, forms a
-back-shop to Mr Ford, grocer, High Street, and, all dingy and out
-of countenance, serves only to store hams, firkins of butter, packages
-of groceries, and bundles of dried cod.<a name="FNanchor_146" id="FNanchor_146"></a><a href="#Footnote_146" class="fnanchor">[146]</a></p>
-
-<p>The gentle Dawney had an old Gaelic song called Crochallan,
-which he occasionally sang to his customers. This led to the
-establishment of a club at his house, which, with a reference to
-the militia regiments then raising, was called the Crochallan
-Corps, or Crochallan Fencibles, and to which belonged, amongst
-other men of original character and talent, the well-known
-William Smellie, author of the <cite>Philosophy of Natural History</cite>.
-Each member bore a military title, and some were endowed with
-ideal offices of a ludicrous character: for example, a lately
-surviving associate had been <em>depute-hangman</em> to the corps.
-Individuals committing a fault were subjected to a mock trial,
-in which such members as were barristers could display their
-forensic talents to the infinite amusement of the brethren. Much
-mirth and not a little horse-play prevailed. Smellie, while
-engaged professionally in printing the Edinburgh edition of the
-poems of Burns, introduced that genius to the Crochallans,
-when a scene of rough banter took place between him and
-certain privileged old hands, and the bard declared at the
-conclusion that he had ‘never been so abominably thrashed in
-his life.’ There was one predominant wit, Willie Dunbar by
-name, of whom the poet has left a characteristic picture:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">{165}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘As I came by Crochallan,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">I cannily keekit ben&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">Rattling roaring Willie</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Was sitting at yon board en’&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">Sitting at yon board en’,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Amang gude companie;</div>
-<div class="verse">Rattling roaring Willie,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Ye’re welcome hame to me!’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>He has also described Smellie as coming to Crochallan with
-his old cocked hat, gray surtout, and beard rising in its
-might:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Yet though his caustic wit was biting, rude,</div>
-<div class="verse">His heart was warm, benevolent, and good.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>The printing-office of this strange genius being at the bottom of
-the close, the transition from the correction of proofs to the
-roaring scenes at Crochallan must have been sufficiently easy for
-Burns.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w325">
-<a id="illus_c_015"></a>
-<img src="images/illus_c_015.jpg" width="325" height="667" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">UPPER BAXTER’S CLOSE.<br />
-Where Burns first resided in Edinburgh.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap"><a href="#Page_164">Page 164.</a></span>
-</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>I am indebted to a privately printed memoir on the Anchor
-Close for the following anecdote of Crochallan: ‘A comical
-gentleman, one of the members of the corps [old Williamson of
-Cardrona, in Peeblesshire], got rather tipsy one evening after a
-severe <em>field-day</em>. When he came to the head of the Anchor
-Close, it occurred to him that it was necessary that he should
-take possession of the Castle. He accordingly set off for this
-purpose. When he got to the outer gate, he demanded immediate
-possession of the garrison, to which he said he was entitled.
-The sentinel, for a considerable time, laughed at him; he,
-however, became so extremely clamorous that the man found it
-necessary to apprise the commanding officer, who immediately
-came down to inquire into the meaning of such impertinent
-conduct. He at once recognised his friend Cardrona, whom he
-had left at the festive board of the Crochallan Corps only a few
-hours before. Accordingly, humouring him in the conceit, he
-said: ‘Certainly you have every right to the command of this
-garrison; if you please, I will conduct you to your proper
-apartment.’ He accordingly conveyed him to a bedroom in
-his house. Cardrona took formal possession of the place, and
-immediately afterwards went to bed. His feelings were indescribable
-when he looked out of his bedroom window next
-morning, and found himself surrounded with soldiers and great
-guns. Some time afterwards this story came to the ears of the
-Crochallans; and Cardrona said he never afterwards had the life<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">{166}</a></span>
-of a dog, so much did they tease and harass him about his strange
-adventure.’</p>
-
-<p>There is a story connected with the air and song of Crochallan
-which will tell strangely after these anecdotes. The title is
-properly <cite>Cro Chalien</cite>&mdash;that is, ‘Colin’s Cattle.’ According to
-Highland tradition, Colin’s wife, dying at an early age, <em>came
-back</em>, some months after she had been buried, and was seen
-occasionally in the evenings milking her cow as formerly, and
-singing this plaintive air. It is curious thus to find Highland
-superstition associated with a snug tavern in the Anchor Close
-and the convivialities of such men as Burns and Smellie.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w275">
-<img src="images/illus_p_166.jpg" width="275" height="395" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Dowie’s Tavern.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><em>John Dowie’s</em>, in Liberton’s Wynd, a still more
-perfect specimen of those taverns which
-Pitcairn eulogises&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Antraque Cocyto penè propinqua’&mdash;</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>enjoyed the highest celebrity
-during the latter years
-of the past and early years
-of the present century. A
-great portion of this house
-was literally without light,
-consisting of a series of
-windowless chambers, decreasing
-in size till the
-last was a mere box, of
-irregular oblong figure, jocularly,
-but not inappropriately,
-designated <em>the Coffin</em>.
-Besides these, there were
-but two rooms possessing
-light, and as that came
-from a deep, narrow alley,
-it was light little more
-than in name. Hither,
-nevertheless, did many of
-the Parliament House men
-come daily for their meridian.
-Here nightly assembled
-companies of cits, as
-well as of men of wit and
-of fashion, to spend hours in what may, by comparison, be described<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">{167}</a></span>
-as gentle conviviality. The place is said to have been
-a howff of Fergusson and Burns in succession. Christopher
-North somewhere alludes to meetings of his own with Tom
-Campbell in that couthy mansion. David Herd, the editor of
-the Scottish songs, Mr Cumming of the Lyon Office, and George
-Paton the antiquary were regular customers, each seldom allowing
-a night to pass without a symposium at Johnie Dowie’s.
-Now, these men are all gone; their very habits are becoming
-matters of history; while, as for their evening haunt, the place
-which knew it once knows it no more, the new access to the
-Lawnmarket, by George IV. Bridge, passing over the area where
-it stood.</p>
-
-<p><em>Johnie Dowie’s</em> was chiefly celebrated for ale&mdash;<em>Younger’s
-Edinburgh ale</em>&mdash;a potent fluid which almost glued the lips of
-the drinker together, and of which few, therefore, could despatch
-more than a bottle. John, a sleek, quiet-looking man, in a last-century
-style of attire, always brought in the liquor himself,
-decanted it carefully, drank a glass to the health of the company,
-and then retired. His neat, careful management of the
-bottle must have entirely met the views of old William Coke,
-the Leith bookseller, of whom it is told that if he saw a greenhorn
-of a waiter acting in a different manner, he would rush
-indignantly up to him, take the ale out of his hands, caress it
-tenderly, as if to soothe and put it to rights again, and then
-proceed to the business of decanting it himself, saying: ‘You
-rascal, is that the way you attend to your business? Sirrah, you
-ought to handle a bottle of ale as you would do a new-born
-babe!’</p>
-
-<p><em>Dowie’s</em> was also famed for its <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">petits soupers</i>, as one of its
-customers has recorded:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="wideverse indent6">‘’Deed, gif ye please,</div>
-<div class="wideverse">Ye may get a bit toasted cheese,</div>
-<div class="wideverse">A crumb o’ tripe, ham, dish o’ peas,</div>
-<div class="wideverse indent6">The season fitting;</div>
-<div class="wideverse">An egg, or, cauler frae the seas,</div>
-<div class="wideverse indent6">A fleuk or whiting.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>When the reckoning came to be paid, John’s duty usually consisted
-simply in counting the empty bottles which stood on a
-little shelf where he had placed them above the heads of his
-customers, and multiplying these by the price of the liquor&mdash;usually
-threepence. Studious of decency, he was rigorous as to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">{168}</a></span>
-hours, and, when pressed for additional supplies of liquor at a
-particular time, would say: ‘No, no, gentlemen; it’s past twelve
-o’clock, and time to go home.’</p>
-
-<p>Of John’s conscientiousness as to money matters there is
-some illustration in the following otherwise trivial anecdote:
-David Herd, being one night prevented by slight indisposition
-from joining in the malt potations of his friends, called for first
-one and then another glass of spirits, which he dissolved, <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">more
-Scotico</i>, in warm water and sugar. When the reckoning came
-to be paid, the antiquary was surprised to find the second glass
-charged a fraction higher than the first&mdash;as if John had been
-resolved to impose a tax upon excess. On inquiring the reason,
-however, honest John explained it thus: ‘Whe, sir, ye see, the
-first glass was out o’ the auld barrel, and the second was out o’
-the new; and as the whisky in the new barrel cost me mair than
-the other, whe, sir, I’ve just charged a wee mair for ’t.’ An
-ordinary host would have doubtless equalised the price by
-raising that of the first glass to a level with the second. It is
-gratifying, but, after this anecdote, not surprising, that John
-eventually retired with a fortune said to have amounted to six
-thousand pounds. He had a son in the army, who attained the
-rank of major, and was a respectable officer.</p>
-
-<p>We get an idea of a class of taverns, humbler in their appointments,
-but equally comfortable perhaps in their entertainments,
-from the description which has been preserved of <em>Mrs Flockhart’s</em>&mdash;otherwise
-<em>Lucky Fykie’s</em>&mdash;in the Potterrow. This was a
-remarkably small, as well as obscure mansion, bearing externally
-the appearance of a huckstry shop. The lady was a neat, little,
-thin, elderly woman, usually habited in a plain striped blue
-gown, and apron of the same stuff, with a black ribbon round
-her head and lappets tied under her chin. She was far from
-being poor in circumstances, as her husband, the umquhile
-John Flucker, or Flockhart, had left her some ready money,
-together with his whole stock-in-trade, consisting of a multifarious
-variety of articles&mdash;as ropes, tea, sugar, whip-shafts,
-porter, ale, beer, yellow sand, <em>calm-stane</em>, herrings, nails, cotton-wicks,
-stationery, thread, needles, tapes, potatoes, lollipops,
-onions, matches, &amp;c., constituting her a very respectable <em>merchant</em>,
-as the phrase was understood in Scotland. On Sundays, too,
-Mrs Flockhart’s little visage might have been seen in a front-gallery
-seat in Mr Pattieson’s chapel in the Potterrow. Her
-abode, situated opposite to Chalmers’s Entry in that suburban<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">{169}</a></span>
-thoroughfare, was a square of about fifteen feet each way, divided
-agreeably to the following diagram:</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w450">
-<img src="images/illus_p_169.jpg" width="450" height="363" alt="Plan" />
-</div>
-
-<p>Each forenoon was this place, or at least all in front of the
-screen, put into the neatest order; at the same time three
-bottles, severally containing brandy, rum, and whisky, were
-placed on a bunker-seat in the window of the ‘hotel,’ flanked
-by a few glasses and a salver of gingerbread biscuits. About
-noon any one watching the place from an opposite window
-would have observed an elderly gentleman entering the humble
-shop, where he saluted the lady with a ‘Hoo d’ye do, mem?’
-and then passed into the side space to indulge himself with a
-glass from one or other of the bottles. After him came another,
-who went through the same ceremonial; after him another
-again; and so on. Strange to say, these were men of importance
-in society&mdash;some of them lawyers in good employment, some
-bankers, and so forth, and all of them inhabitants of good houses
-in George Square. It was in passing to or from forenoon
-business in town that they thus regaled themselves. On special
-occasions Lucky could furnish forth a <em>soss</em>&mdash;that is, stew&mdash;which
-the votary might partake of upon a clean napkin in the closet,
-a place which only admitted of one chair being placed in it.
-Such were amongst the habits of the fathers of some of our
-present (1824) most distinguished citizens!</p>
-
-<p>This may be the proper place for introducing the few notices
-which I have collected respecting Edinburgh inns of a past date.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">{170}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The oldest house known to have been used in the character
-of an inn is one situated in what is called Davidson’s or the
-White Horse Close, at the bottom of the Canongate. A sort of
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">porte-cochère</i> gives access to a court having mean buildings on
-either hand, but facing us a goodly structure of antique fashion,
-having two outside stairs curiously arranged, and the whole
-reminding us much of certain houses still numerous in the
-Netherlands. A date, deficient in the decimal figure (16-3),
-gives us assurance of the seventeenth century, and, judging from
-the style of the building, I would say the house belongs to an
-early portion of that age. The whole of the ground-floor, accessible
-from the street called North Back of Canongate, has been
-used as stables, thus reminding us of the absence of nicety in a
-former age, when human beings were content to sit with only a
-wooden floor between themselves and their horses.</p>
-
-<p>This house, supposed to have been styled <em>The White Horse
-Inn</em> or <em>White Horse Stables</em> (for the latter was the more common
-word), would be conveniently situated for persons travelling to
-or arriving from London, as it is close to the ancient exit of the
-town in that direction. The adjacent Water-gate took its name
-from a horse-pond, which probably was an appendage of this
-mansion. The manner of procedure for a gentleman going to
-London in the days of the <em>White Horse</em> was to come booted to
-this house with saddle-bags, and here engage and mount a
-suitable roadster, which was to serve all the way. In 1639,
-when Charles I. had made his first pacification with the
-Covenanters, and had come temporarily to Berwick, he sent
-messages to the chief lords of that party, desiring some conversation
-with them. They were unsuspectingly mounting their
-horses at this inn, in order to ride to Berwick, when a mob,
-taught by the clergy to suspect that the king wished only to wile
-over the nobles to his side, came and forcibly prevented them
-from commencing their designed journey. Montrose alone
-broke through this restraint; and assuredly the result in his
-instance was such as to give some countenance to the suspicion,
-as thenceforward he was a royalist in his heart.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w550">
-<a id="illus_c_016"></a>
-<img src="images/illus_c_016.jpg" width="550" height="442" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">WHITE HORSE INN.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap"><a href="#Page_170">Page 170.</a></span>
-</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The <em>White Horse</em> has ceased to be an inn from a time which
-no ‘oldest inhabitant’ of my era could pretend to have any
-recollection of. The only remaining fact of interest connected
-with it is one concerning Dr Alexander Rose, the last Bishop
-of Edinburgh, and the last survivor of the established Episcopacy
-of Scotland. Bishop Keith, who had been one of his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">{171}</a></span>
-presbyters, and describes him as a sweet-natured man, of a
-venerable aspect, states that he died March 20, 1720, ‘in his
-own sister’s house in the Canongate, in which street he also
-lived.’ Tradition points to the floor immediately above the
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">porte-cochère</i> by which the stable-yard is entered from the street
-as the humble mansion in which the bishop breathed his last.
-I know at least one person who never goes past the place
-without an emotion of respect, remembering the self-abandoning
-devotion of the Scottish prelates to their engagements at the
-Revolution:<a name="FNanchor_147" id="FNanchor_147"></a><a href="#Footnote_147" class="fnanchor">[147]</a></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Amongst the faithless, faithful only found.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>To the elegant accommodations of the best New Town establishments
-of the present day, the inns of the last century present a
-contrast which it is difficult by the greatest stretch of imagination
-to realise. For the west road, there was the <em>White Hart</em> in the
-Grassmarket; for the east, the <em>White Horse Inn</em> in Boyd’s Close,
-Canongate; for the south, and partly also the east, Peter Ramsay’s,
-at the bottom of St Mary’s Wynd. Arnot, writing in 1779,
-describes them as ‘mean buildings; their apartments dirty and
-dismal; and if the waiters happen to be out of the way, a stranger
-will perhaps be shocked with the novelty of being shown into a
-room by a dirty, sunburnt wench, without shoes or stockings.’
-The fact is, however, these houses were mainly used as places for
-keeping horses. Guests, unless of a very temporary character, were
-usually relegated to lodging-houses, of which there were several
-on a considerable scale&mdash;as Mrs Thomson’s at the Cross, who
-advertises, in 1754, that persons not bringing ‘their silver plate,
-tea china, table china, and tea linen, can be served in them all;’
-also in wines and spirits; likewise that persons boarding with
-her ‘may expect everything in a very genteel manner.’ But
-hear the unflattering Arnot on these houses.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">{172}</a></span> ‘He [the stranger]
-is probably conducted to the third or fourth floor, up dark
-and dirty stairs, and there shown into apartments meanly
-fitted up and poorly furnished.... In Edinburgh, letting of
-lodgings is a business by itself, and thereby the prices are very
-extravagant; and every article of furniture, far from wearing the
-appearance of having been purchased for a happy owner, seems
-to be scraped together with a penurious hand, to pass muster
-before a stranger who will never wish to return!’</p>
-
-<p><em>Ramsay’s</em> was almost solely a place of stables. General
-Paoli,<a name="FNanchor_148" id="FNanchor_148"></a><a href="#Footnote_148" class="fnanchor">[148]</a> on visiting Edinburgh in 1771, came to this house, but
-was immediately taken home by his friend Boswell to James’s
-Court, where he lived during his stay in our city; his companion,
-the Polish ambassador, being accommodated with a bed by Dr
-John Gregory, in a neighbouring floor. An old gentleman of my
-acquaintance used to talk of having seen the Duke of Hamilton
-one day lounging in front of Ramsay’s inn, occasionally chatting
-with any gay or noble friend who passed. To one knowing
-the Edinburgh of the present day, nothing could seem more
-extravagant than the idea of such company at such places. I
-nevertheless find Ramsay, in 1776, advertising that, exclusive
-of some part of his premises recently offered for sale, he is
-‘possessed of a good house of entertainment, good stables for
-above one hundred horses, and sheds for above twenty carriages.’
-He retired from business about 1790 with £10,000.<a name="FNanchor_149" id="FNanchor_149"></a><a href="#Footnote_149" class="fnanchor">[149]</a></p>
-
-<p>The modern <em>White Horse</em> was a place of larger and somewhat
-better accommodations, though still far from an equality
-with even the second-rate houses of the present day. Here
-also the rooms were directly over the stables.</p>
-
-<p>It was almost a matter of course that Dr Johnson, on arriving
-in Edinburgh, August 17, 1773, should have come to the <em>White
-Horse</em>, which was then kept by a person of the name of Boyd.
-His note to Boswell informing him of this fact was as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p class="right">
-‘<em>Saturday night.</em>
-</p>
-
-<p>‘Mr Johnson sends his compliments to Mr Boswell, being just arrived at
-Boyd’s.’</p></div>
-
-<p>When Boswell came, he found his illustrious friend in a violent
-passion at the waiter for having sweetened his lemonade without
-the ceremony of a pair of sugar-tongs. Mr William Scott,
-afterwards Lord Stowell, accompanied Johnson on this occasion;
-and he informs us, in a note to Croker’s edition of Boswell,
-that when he heard the mistress of the house styled, in Scotch
-fashion, <em>Lucky</em>, which he did not then understand, he thought
-she should rather have been styled <em>Unlucky</em>, for the doctor
-seemed as if he would destroy the house.<a name="FNanchor_150" id="FNanchor_150"></a><a href="#Footnote_150" class="fnanchor">[150]</a></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">{173}</a></span></p>
-<p>James Boyd, the keeper of this inn, was addicted to horse-racing,
-and his victories on the turf, or rather on Leith sands,
-are frequently chronicled in the journals of that day. It is said
-that he was at one time on the brink of ruin, when he was
-saved by a lucky run with a white horse, which, in gratitude, he
-kept idle all the rest of its days, besides setting up its portrait
-as his sign. He eventually retired from this ‘dirty and dismal’
-inn with a fortune of several thousand pounds; and, as a
-curious note upon the impression which its slovenliness conveyed
-to Dr Johnson, it may be stated as a fact, well authenticated,
-that at the time of his giving up the house he possessed
-<em>napery</em> to the value of five hundred pounds!</p>
-
-<p>A large room in the <em>White Horse</em> was the frequent scene of
-the marriages of runaway English couples, at a time when these
-irregularities were permitted in Edinburgh. On one of the
-windows were scratched the words:</p>
-
-<p class="center">
-‘JEREMIAH and SARAH BENTHAM, 1768.’
-</p>
-
-<p>Could this be the distinguished jurist and codificator, on a
-journey to Scotland in company with a female relation?<a name="FNanchor_151" id="FNanchor_151"></a><a href="#Footnote_151" class="fnanchor">[151]</a></p>
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">{174}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="THE_CROSS_CADDIES" id="THE_CROSS_CADDIES">THE CROSS&mdash;CADDIES.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>The Cross, a handsome octagonal building in the High Street,
-surmounted by a pillar bearing the Scottish unicorn, was the
-great centre of gossip in former days. The principal coffee-houses
-and booksellers’ shops were close to this spot. The
-chief merchants, the leading official persons, the men of learning
-and talents, the laird, the noble, the clergyman, were constantly
-clustering hereabouts during certain hours of the day. It was
-the very centre and cynosure of the old city.</p>
-
-<p>During the reigns of the first and second Georges, it was
-customary for the magistrates of Edinburgh to drink the king’s
-health on his birthday on a stage erected at the Cross&mdash;loyalty
-being a virtue which always becomes peculiarly ostentatious
-when it is under any suspicion of weakness. On one of these
-occasions the ceremony was interrupted by a shower of rain, so
-heavy that the company, with one consent, suddenly dispersed,
-leaving their entertainment half-finished. When they returned,
-the glasses were found full of water, which gave a Jacobite lady
-occasion for the following epigram, reported to me by a venerable
-bishop of the Scottish Episcopal Church:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘In Cana once Heaven’s king was pleased</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">With some gay bridal folks to dine,</div>
-<div class="verse">And then, in honour of the feast,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">He changed the water into wine.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">But when, to honour Brunswick’s birth,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Our tribunes mounted the Theâtre,</div>
-<div class="verse">He would not countenance their mirth,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">But turned their claret into water!’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<div class="figcenter w550">
-<a id="illus_c_017"></a>
-<img src="images/illus_c_017.jpg" width="550" height="693" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">FORENOON AT THE CROSS.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap"><a href="#Page_174">Page 174.</a></span>
-</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>As the place where state proclamations were always made,
-where the execution of noted state criminals took place, and
-where many important public ceremonials were enacted, the
-Cross of Edinburgh is invested with numberless associations of
-a most interesting kind, extending over several centuries. Here
-took place the mysterious midnight proclamation, summoning
-the Flodden lords to the domains of Pluto, as described so
-strikingly in <cite>Marmion</cite>; the witness being ‘Mr Richard Lawson,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">{175}</a></span>
-ill-disposed, ganging in his gallery fore-stair.’ Here did King
-James VI. bring together his barbarous nobles, and make them
-shake hands over a feast partaken of before the eyes of the
-people. Here did the Covenanting lords read their protests
-against Charles’s feeble proclamations. Here fell Montrose,
-Huntly, the Argylls, Warriston, and many others of note, victims
-of political dissension. Here were fountains set a-flowing with
-the blood-red wine, to celebrate the passing of kings along the
-causeway. And here, as a last notable fact, were Prince Charles
-and his father proclaimed by their devoted Highlanders, amidst
-screams of pipe and blare of trumpet, while the beautiful Mrs
-Murray of Broughton sat beside the party on horseback, adorned
-with white ribbons, and with a drawn sword in her hand! How
-strange it seems that a time should at length have come when a
-set of magistrates thought this structure an encumbrance to the
-street, and had it removed. This event took place in 1756&mdash;the
-ornamental stones dispersed, the pillar taken to the park
-at Drum.<a name="FNanchor_152" id="FNanchor_152"></a><a href="#Footnote_152" class="fnanchor">[152]</a></p>
-
-<p>The Cross was the peculiar citadel and rallying-point of a
-species of lazzaroni called <em>Caddies</em> or <em>Cawdies</em>, which formerly
-existed in Edinburgh, employing themselves chiefly as street-messengers
-and <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">valets de place</i>. A ragged, half-blackguard-looking
-set they were, but allowed to be amazingly acute and
-intelligent, and also faithful to any duty entrusted to them. A
-stranger coming to reside temporarily in Edinburgh got a caddy
-attached to his service to conduct him from one part of the town
-to another, to run errands for him; in short, to be wholly at his
-bidding.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="wideverse indent2">‘Omnia novit,</div>
-<div class="wideverse">Græculus esuriens, in cœlum, jusseris, ibit.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>A caddy <em>did</em> literally know everything&mdash;of Edinburgh; even to
-that kind of knowledge which we now only expect in a street
-directory. And it was equally true that he could hardly be asked
-to go anywhere, or upon any mission, that he would not go. On
-the other hand, the stranger would probably be astonished to find
-that, in a few hours, his caddy was acquainted with every particular<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">{176}</a></span>
-regarding himself, where he was from, what was his purpose
-in Edinburgh, his family connections, and his own tastes and
-dispositions. Of course for every particle of scandal floating about
-Edinburgh, the caddy was a ready book of reference. We sometimes
-wonder how our ancestors did without newspapers. We
-do not reflect on the living vehicles of news which then existed:
-the privileged beggar for the country people; for townsfolk, the
-caddies.</p>
-
-<p>The caddy is alluded to as a useful kind of blackguard in Burt’s
-<cite>Letters from the North of Scotland</cite>, written about 1740. He says
-that although they are mere wretches in rags, lying upon stairs
-and in the streets at night, they are often considerably trusted,
-and seldom or never prove unfaithful. The story told by tradition
-is that they formed a society under a chief called their
-constable, with a common fund or box; that when they committed
-any misdemeanour, such as incivility or lying, they were punished
-by this officer by fines, or sometimes corporeally; and if by any
-chance money entrusted to them should not be forthcoming, it
-was made up out of the common treasury. Mr Burt says:
-‘Whether it be true or not I cannot say, but I have been told
-by several that one of the judges formerly abandoned two of
-his sons for a time to this way of life, as believing it would
-create in them a sharpness which might be of use to them in
-the future course of their lives.’ Major Topham, describing
-Edinburgh in 1774, says of the caddies: ‘In short, they are the
-tutelary guardians of the city; and it is entirely owing to them
-that there are fewer robberies and less housebreaking in Edinburgh
-than anywhere else.’</p>
-
-<p>Another conspicuous set of public servants characteristic of Edinburgh
-in past times were the <em>Chairmen</em>, or carriers of sedans, who
-also formed a society among themselves, but were of superior respectability,
-in as far as none but steady, considerate persons of so
-humble an order could become possessed of the means to buy the
-vehicle by which they made their bread. In former times, when
-Edinburgh was so much more limited than now, and rather an
-assemblage of alleys than of streets, sedans were in comparatively
-great request. They were especially in requisition amongst the
-ladies&mdash;indeed, almost exclusively so. From time immemorial the
-sons of the Gael have monopolised this branch of service; and as
-far as the business of a sedan-carrier can yet be said to exist
-amongst us, it is in the possession of Highlanders.</p>
-
-<p>The reader must not be in too great haste to smile when I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">{177}</a></span>
-claim his regard for an historical person among the chairmen of
-Edinburgh. This was Edward Burke, the immediate attendant
-of Prince Charles Edward during the earlier portion of his wanderings
-in the Highlands. Honest Ned had been a chairman in our
-city, but attaching himself as a servant to Mr Alexander Macleod
-of Muiravonside, aide-de-camp to the Prince, it was his fortune to
-be present at the battle of Culloden, and to fly from the field in
-his Royal Highness’s company. He attended the Prince for
-several weeks, sharing cheerfully in all his hardships, and doing
-his best to promote his escape. Thus has his name been inseparably
-associated with this remarkable chapter of history. After
-parting with Charles, this poor man underwent some dreadful
-hardships while under hiding, his fears of being taken having
-reference chiefly to the Prince, as he was apprehensive that the
-enemy might torture him to gain intelligence of his late master’s
-movements. At length the Act of Indemnity placed him at his
-ease; and the humble creature who, by a word of his mouth,
-might have gained thirty thousand pounds, quietly returned to
-his duty as a chairman on the streets of Edinburgh! Which
-of the venal train of Walpole, which even of the admirers of
-Pulteney, is more entitled to admiration than Ned Burke? A
-man, too, who could neither read nor write&mdash;for such was actually
-his case.<a name="FNanchor_153" id="FNanchor_153"></a><a href="#Footnote_153" class="fnanchor">[153]</a></p>
-
-<p>One cannot but feel it to be in some small degree a consolatory
-circumstance, and not without a certain air of the romance of an
-earlier day, that a bacchanal company came with a bowl of
-punch, the night before the demolition, and in that mood of mind
-when men shed ‘smiles that might as well be tears,’ drank the
-Dredgie of the Cross upon its doomed battlements.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">{178}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Oh! be his tomb as lead to lead,</div>
-<div class="verse">Upon its dull destroyer’s head!</div>
-<div class="verse">A minstrel’s malison is said.’<a name="FNanchor_154" id="FNanchor_154"></a><a href="#Footnote_154" class="fnanchor">[154]</a></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-
-
-<div class="figcenter w425">
-<a id="illus_c_018"></a>
-<img src="images/illus_c_018.jpg" width="425" height="683" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">THE TOWN-GUARD.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap"><a href="#Page_179">Page 179.</a></span><br />
-</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">{179}</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h2><a name="THE_TOWN-GUARD" id="THE_TOWN-GUARD">THE TOWN-GUARD.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>One of the characteristic features of Edinburgh in old times
-was its Town-guard, a body of military in the service of the
-magistrates for the purposes of a police, but dressed and armed
-in all respects as soldiers. Composed for the most part of old
-Highlanders, of uncouth aspect and speech, dressed in a dingy
-red uniform with cocked hats, and often exchanging the musket
-for an antique native weapon called the Lochaber axe, these men
-were (at least in latter times) an unfailing subject of mirth to the
-citizens, particularly the younger ones. In my recollection they
-had a sort of Patmos in the ground-floor of the Old Tolbooth,
-where a few of them might constantly be seen on duty, endeavouring
-to look as formidable as possible to the little boys who might
-be passing by. On such occasions as executions, or races at Leith,
-or the meeting of the General Assembly, they rose into a certain
-degree of consequence; but in general they could hardly be
-considered as of any practical utility. Their numbers were at that
-time much reduced&mdash;only twenty-five privates, two sergeants, two
-corporals, and a couple of drummers. Every night did their
-drum beat through the Old Town at eight o’clock, as a kind of
-curfew. No other drum, it seems, was allowed to sound on the
-High Street between the Luckenbooths and Netherbow. They
-also had an old practice of giving a <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">charivari</i> on the drum on
-the night of a marriage before the lodgings of the bridegroom;
-of course not without the expectation of something wherewithal to
-drink the health of the young couple. A strange remnant of old
-times altogether were the <em>Town Rats</em>, as the poor old fellows
-were disrespectfully called by the boys, in allusion to the hue of
-their uniform.</p>
-
-<p>Previous to 1805, when an unarmed police was established for
-the protection of the streets, the Town-guard had consisted of
-three equally large companies, each with a lieutenant (complimentarily
-called captain) at its head. Then it was a somewhat more
-respectable body, not only as being larger, but invested with a
-really useful purpose. The unruly and the vicious stood in some
-awe of a troop of men bearing lethal weapons, and generally
-somewhat frank in the use of them. If sometimes roughly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">{180}</a></span>
-handled on kings’ birthdays and other exciting occasions, they
-in their turn did not fail to treat cavalierly enough any unfortunate
-roisterer whom they might find breaking the peace. They
-had, previous to 1785, a guard-house in the middle of the High
-Street, the ‘black hole’ of which had rather a bad character
-among the bucks and the frail ladies. One of their sergeants
-in those days, by name John Dhu, is commemorated by Scott as
-the fiercest-looking fellow he ever saw. If we might judge from
-poor Robert Fergusson, they were truly formidable in his time.
-He says:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="wideverse">‘And thou, great god o’ aquavitæ,</div>
-<div class="wideverse">Wha sway’st the empire o’ this city; ...</div>
-<div class="wideverse indent4">Be thou prepared</div>
-<div class="wideverse">To hedge us frae that <em>black banditti</em>,</div>
-<div class="wideverse indent4">The City-guard.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>He adds, apostrophising the irascible veterans:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="wideverse">‘Oh, soldiers, for your ain dear sakes,</div>
-<div class="wideverse">For Scotland’s love&mdash;the land o’ cakes&mdash;</div>
-<div class="wideverse">Gi’e not her bairns sae deadly paiks,</div>
-<div class="wideverse indent4">Nor be sae rude,</div>
-<div class="wideverse">Wi’ firelock and Lochaber axe,</div>
-<div class="wideverse indent4">As spill their blude!’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>The affair at the execution of Wilson the smuggler in 1736,
-when, under command of Porteous, they fired upon and killed
-many of the mob, may be regarded as a peculiarly impressive
-example of the stern relation in which they stood to the populace
-of a former age.</p>
-
-<p>The great bulk of the corps was drawn either from the Highlands
-directly or from the Highland regiments. A humble
-Highlander considered it as getting a <em>berth</em> when he was enlisted
-into the Edinburgh Guard. Of this feeling we have a remarkable
-illustration in an anecdote which I was told by the late Mr Alexander
-Campbell regarding the Highland bard, Duncan Macintyre,
-usually called <em>Donacha Bhan</em>. This man, really an exquisite poet
-to those understanding his language, became the object of a kind
-interest to many educated persons in Perthshire, his native county.
-The Earl of Breadalbane sent to let him know that he wished to
-befriend him, and was anxious to procure him some situation that
-might put him comparatively at his ease. Poor Duncan returned
-his thanks, and asked his lordship’s interest&mdash;to get him into the
-Edinburgh Town-guard&mdash;pay, sixpence a day! What sort of
-material these men would have proved in the hands of the magistrates<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">{181}</a></span>
-if Provost Stewart had attempted by their means and the
-other forces at his command to hold out the city against Prince
-Charlie seems hardly to be matter of doubt. I was told the
-following anecdote of a member of the corps, on good authority.
-Robert Stewart, a descendant of the Stewarts of Bonskeid in
-Athole, was then a private in the City-guard. When General
-Hawley left Edinburgh to meet the Highland army in the west
-country, Stewart had just been relieved from duty for the customary
-period of two days. Instantly forming his plan of action,
-he set off with his gun, passed through the English troops on
-their march, and joined those of the Prince. Stewart fought next
-day like a hero in the battle of Falkirk, where the Prince had the
-best of it; and next morning our Town-guardsman was back to
-Edinburgh in time to go upon duty at the proper hour. The
-captain of his company suspected what business Robert and his
-gun had been engaged in, but preserved a friendly silence.</p>
-
-<p>The <em>Gutter-blood</em> people of Edinburgh had an extravagant idea
-of the antiquity of the Guard, led probably by a fallacy arising
-from the antiquity of the individual men. They used to have a
-strange story&mdash;too ridiculous, one would have thought, for a
-moment’s credence anywhere&mdash;that the Town-guard existed before
-the Christian era. When the Romans invaded Britain, some of
-the Town-guard joined them; and three were actually present in
-Pilate’s guard at the Crucifixion! In reality, the corps took its
-rise in the difficulties brought on by bad government in 1682,
-when, at the instigation of the Duke of York, it was found
-necessary to raise a body of 108 armed men, under a trusty
-commander, simply to keep the people in check.<a name="FNanchor_155" id="FNanchor_155"></a><a href="#Footnote_155" class="fnanchor">[155]</a></p>
-
-<p>Fifty years ago (1824) the so-called captaincies of the Guard
-were snug appointments, in great request among respectable old
-citizens who had not succeeded in business. Kay has given us
-some illustrations of these extraordinary specimens of soldier-craft,
-one of whom was nineteen stone. Captain Gordon of
-Gordonstown, representative of one of the oldest families in
-Scotland, found himself obliged by fortune to accept of one of
-these situations.</p>
-
-<p>Scott, writing his <cite>Heart of Mid-Lothian</cite> in 1817, says: ‘Of
-late, the gradual diminution of these civic soldiers reminds one
-of the abatement of King Lear’s hundred knights. The edicts of
-each set of succeeding magistrates have, like those of Goneril
-and Regan, diminished this venerable band with similar question&mdash;“What<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">{182}</a></span>
-need have we of five-and-twenty?&mdash;ten?&mdash;five?” and
-now it is nearly come to: “What need we one?” A spectre may
-indeed here and there still be seen of an old gray-headed and
-gray-bearded Highlander, with war-worn features, but bent double
-by age; dressed in an old-fashioned cocked-hat, bound with white
-tape instead of silver lace, and in coat, waistcoat, and breeches
-of a muddy-coloured red; bearing in his withered hand an ancient
-weapon, called a Lochaber axe&mdash;a long pole, namely, with an axe
-at the extremity, and a hook at the back of the hatchet. Such a
-phantom of former days still creeps, I have been informed, round
-the statue of Charles II. in the Parliament Square, as if the image
-of a Stuart were the last refuge for any memorial of our ancient
-manners,’ &amp;c. At the close of this very year, the ‘What need
-we one?’ was asked, and answered in the negative; and the corps
-was accordingly dissolved. ‘Their last march to do duty at
-Hallow Fair had something in it affecting. Their drums and
-fifes had been wont, in better days, to play on this joyous occasion
-the lively tune of</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">“Jockey to the fair;”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>but on this final occasion the afflicted veterans moved slowly to
-the dirge of</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">“The last time I came owre the muir.”’<a name="FNanchor_156" id="FNanchor_156"></a><a href="#Footnote_156" class="fnanchor">[156]</a></div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>The half-serious pathos of Scott regarding this corps becomes
-wholly so when we learn that a couple of members survived to
-make an actual last public appearance in the procession which
-consecrated his richly deserved monument, August 15, 1846.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">{183}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="EDINBURGH_MOBS" id="EDINBURGH_MOBS">EDINBURGH MOBS.</a></h2>
-
-
-
-<p class="chapter_summary"><strong>The Blue Blanket&mdash;Mobs of the Seventeenth Century&mdash;Bowed
-Joseph.</strong></p>
-
-
-<p>The Edinburgh populace was noted, during many ages, for its
-readiness to rise in tumultuary fashion, whether under the
-prompting of religious zeal or from inferior motives. At an early
-time they became an impromptu army, each citizen possessing
-weapons which he was ready and willing to use. Thus they are
-understood to have risen in 1482 to redeem James III. from
-restraint in the Castle; for which service, besides certain privileges,
-‘he granted them,’ says Maitland, ‘a banner or standard, with a
-power to display the same in defence of their king, country, and
-their own right.’ The historian adds: ‘This flag, at present
-denominated the <span class="smcap">Blue Blanket</span>, is kept by the Convener of the
-Trades; at whose appearance therewith, ’tis said that not only
-the artificers of Edinburgh are obliged to repair to it, but all the
-artisans or craftsmen within Scotland are bound to follow it, and
-fight under the Convener of Edinburgh, as aforesaid.’ The Blue
-Blanket, I may mention, has become a sort of myth in Edinburgh,
-being magnified by the popular imagination into a banner which
-the citizens carried with them to the Holy Land in one of the
-Crusades&mdash;expeditions which took place before Edinburgh had
-become a town fit to furnish any distinct corps of armed men.<a name="FNanchor_157" id="FNanchor_157"></a><a href="#Footnote_157" class="fnanchor">[157]</a></p>
-
-<p>When the Protestant faith came to stir up men’s minds,
-the lower order of citizens became a formidable body indeed.
-James VI., who had more than once experienced their violence,
-and consequently knew them well, says very naïvely in his <cite>Basilicon
-Doron</cite>, or ‘Book of Instruction’ to his son: ‘They think we
-should be content with their work, how bad and dear soever it be;
-and if they be in anything controuled, up goeth the <em>Blue Blanket</em>!’</p>
-
-<p>The tumults at the introduction of the Service-book, in 1637,
-need only be alluded to. So late as the Revolution there appears
-a military spirit of great boldness in the Edinburgh populace,
-reminding us of that of Paris in our own times: witness the bloody
-contests which took place in accomplishing the destruction of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">{184}</a></span>
-papistical arrangements at the Abbey, December 1688. The
-Union mobs were of unexampled violence; and Edinburgh was
-only kept in some degree of quiet, during the greater part of that
-crisis, by a great assemblage of troops. Finally, in the Porteous
-mob we have a singular example of popular vengeance, wreaked
-out in the most cool but determined manner. Men seem to have
-been habitually under an impression in those days that the law
-was at once an imperfect and a partial power. They seem to have
-felt themselves constantly liable to be called upon to supplement
-its energy, or control or compensate for its errors. The mob had
-at that time a part in the state.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w150">
-<img src="images/illus_p_184.jpg" width="150" height="281" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">‘General’ Joe Smith
-laying down the Law
-to the Magistrates.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In this ‘fierce democracy’ there once arose a mighty Pyrrhus,
-who contrived, by dint of popular qualifications, to subject the
-rabble to his command, and to get himself elected, by acclamation,
-dictator of all its motions and exploits. How he acquired his
-wonderful power is not recorded; but it is to be supposed that
-his activity on occasions of mobbing, his boldness and sagacity, his
-strong voice and uncommonly powerful whistle, together with the
-mere whim or humour of the thing, conspired to his promotion.
-His trade was that of a cobbler, and he
-resided in some obscure den in the Cowgate.
-His person was low and deformed, with the
-sole good property of great muscular strength
-in the arms. Yet this wretch, miserable and
-contemptible as he appeared, might be said
-to have had at one time the command of the
-Scottish metropolis. The magistrates, it is
-true, assembled every Wednesday forenoon
-to manage the affairs and deliberate upon
-the improvements of the city; but their
-power was merely that of a viceroyalty.
-<em>Bowed Joseph</em>, otherwise called General Joseph
-Smith, was the only true potentate; and
-their resolutions could only be carried into
-effect when not inconsistent with his views of
-policy.</p>
-
-<p>In exercising the functions of his perilous
-office, it does not appear that he ever drew
-down the vengeance of the more lawfully constituted
-authorities of the land. On the
-contrary, he was in some degree countenanced by the magistracy,
-who, however, patronised him rather from fear than respect. They<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">{185}</a></span>
-frequently sent for him in emergencies, in order to consult with him
-regarding the best means of appeasing and dispersing the mob.
-On such occasions nothing could equal the consequential air which
-he assumed. With one hand stuck carelessly into his side, and
-another slapped resolutely down upon the table&mdash;with a majestic
-toss of the head, and as much fierceness in his little gray eye as if
-he were himself a mob&mdash;he would stand before the anxious and
-feeble council, pleading the cause of his compeers, and suggesting
-the best means of assuaging their just fury. He was generally
-despatched with a promise of amendment and a hogshead of good
-ale, with which he could easily succeed in appeasing his men, whose
-dismissal, after a speech from himself and a libation from the
-barrel, was usually accomplished by the simple words: ‘<em>Now
-disperse, my lads!</em>’</p>
-
-<p>Joseph was not only employed in directing and managing the
-mobs, but frequently performed exploits without the co-operation
-of his greasy friends, though always for their amusement and in
-their behalf. Thus, for instance, when Wilkes by his celebrated
-Number 45 incensed the Scottish nation so generally and so
-bitterly, Joseph got a cart, fitted up with a high gallows, from
-which depended a straw-stuffed effigy of North Britain’s arch-enemy,
-with the devil perched upon his shoulder; and this he
-paraded through the streets, followed by the multitude, till he
-came to the Gallow Lee in Leith Walk, where two criminals
-were then hanging in chains, beside whom he exposed the figures
-of Wilkes and his companion. Thus also, when the Douglas cause
-was decided against the popular opinion in the Court of Session,
-Joseph went up to the chair of the Lord President as he was
-going home to his house, and called him to account for the
-injustice of his decision. After the said decision was reversed by
-the House of Lords, Joseph, by way of triumph over the Scottish
-court, dressed up fifteen figures in rags and wigs, resembling the
-judicial attire, mounted them on asses, and led them through the
-streets, telling the populace that they saw the fifteen senators of
-the College of Justice!</p>
-
-<p>When the craft of shoemakers used, in former times, to parade
-the High Street, West Bow, and Grassmarket, with inverted tin
-kettles on their heads and schoolboys’ rulers in their hands,
-Joseph&mdash;who, though a leader and commander on every other
-public occasion, was not admitted into this procession on account
-of his being only a cobbler&mdash;dressed himself in his best clothes,
-with a royal crown painted and gilt and a wooden truncheon, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">{186}</a></span>
-marched pompously through the city till he came to the Netherbow,
-where he planted himself in the middle of the street to
-await the approach of the procession, which he, as a citizen of
-Edinburgh, proposed to welcome into the town. When the royal
-shoemaker came to the Netherbow Port, Joseph stood forth,
-removed the truncheon from his haunch, flourished it in the air,
-and pointing it to the ground, with much dignity of manner,
-addressed his paste-work majesty in these words: ‘O great King
-Crispianus! what are we in thy sight but a parcel of puir slaister-kytes&mdash;creeshy
-cobblers&mdash;sons of bitches?’ And I have been
-assured that this ceremony was performed in a style of burlesque
-exhibiting no small artistic power.</p>
-
-<p>Joseph had a wife, whom he would never permit to walk beside
-him, it being his opinion that women are inferior to the male part
-of creation, and not entitled to the same privileges. He compelled
-his spouse to walk a few paces behind him; and when he turned,
-she was obliged to make a circuit so as to maintain the precise
-distance from his person which he assigned to her. When he
-wished to say anything to her, he whistled as upon a dog, upon
-which she came up to him submissively and heard what he had to
-say; after which she respectfully resumed her station in the rear.</p>
-
-<p>After he had figured for a few years as an active partisan of the
-people, his name waxed of such account with them that it is said
-he could in the course of an hour collect a crowd of not fewer
-than ten thousand persons, all ready to obey his high behests, or
-to disperse at his bidding. In collecting his troops he employed
-a drum, which, though a general, he did not disdain to beat with
-his own hands; and never, surely, had the fiery cross of the
-Highland chief such an effect upon the warlike devotion of his
-clan as Bowed Joseph’s drum had upon the spirit of the Edinburgh
-rabble. As he strode along, the street was cleared of its loungers,
-every close pouring forth an addition to his train, like the
-populous glens adjacent to a large Highland strath giving forth
-their accessions to the general force collected by the aforesaid
-cross. The Town Rats, who might peep forth like old cautious
-snails on hearing his drum, would draw in their horns with a
-Gaelic execration, and shut their door, as he approached; while
-the <em>Lazy Corner</em> was, at sight of him, a lazy corner no longer;
-and the West Bow ceased to resound as he descended.</p>
-
-<p>It would appear, after all, that there was a moral foundation
-for Joseph’s power, as there must be for that of all governments
-of a more regular nature that would wish to thrive or be lasting.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">{187}</a></span>
-The little man was never known to act in a bad cause, or in any
-way to go against the principles of natural justice. He employed
-his power in the redress of such grievances as the law of the land
-does not or cannot easily reach; and it was apparent that almost
-everything he did was for the sake of what he himself designated
-<em>fair-play</em>. Fair-play, indeed, was his constant object, whether in
-clearing room with his brawny arms for a boxing-match, insulting
-the constituted authorities, sacking the granary of a monopolist,
-or besieging the Town-council in their chamber.</p>
-
-<p>An anecdote which proves this strong love of fair-play deserves
-to be recorded. A poor man in the Pleasance having been a
-little deficient in his rent, and in the country on business, his
-landlord seized and rouped his household furniture, turning out
-the family to the street. On the poor man’s return, finding the
-house desolate and his family in misery, he went to a neighbouring
-stable and hanged himself.<a name="FNanchor_158" id="FNanchor_158"></a><a href="#Footnote_158" class="fnanchor">[158]</a> Bowed Joseph did not long remain
-ignorant of the case; and as soon as it was generally known in the
-city, he shouldered on his drum, and after beating it through the
-streets for half-an-hour, found himself followed by several thousand
-persons, inflamed with resentment at the landlord’s cruelty. With
-this army he marched to an open space of ground now covered
-by Adam Street, Roxburgh Street, &amp;c., named in former times
-Thomson’s Park, where, mounted upon the shoulders of six of his
-lieutenant-generals, he proceeded to harangue them, in Cambyses’s
-vein, concerning the flagrant oppression which they were about to
-revenge. He concluded by directing his men to sack the premises
-of the cruel landlord, who by this time had wisely made his
-escape; and this order was instantly obeyed. Every article which
-the house contained was brought out to the street, where, being
-piled up in a heap, the general set fire to them with his own hand,
-while the crowd rent the air with their acclamations. Some
-money and bank-notes perished in the blaze, besides an eight-day
-clock, which, sensible to the last, calmly struck ten just as it was
-consigned to the flames.</p>
-
-<p>On another occasion, during a scarcity, the mob, headed by
-Joseph, had compelled all the meal-dealers to sell their meal at a
-certain price per peck, under penalty of being obliged to shut up
-their shops. One of them, whose place of business was in the
-Grassmarket, agreed to sell his meal at the price fixed by the
-general, for the good of the poor, as he said; and he did so under
-the superintendence of Joseph, who stationed a party at the shop-door<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">{188}</a></span>
-to preserve peace and good order till the whole stock was
-disposed of, when, by their leader’s command, the mob gave three
-hearty cheers, and quietly dispersed. Next day, the unlucky victualler
-let his friends know that he had not suffered so much by
-this compulsory trade as might be supposed; because, though the
-price was below that of the market, he had taken care to use a
-measure which gave only about three-fourths instead of the whole.
-It was not long ere this intelligence came to the ears of our tribune,
-who, immediately collecting a party of his troops, beset the meal-dealer
-before he was aware, and compelled him to pay back a
-fourth of the price of every peck of meal sold; then giving their
-victim a hearty drubbing, they sacked his shop, and quietly
-dispersed as before.</p>
-
-<p>Some foreign princes happening to visit Edinburgh during
-Joseph’s administration, at a period of the year when the mob of
-Edinburgh was wont to amuse itself with an annual burning of
-the pope, the magistrates felt anxious that this ceremony should
-for once be dispensed with, as it might hurt the feelings of their
-distinguished visitors. The provost, in this emergency, resolved
-not to employ his own authority, but that of Joseph, to whom,
-accordingly, he despatched his compliments, with half a guinea,
-begging his kind offices in dissuading the mob from the performance
-of their accustomed sport. Joseph received the message with
-the respect due to the commission of ‘his friend the Lord Provost,’
-and pocketed the half-guinea with a complacent smile; but
-standing up to his full height, and resolutely shaking his rough
-head, he gave for answer that ‘he was highly gratified by his
-lordship’s message; but, everything considered, the pope <em>must be
-burnt</em>!’ And so the pope, honest man, <em>was</em> burnt with all the
-honours accordingly.</p>
-
-<p>Joseph was at last killed by a fall from the top of a Leith
-stage-coach, in returning from the races, while in a state of
-intoxication, about the year 1780. It is to be hoped, for the
-good of society, that ‘we ne’er shall look upon his like again.’<a name="FNanchor_159" id="FNanchor_159"></a><a href="#Footnote_159" class="fnanchor">[159]</a></p>
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">{189}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="BICKERS" id="BICKERS">BICKERS.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>Amongst the social features of a bygone age in Edinburgh
-were the <em>bickers</em> in which the boys were wont to indulge&mdash;that
-is, street conflicts, conducted chiefly with stones, though
-occasionally with sticks also, and even more formidable weapons.
-One cannot but wonder that, so lately as the period when elderly
-men now living were boys, the powers for preserving peace in the
-city should have been so weak as to allow of such battles taking
-place once or twice almost every week. The practice was, however,
-only of a piece with the general rudeness of those old days;
-and, after all, there was more appearance than reality of danger
-attending it. It was truly, as one who had borne a part in it has
-remarked, ‘only a rough kind of play.’<a name="FNanchor_160" id="FNanchor_160"></a><a href="#Footnote_160" class="fnanchor">[160]</a></p>
-
-<p>The most likely time for a bicker was Saturday afternoon, when
-the schools and hospitals held no restraint over their tenants.
-Then it was almost certain that either the Old Town and New
-Town boys, the George Square and Potterrow boys, the Herioters
-and the Watsoners, or some other parties accustomed to regard
-themselves as natural enemies, would meet on some common
-ground, and fall a-pelting each other. There were hardly anywhere
-two adjoining streets but the boys respectively belonging
-to them would occasionally hold encounters of this kind; and the
-animosity assumed a darker tinge if there was any discrepancy of
-rank or condition between the parties, as was apt to be the case
-when, for instance, the Old Town lads met the children of the
-aristocratic streets to the north. Older people looked on with
-anxiety, and wondered what the Town-guard was about, and
-occasionally reports were heard that such a boy had got a wound
-in the head, while another had lost a couple of his front teeth; it
-was even said that fatal cases had occurred in the memory of aged
-citizens. Yet, to the best of my recollection&mdash;for I do remember
-something of bickers&mdash;there was little likelihood of severe damage.
-The parties somehow always kept at a good distance from each
-other, and there was a perpetual running in one direction or
-another; certainly nothing like hand-to-hand fighting. Occasionally
-attempts were made to put down the riot, but seldom with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">{190}</a></span>
-much success; for it was one of the most ludicrous features of
-these contests that whenever the Town-guard made its appearance
-on the ground, the belligerent powers instantly coalesced against
-the common foe. Besides, they could quickly make their way to
-other ground, and there continue the war.</p>
-
-<p>Bickers must have had a foundation in human nature: from no
-temporary effervescence of the boy-mind did they spring; pleasant,
-though wrong, had they been from all time. Witness the following
-act of the Town-council so long ago as 1529: ‘<em>Bikkyrringis
-betwix Barnis</em>.&mdash;It is statut and ordainit be the prouest ballies
-and counsall Forsamekle as ther has bene gret bikkyrringis betwix
-barnis and followis in tymes past and diuerse thar throw hurt in
-perell of ther lyffis and gif sik thingis be usit thar man diuerse
-barnis and innocentis be slane and diuisione ryse amangis
-nychtbouris theirfor we charge straitlie and commandis in our
-Souerane Lord the Kingis name the prouest and ballies of this
-burgh that na sic bykkyrringis be usit in tymes to cum. Certifing
-that and ony persone be fund bykkyrrand that faderis and moderis
-sall ansuer and be accusit for thar deidis and gif thai be vagabondis
-thai to be scurgit and bannist the toune.’</p>
-
-<p>An anecdote which Scott has told of his share in the bickers
-which took place in his youth between the George Square youth
-and the plebeian fry of the neighbouring streets is so pat to this
-occasion that its reproduction may be excusable. ‘It followed,’
-he says, ‘from our frequent opposition to each other, that, though
-not knowing the names of our enemies, we were yet well acquainted
-with their appearance, and had nicknames for the most remarkable
-of them. One very active and spirited boy might be considered
-as the principal leader in the cohort of the suburbs. He was, I
-suppose, thirteen or fourteen years old, finely made, tall, blue-eyed,
-with long fair hair, the very picture of a youthful Goth.
-This lad was always first in the charge and last in the retreat&mdash;the
-Achilles, at once, and Ajax, of the Crosscauseway. He was
-too formidable to us not to have a cognomen, and, like that of
-a knight of old, it was taken from the most remarkable part of his
-dress, being a pair of old green livery breeches, which was the
-principal part of his clothing; for, like Pentapolin, according to
-Don Quixote’s account, Green Breeks, as we called him, always
-entered the battle with bare arms, legs, and feet.</p>
-
-<p>‘It fell that, once upon a time, when the combat was at the
-thickest, this plebeian champion headed a sudden charge, so rapid
-and furious that all fled before him. He was several paces before<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">{191}</a></span>
-his comrades, and had actually laid his hands on the patrician
-standard, when one of our party, whom some misjudging friend
-had entrusted with a <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">couteau de chasse</i>, or hanger, inspired with a
-zeal for the honour of the corps worthy of Major Sturgeon himself,
-struck poor Green Breeks over the head with strength sufficient
-to cut him down. When this was seen, the casualty was so far
-beyond what had ever taken place before that both parties fled
-different ways, leaving poor Green Breeks, with his bright hair
-plentifully dabbled in blood, to the care of the watchman, who
-(honest man) took care not to know who had done the mischief.
-The bloody hanger was flung into one of the Meadow ditches,
-and solemn secrecy was sworn on all hands; but the remorse and
-terror of the actor were beyond all bounds, and his apprehensions
-of the most dreadful character. The wounded hero was for a few
-days in the Infirmary, the case being only a trifling one. But
-though inquiry was strongly pressed on him, no argument could
-make him indicate the person from whom he had received the
-wound, though he must have been perfectly well known to him.
-When he recovered, and was dismissed, the author and his brother
-opened a communication with him, through the medium of a
-popular gingerbread baker, of whom both parties were customers,
-in order to tender a subsidy in name of smart-money. The sum
-would excite ridicule were I to name it; but sure I am that the
-pockets of the noted Green Breeks never held as much money of
-his own. He declined the remittance, saying that he would not
-sell his blood; but at the same time reprobated the idea of being
-an informer, which he said was <em>clam</em>&mdash;that is, base or mean.
-With much urgency he accepted a pound of snuff for the use of
-some old woman&mdash;aunt, grandmother, or the like&mdash;with whom he
-lived. We did not become friends, for the bickers were more
-agreeable to both parties than any more pacific amusement; but
-we conducted them ever after under mutual assurances of the
-highest consideration for each other.’<a name="FNanchor_161" id="FNanchor_161"></a><a href="#Footnote_161" class="fnanchor">[161]</a></p>
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">{192}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="SUSANNA_COUNTESS_OF_EGLINTOUNE" id="SUSANNA_COUNTESS_OF_EGLINTOUNE">SUSANNA, COUNTESS OF EGLINTOUNE.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>The house on the west side of the Old Stamp-office Close,
-High Street, formerly Fortune’s Tavern, was, in the early
-part of the last century, the family mansion of Alexander, Earl
-of Eglintoune. It is a building of considerable height and extent,
-accessible by a broad scale stair. The alley in which it is situated
-bears great marks of former respectability, and contained, till
-the year 1821, the Stamp-office, then removed to the Waterloo
-Buildings.<a name="FNanchor_162" id="FNanchor_162"></a><a href="#Footnote_162" class="fnanchor">[162]</a></p>
-
-<p>The ninth Earl of Eglintoune<a name="FNanchor_163" id="FNanchor_163"></a><a href="#Footnote_163" class="fnanchor">[163]</a> was one of those patriarchal
-peers who live to an advanced age&mdash;indefatigable in the frequency
-of their marriages and the number of their children&mdash;who linger
-on and on, with an unfailing succession of young countesses, and
-die at last leaving a progeny interspersed throughout the whole
-of Douglas’s <cite>Peerage</cite>, two volumes, folio, re-edited by Wood.
-His lordship, in early life, married a sister of Lady Dundee, who
-brought him a large family, and died just about that happy period
-when she could not have greatly increased it. His next wife was
-a daughter of Chancellor Aberdeen, who only added one daughter
-to his stock, and then paused, in a fit of ill-health, to the great
-vexation of his lordship, who, on account of his two sons by the
-first countess having died young, was anxious for an heir. This
-was a consummation to his nuptial happiness which Countess Anne
-did not seem at all likely to bring about, and the chagrin of his
-lordship must have been increased by the longevity which her very
-ill-health seemed to confer upon her; for her ladyship was one of
-those valetudinarians who are too well acquainted with death,
-being always just at his door, ever to come to closer quarters with
-him. At this juncture the blooming Miss Kennedy was brought
-to Edinburgh by her father, Sir Archibald, the rough old cavalier,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">{193}</a></span>
-who made himself so conspicuous in <em>the Persecution</em> and in
-Dundee’s wars.</p>
-
-<p>Susanna Kennedy, though the daughter of a lady considerably
-under the middle size&mdash;one of the three co-heiresses of the
-Covenanting general, David Leslie (Lord Newark), whom Cromwell
-overthrew at Dunbar&mdash;was six feet high, extremely handsome,
-elegant in her carriage, and had a face and complexion of most
-bewitching loveliness. Her relations and nurses always anticipated
-that she was to marry the Earl of Eglintoune, in spite of their
-disparity of age;<a name="FNanchor_164" id="FNanchor_164"></a><a href="#Footnote_164" class="fnanchor">[164]</a> for, while walking one day in her father’s garden
-at Culzean, there alighted upon her shoulder a hawk, with his
-lordship’s name upon its bells, which was considered an infallible
-omen of her fate. Her appearance in Edinburgh, which took
-place about the time of the Union, gained her a vast accession of
-lovers among the nobility and gentry, and set all the rhyming
-fancies of the period agog. Among her swains was Sir John Clerk
-of Penicuik, a man of learning and talent in days when such
-qualities were not common. As Miss Kennedy was understood to
-be fond of music, he sent her a flute as a love-gift; from which it
-may be surmised that this instrument was played by females in
-that age, while as yet the pianoforte was not. When the young
-lady attempted to blow the instrument, something was found to
-interrupt the sound, which turned out to be a copy of verses in her
-praise:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Harmonious pipe, I languish for thy bliss,</div>
-<div class="verse">When pressed to Silvia’s lips with gentle kiss!</div>
-<div class="verse">And when her tender fingers round thee move</div>
-<div class="verse">In soft embrace, I listen and approve</div>
-<div class="verse">Those melting notes which soothe my soul in love.</div>
-<div class="verse">Embalmed with odours from her breath that flow,</div>
-<div class="verse">You yield your music when she’s pleased to blow;</div>
-<div class="verse">And thus at once the charming lovely fair</div>
-<div class="verse">Delights with sounds, with sweets perfumes the air.</div>
-<div class="verse">Go, happy pipe, and ever mindful be</div>
-<div class="verse">To court bewitching Silvia for me;</div>
-<div class="verse">Tell all I feel&mdash;you cannot tell too much&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">Repeat my love at each soft melting touch&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">Since I to her my liberty resign,</div>
-<div class="verse">Take thou the care to tune her heart to mine.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Unhappily for this accomplished and poetical lover, Lord
-Eglintoune’s sickly wife happened just about this time to die, and
-set his lordship again at large among the spinsters of Scotland.
-Admirers of a youthful, impassioned, and sonnet-making cast
-might have trembled at his approach to the shrine of their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">{194}</a></span>
-divinity; for his lordship was one of those titled suitors who,
-however old and horrible, are never rejected, except in novels and
-romances. It appears that poor Clerk had actually made a
-declaration of his passion for Miss Kennedy, which her father was
-taking into consideration, a short while before the death of Lady
-Eglintoune. As an old friend and neighbour, Sir Archibald
-thought he would consult the earl upon the subject, and he
-accordingly proceeded to do so. Short but decisive was the
-conference. ‘Bide a wee, Sir Archy,’ said his lordship; ‘my
-wife’s very sickly.’ With Sir Archibald, as with Mrs Slipslop,
-the least hint sufficed: the case was at once settled against the
-elegant baronet of Penicuik. The lovely Susanna accordingly
-became in due time the Countess of Eglintoune.</p>
-
-<p>Even after this attainment of one of the greatest blessings
-that life has to bestow,<a name="FNanchor_165" id="FNanchor_165"></a><a href="#Footnote_165" class="fnanchor">[165]</a> the old peer’s happiness was like to
-have been destroyed by another untoward circumstance. It was
-true that he had the handsomest wife in the kingdom, and she
-brought him as many children as he could desire. One after
-another came no fewer than seven daughters. But then his
-lordship wanted a male heir; and every one knows how poor a
-consolation a train of daughters, however long, proves in such a
-case. He was so grieved at the want of a son that he threatened
-to divorce his lady. The countess replied that he need not do
-that, for she would readily agree to a separation, provided he
-would give back what he had with her. His lordship, supposing
-she alluded only to pecuniary matters, assured her she should have
-her fortune to the last penny. ‘Na, na, my lord,’ said she, ‘that
-winna do: return me my youth, beauty, and virginity, and dismiss
-me when you please.’ His lordship, not being able to comply
-with this demand, willingly let the matter drop; and before the
-year was out her ladyship brought him a son, who established
-the affection of his parents on an enduring basis. Two other
-male children succeeded. The countess was remarkable for a
-manner quite peculiar to herself, and which was remembered as
-the <em>Eglintoune air</em>, or the <em>Eglintoune manner</em>, long after her
-death. A Scottish gentleman, writing from London in 1730,
-says: ‘Lady Eglintoune has set out for Scotland, much satisfied
-with the honour and civilities shown her ladyship by the queen
-and all the royal family: she has done her country more honour
-than any lady I have seen here, both by a genteel and a prudent<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">{195}</a></span>
-behaviour.’<a name="FNanchor_166" id="FNanchor_166"></a><a href="#Footnote_166" class="fnanchor">[166]</a> Her daughters were also handsome women. It was
-a goodly sight, a century ago, to see the long procession of sedans,
-containing Lady Eglintoune and her daughters, devolve from the
-close and proceed to the Assembly Rooms, where there was sure
-to be a crowd of plebeian admirers congregated to behold their
-lofty and graceful figures step from the chairs on the pavement.
-It could not fail to be a remarkable sight&mdash;eight beautiful women,
-conspicuous for their stature and carriage, all dressed in the
-splendid though formal fashions of that period, and inspired at
-once with dignity of birth and consciousness of beauty! Alas!
-such <em>visions</em> no longer illuminate the dark tortuosities of Auld
-Reekie!</p>
-
-<p>Many of the young ladies found good matches, and were the
-mothers of men more or less distinguished for intellectual attainments.
-Sir James Macdonald, the Marcellus of the Hebrides,
-and his two more fortunate brothers, were the progeny of Lady
-Margaret; and in various other branches of the family talent
-seems to be hereditary.</p>
-
-<p>The countess was herself a blue-stocking&mdash;at that time a sort
-of prodigy&mdash;and gave encouragement to the humble literati of
-her time. The unfortunate Boyse dedicated a volume of poems
-to her; and I need scarcely remind the Scottish reader that the
-<cite>Gentle Shepherd</cite> was laid at her ladyship’s feet. The dedication
-prefixed to that pastoral drama contains what appears the usual
-amount of extravagant praise; yet it was perhaps little beyond
-the truth. For the ‘penetration, superior wit, and profound
-judgment’ which Allan attributes to her ladyship, she was perhaps
-indebted in some degree to the lucky accident of her having
-exercised it in the bard’s favour; but he assuredly overstrained
-his conscience very little when he said she was ‘possessed of every
-outward charm in the most perfect degree.’ Neither was it too
-much to speak of ‘the unfading beauties of wisdom and piety’
-which adorned her ladyship’s mind.’<a name="FNanchor_167" id="FNanchor_167"></a><a href="#Footnote_167" class="fnanchor">[167]</a> Hamilton of Bangour<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">{196}</a></span>’s
-prefatory verses, which are equally laudatory and well bestowed,
-contain the following beautiful character of the lady, with a just
-compliment to her daughters:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘In virtues rich, in goodness unconfined,</div>
-<div class="verse">Thou shin’st a fair example to thy kind;</div>
-<div class="verse">Sincere, and equal to thy neighbours’ fame,</div>
-<div class="verse">How swift to praise, how obstinate to blame!</div>
-<div class="verse">Bold in thy presence bashfulness appears,</div>
-<div class="verse">And backward merit loses all its fears.</div>
-<div class="verse">Supremely blest by Heaven, Heaven’s richest grace</div>
-<div class="verse">Confest is thine&mdash;an early blooming race;</div>
-<div class="verse">Whose pleasing smiles shall guardian wisdom arm&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">Divine instruction!&mdash;taught of thee to charm,</div>
-<div class="verse">What transports shall they to thy soul impart</div>
-<div class="verse">(The conscious transports of a parent’s heart),</div>
-<div class="verse">When thou behold’st them of each grace possessed,</div>
-<div class="verse">And sighing youths imploring to be blest</div>
-<div class="verse">After thy image formed, with charms like thine,</div>
-<div class="verse">Or in the visit or the dance<a name="FNanchor_168" id="FNanchor_168"></a><a href="#Footnote_168" class="fnanchor">[168]</a> to shine:</div>
-<div class="verse">Thrice happy who succeed their mother’s praise,</div>
-<div class="verse">The lovely Eglintounes of other days!’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>It may be remarked that her ladyship’s thorough-paced Jacobitism,
-which she had inherited from her father, tended much to make
-her the friend of Ramsay, Hamilton, and other Cavalier bards.
-She was, it is believed, little given to patronising Whig poets.</p>
-
-<p>The patriarchal peer who made Susanna so happy a mother
-died in 1729, leaving her a dowager of forty, with a good jointure.
-Retiring to the country, she employed her widowhood in the
-education of her children, and was considered a perfect example to
-all mothers in this useful employment. In our days of freer
-manners, her conduct might appear too reserved. The young
-were taught to address her by the phrase ‘Your ladyship;’ and she
-spoke to them in the same ceremonious style. Though her eldest
-son was a mere boy when he succeeded to the title, she constantly
-called him Lord Eglintoune; and she enjoined all the rest of the
-children to address him in the same manner. When the earl grew<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">{197}</a></span>
-up, they were upon no less formal terms; and every day in the
-world he took his mother by the hand at the dinner-hour, and led
-her downstairs to her chair at the head of his table, where she sat
-in state, a perfect specimen of the stately and ostentatious politeness
-of the last age.</p>
-
-<p>All this ceremony was accompanied with so much affection
-that the countess was never known to refuse her son a request but
-one&mdash;to walk as a peeress at the coronation of King George III.
-Lord Eglintoune, then a gentleman of the bedchamber, was proud
-of his mother, and wished to display her noble figure on that
-occasion. But she jestingly excused herself by saying that it was
-not worth while for so old a woman to buy new robes.</p>
-
-<p>The unhappy fate of her eldest and favourite son&mdash;shot by a
-man of violent passions, whom he was rashly treating as a poacher
-(1769)&mdash;gave her ladyship a dreadful shock in her old age. The
-earl, after receiving the fatal wound, was brought to Eglintoune
-Castle, when his mother was immediately sent for from Auchans.
-What her feelings must have been when she saw one so dear to
-her thus suddenly struck down in the prime of his days may be
-imagined. The tenderness he displayed towards her and others
-in his last hours is said to have been to the last degree noble and
-affecting.</p>
-
-<p>When Johnson and Boswell returned from their tour to the
-Hebrides, they visited Lady Eglintoune at Auchans. She was so
-well pleased with the doctor, his politics, and his conversation that
-she embraced and kissed him at parting, an honour of which the
-gifted tourist was ever afterwards extremely proud. Boswell’s
-account of the interview is interesting. ‘Lady Eglintoune,’ says
-he, ‘though she was now in her eighty-fifth year, and had lived in
-the country almost half a century, was still a very agreeable woman.
-Her figure was majestic, her manners high-bred, her reading extensive,
-and her conversation elegant. She had been the admiration
-of the gay circles, and the patroness of poets. Dr Johnson was
-delighted with his reception here. Her principles in church and
-state were congenial with his. In the course of conversation,
-it came out that Lady Eglintoune was married the year before Dr
-Johnson was born; upon which she graciously said to him that she
-might have been his mother, and she now adopted him.’</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w300">
-<div class="figleft w150">
-<img src="images/illus_p_198a.jpg" width="150" height="93" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="figright w100">
-<img src="images/illus_p_198b.jpg" width="100" height="94" alt="" />
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="clear">This venerable woman amused herself latterly in taming and
-patronising rats. She kept a vast number of these animals in her
-pay at Auchans, and they succeeded in her affections to the poets
-and artists whom she had loved in early life. It does not reflect<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">{198}</a></span>
-much credit upon the latter that her ladyship used to complain of
-never having met with true gratitude except from four-footed
-animals. She had a panel in the oak wainscot of her
-dining-room, which she tapped upon and opened at
-meal-times, when ten or twelve jolly rats
-came tripping forth and joined her at table.
-At the word of command, or a signal from
-her ladyship, they retired again obediently to their
-native obscurity&mdash;a trait of good sense in the character
-and habits of the animals which, it is hardly necessary to
-remark, patrons do not always find in two-legged
-protégés.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w450">
-<div class="figleft w190">
-<img src="images/illus_p_198c.jpg" width="190" height="106" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="figright w220">
-<img src="images/illus_p_198d.jpg" width="220" height="92" alt="" />
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="clear">Her ladyship died in 1780, at the age of ninety-one,
-having preserved her stately mien and beautiful
-complexion to the last. The
-latter was a mystery of fineness to many
-ladies not the third of her age. As her secret
-may be of service to modern beauties, I shall,
-in kindness to the sex, divulge it. <em>She never
-used paint, but washed her face periodically with <span class="smcap lowercase">SOW’S MILK</span>!</em> I
-have seen a portrait, taken in her eighty-first year, in which it is
-observable that her skin is of exquisite delicacy and tint. Altogether,
-the countess was a woman of ten thousand!</p>
-
-<p>The jointure-house of this fine old country-gentlewoman&mdash;Auchans
-Castle, a capital specimen of the Scottish manor-house of
-the seventeenth century, situated near Irvine&mdash;is now uninhabited,
-and the handsome wainscoted rooms in which she entertained
-Johnson and Boswell are fast hastening to decay. One last trait
-may now be recorded; in her ladyship’s bedroom at this place was
-hung a portrait of her sovereign <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">de jure</i>, the ill-starred Charles
-Edward, so situated as to be <em>the first object which met her sight on
-awaking in the morning</em>.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">{199}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="FEMALE_DRESSES_OF_LAST_CENTURY" id="FEMALE_DRESSES_OF_LAST_CENTURY">FEMALE DRESSES OF LAST CENTURY.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>Ladies in the last century wore dresses and decorations many
-of which were of an inconvenient nature; yet no one can deny
-them the merit of a certain dignity and grace. How fine it must
-have been to see, as an old gentleman told me he had seen, two
-hooped ladies moving along the Lawnmarket in a summer evening,
-and filling up the whole footway with their stately and voluminous
-persons!</p>
-
-<p>Amongst female articles of attire in those days were calashes,
-bongraces, capuchins, negligées, stomachers, stays, hoops, lappets,
-pinners, plaids, fans, busks, rumple-knots, &amp;c., all of them now
-forgotten.</p>
-
-<p>The calash was a species of hood, constructed of silk upon a
-framework of cane, and was used as a protection to a cap or head-dress
-in walking out or riding in a carriage. It could be folded
-back like the hood of a carriage, so as to lie gathered together
-behind the neck.</p>
-
-<p>The bongrace was a bonnet of silk and cane, in shape somewhat
-like a modern bonnet.</p>
-
-<p>The capuchin was a short cloak, reaching not below the elbows.
-It was of silk, edged with lace, or of velvet. Gentlemen also wore
-capuchins. The first Sir William Forbes frequently appeared at
-the Cross in one. A lady’s <em>mode tippet</em> was nearly the same piece
-of dress.</p>
-
-<p>The negligée was a gown, projecting in loose and ample folds
-from the back. It could only be worn with stays. It was entirely
-open in front, so as to show the stomacher, across which it was
-laced with flat silk cords, while below it opened more widely and
-showed the petticoat. This latter, though shorter, was sometimes
-more splendid than the gown, and had a deep flounce. Ladies in
-walking generally carried the skirt of the gown over the arm, and
-exhibited the petticoat; but when they entered a room, they
-always came sailing in, with the train sweeping full and majestically
-behind them.</p>
-
-<p>The stomacher was a triangular piece of rich silk, one corner
-pointing downwards and joining the fine black lace-bordered apron,
-while the other two angles pointed to the shoulders. Great pains
-were usually discovered in the adornment of this beautiful and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">{200}</a></span>
-most attractive piece of dress. Many wore jewels upon it; and a
-lady would have thought herself poor indeed if she could not
-bedizen it with strings of bugles or tinsel.</p>
-
-<p>Stays were made so long as to touch the chair, both in front and
-rear, when a lady sat. They were calculated to fit so tightly that
-the wearers had to hold by the bedpost while the maid was lacing
-them. There is a story told of a lady of high rank in Scotland,
-about 1720, which gives us a strange idea of the rigours and
-inconvenience of this fashion. She stinted her daughters as to diet,
-with a view to the improvement of their shapes; but the young
-ladies, having the cook in their interest, used to unlace their stays
-at night, after her ladyship went to bed, and make a hearty meal.
-They were at last discovered, by the smell of a roast goose, carried
-upstairs to their bedchamber; as unluckily their lady-mother did
-not take snuff,<a name="FNanchor_169" id="FNanchor_169"></a><a href="#Footnote_169" class="fnanchor">[169]</a> and was not asleep.</p>
-
-<p>The hoop was contemporary with, and a necessary appendage
-of, the stays. There were different species of hoops, being of
-various shapes and uses. The pocket-hoop, worn in the morning,
-was like a pair of small panniers, such as one sees on an ass. The
-bell-hoop was a sort of petticoat, shaped like a bell and made with
-cane or rope for framework. This was not quite full-dress. There
-was also a straw petticoat, a species of hoop such as is so common
-in French prints. The full-sized evening hoop was so monstrous
-that people saw one-half of it enter the room before the wearer.
-This was very inconvenient in the Old Town, where doorways and
-closes were narrow. In going down a close or a turnpike stair,
-ladies tilted them up and carried them under their arms. In case
-of this happening, there was a <em>show petticoat</em> below; and such care
-was taken of appearances that even the <em>garters</em> were worn fine,
-being either embroidered or having gold and silver fringes and
-tassels.</p>
-
-<p>The French silks worn during the last century were beautiful,
-the patterns were so well drawn and the stuff of such excellent
-quality. The dearest common brocade was about a guinea a yard;
-if with gold or silver, considerably more.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">{201}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The lappet was a piece of Brussels or point lace, hanging in
-two pieces from the crown of the head and streaming gracefully
-behind.</p>
-
-<p>Pinners, such as the celebrated Egyptian Sphinx wears, were
-pinned down the stomacher.</p>
-
-<p>Plaids were worn by ladies to cover their heads and muffle their
-faces when they went into the street. The council records of
-Edinburgh abound in edicts against the use of this piece of dress,
-which, they said, confounded decent women with those who were
-the contrary.</p>
-
-<p>Fans were large, the sticks curiously carved, and if of leather,
-generally very well painted&mdash;being imported from Italy or Holland.
-In later times these have been sometimes framed like pictures and
-hung on the walls.</p>
-
-<p>All women, high and low, wore enormous busks, generally with
-a heart carved at the upper end. In low life this was a common
-present to sweethearts; if from carpenters, they were artificially
-veneered.</p>
-
-<p>The rumple-knot was a large bunch of ribbons worn at the peak
-of the waist behind. Knots of ribbons were then numerous over
-the whole body. There were the breast-knots, two hainch-knots
-(at which there were also buttons for looping up the gown behind),
-a knot at the tying of the beads behind the neck, one in front and
-another at the back of the head-gear, and knots upon the shoes.
-It took about twelve yards or upwards to make a full suit of
-ribbons.<a name="FNanchor_170" id="FNanchor_170"></a><a href="#Footnote_170" class="fnanchor">[170]</a></p>
-
-<p>Other minor articles of dress and adornment were the <em>befong</em>
-handkerchief (spelt at random), of a stuff similar to what is now
-called <em>net</em>, crossed upon the breast; paste ear-rings and necklace;
-broad black bracelets at the wrists; a <em>pong pong</em>&mdash;a jewel fixed to
-a wire with a long pin at the end, worn in front of the cap, and
-which shook as the wearer moved. It was generally stuck in the
-cushion over which the hair was turned in front. Several were
-frequently worn at once. A song in the <cite>Charmer</cite>, 1751, alludes
-to this bijou:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Come all ye young ladies whose business and care</div>
-<div class="verse">Is contriving new dresses, and curling your hair;</div>
-<div class="verse">Who flirt and coquet with each coxcomb who comes</div>
-<div class="verse">To toy at your toilets, and strut in your rooms;</div>
-<div class="verse">While you’re placing a patch, <em>or adjusting pong pong</em>,</div>
-<div class="verse">Ye may listen and learn by the truth of my song.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">{202}</a></span></p>
-<p>Fly-caps, encircling the head, worn by young matrons, and mob-caps,
-falling down over the ears, used only by old ones; pockets
-of silk or satin, of which young girls wore one above their other
-attire; silk or linen stockings&mdash;never of cotton, which is a modern
-stuff&mdash;slashed with pieces of a colour in strong contrast with the
-rest, or gold or silver clocks, wove in. The silk stockings were
-very thick, and could not be washed on account of the gold or
-silver. They were frequently of scarlet silk, and (1733) worn both
-by ladies and gentlemen. High-heeled shoes, set off with fine lace
-or sewed work, and sharply pointed in front.</p>
-
-<p>To give the reader a more picturesque idea of the former dresses
-of the ladies of Edinburgh, I cite a couple of songs, the first wholly
-old, the second a revivification:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘I’ll gar our guidman trow that I’ll sell the ladle,</div>
-<div class="verse">If he winna buy to me a new side-saddle&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">To ride to the kirk, and frae the kirk, and round about the toun&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">Stand about, ye fisher jades, and gi’e my goun room!</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">I’ll gar our guidman trow that I’ll tak the fling-strings,</div>
-<div class="verse">If he winna buy to me twelve bonnie goud rings,</div>
-<div class="verse">Ane for ilka finger, and twa for ilka thumb&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">Stand about, ye fisher jades, and gi’e my goun room!</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">I’ll gar our guidman trow that I’m gaun to dee,</div>
-<div class="verse">If he winna fee to me twa valets or three,</div>
-<div class="verse">To beir my tail up frae the dirt and ush me through the toun&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">Stand about, ye fisher jades, and gi’e my goun room!’</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘As Mally Lee cam’ down the street, her <em>capuchin</em> did flee;</div>
-<div class="verse">She coost a look behind her, to see her <em>negligee</em>.</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">And we’re a’ gaun east and wast, we’re a’ gaun agee,</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">We’re a’ gaun east and wast, courtin’ Mally Lee.<a name="FNanchor_171" id="FNanchor_171"></a><a href="#Footnote_171" class="fnanchor">[171]</a></div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">She had twa <em>lappets</em> at her head, that flaunted gallantlie,</div>
-<div class="verse">And <em>ribbon knots</em> at back and breast of bonnie Mally Lee.</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">And we’re a’ gaun, &amp;c.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">A’ down alang the Canongate were beaux o’ ilk degree;</div>
-<div class="verse">And mony are turned round to look at bonnie Mally Lee.</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">And we’re a’ gaun, &amp;c.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">And ilka bab her <em>pong pong</em> gi’ed, ilk lad thought that’s to me;</div>
-<div class="verse">But feint a ane was in the thought of bonnie Mally Lee.</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">And we’re a’ gaun, &amp;c.</div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">{203}</a></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Frae Seton’s Land a countess fair looked owre a window hie,</div>
-<div class="verse">And pined to see the genty shape of bonnie Mally Lee.</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">And we’re a’ gaun, &amp;c.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">And when she reached the palace porch, there lounged erls three;</div>
-<div class="verse">And ilk ane thought his Kate or Meg a drab to Mally Lee.</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">And we’re a’ gaun, &amp;c.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">The dance gaed through the palace ha’, a comely sight to see;</div>
-<div class="verse">But nane was there sae bright or braw as bonnie Mally Lee.</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">And we’re a’ gaun, &amp;c.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Though some had jewels in their hair, like stars ’mang cluds did shine,</div>
-<div class="verse">Yet Mally did surpass them a’ wi’ but her glancin’ eyne.</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">And we’re a’ gaun, &amp;c.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">A prince cam’ out frae ’mang them a’, wi’ garter at his knee,</div>
-<div class="verse">And danced a stately minuet wi’ bonnie Mally Lee.</div>
-<div class="verse indent1">And we’re a’ gaun, &amp;c.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">{204}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="THE_LORD_JUSTICE-CLERK_ALVA172" id="THE_LORD_JUSTICE-CLERK_ALVA172">THE LORD JUSTICE-CLERK ALVA.</a><a name="FNanchor_172" id="FNanchor_172"></a><a href="#Footnote_172" class="fnanchor">[172]</a></h2>
-
-
-
-<p class="chapter_summary"><strong>Ladies Sutherland and Glenorchy&mdash;The Pin or Risp.</strong></p>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter w300">
-<img src="images/illus_p_204.jpg" width="300" height="338" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Mylne’s Court,
-where some of the Mylne family resided.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>This eminent person&mdash;a cadet of
-the ancient house of Mar
-(born 1680, died 1763)&mdash;had
-his town mansion in an
-obscure recess of the
-High Street called
-Mylne Square,<a name="FNanchor_173" id="FNanchor_173"></a><a href="#Footnote_173" class="fnanchor">[173]</a> the
-first place bearing such
-a designation in our
-northern capital: it
-was, I may remark,
-built by one of a
-family of Mylnes, who
-are said to have been
-master-masons to the
-Scottish monarchs for
-eight generations, and
-some of whom are at this
-day architects by profession.<a name="FNanchor_174" id="FNanchor_174"></a><a href="#Footnote_174" class="fnanchor">[174]</a>
-Lord Alva’s residence was in the
-second and third floors of the large
-building on the west side of the
-square. Of the same structure, an Earl
-of Northesk occupied another <em>flat</em>. And,
-to mark the character of Lord Alva’s abode,
-part of it was afterwards, in the hands of a Mrs Reynolds,
-used as a lodging-house of the highest grade. The Earl of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">{205}</a></span>
-Hopetoun, while acting as Commissioner to the General
-Assembly, there held viceregal state. But to return to Lord
-Alva: it gives a curious idea of the habits of such a dignitary
-before the rise of the New Town that we should find him
-content with this dwelling while in immediate attendance upon
-the court, and happy during the summer vacation to withdraw to
-the shades of his little villa at Drumsheugh, standing on a spot
-now surrounded by <em>town</em>. Lord Lovat, who, on account of his
-numerous law-pleas, was a great intimate of Lord Alva’s, frequently
-visited him here; and Mrs Campbell of Monzie, Lord Alva’s
-daughter, used to tell that when she met Lord Lovat on the stair
-he always took her up in his arms and kissed her, to her great
-annoyance and horror&mdash;<em>he was so ugly</em>. During one of his law-pleas,
-he went to a dancing-school ball, which Misses Jean and
-Susanna, Lord Alva’s daughters, attended. He had his pocket
-full of <em>sweeties</em>, as Mrs Campbell expressed it; and so far did he
-carry his exquisitely refined system of cunning, that&mdash;in order no
-doubt to find favour with their father&mdash;he devoted the greater
-share of his attentions and the whole of his comfits to them alone.
-Those who knew this singular man used to say that, with all his
-duplicity, faithlessness, and cruelty, his character exhibited no
-redeeming trait whatever: nobody ever knew any good of him.</p>
-
-<p>In his Mylne Square mansion Lord Alva’s two step-daughters
-were married; one to become Countess of Sutherland, the other
-Lady Glenorchy. There was something very striking in the fate
-of Lady Sutherland and of the earl, her husband&mdash;a couple
-distinguished as much by personal elegance and amiable character
-as by lofty rank. Lady Sutherland was blessed with a temper of
-extraordinary sweetness, which shone in a face of so much beauty
-as to have occasioned admiration where many were beautiful&mdash;the
-coronation of George III. and his queen. The happiness of the
-young pair had been increased by the birth of a daughter. One
-unlucky day his lordship, coming after dinner into the drawing-room
-at Dunrobin a little flushed with wine, lifted up the infant
-above his head by way of frolic, when, sad to tell, he dropped her
-by accident on the floor, and she received injuries from which she
-never recovered. This incident had such an effect upon his lordship’s
-spirits that his health became seriously affected, so as finally
-to require a journey to Bath, where he was seized with an infectious
-fever. For twenty-one successive days and nights he was attended
-by his wife, then pregnant, till she herself caught the fatal distemper.
-The countess’s death was concealed from his lordship;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">{206}</a></span>
-nevertheless, when his delirium left him, the day before he died,
-he frequently said: ‘I am going to join my dear wife;’ appearing
-to know that she had ‘already reached the goal with mended pace!’
-Can it be that we are sometimes able to penetrate the veil which
-hangs, in thick and gloomy folds, between this world and the next;
-or does the ‘mortal coil’ in which the light of mind is enveloped
-become thinner and more transparent by the wearing of deadly
-sickness? The bodies of the earl and countess were brought to
-Holyrood House, where they had usually resided when in town, and
-lay in state for some time previous to their interment in one grave in
-the Abbey Chapel. The death of a pair so young, so good, and
-who had stood in so distinguished a position in society&mdash;leaving one
-female infant to a disputed title&mdash;made a deep impression on the
-public, and was sincerely lamented in their own immediate circle.
-Of much poetry written on the occasion, a specimen may be seen
-in Evans’s <cite>Old Ballads</cite>. Another appears in Brydges’s <cite>Censura
-Literaria</cite>, being the composition of Sir Gilbert Elliot of Minto:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="wideverse indent4">‘In pity, Heaven bestowed</div>
-<div class="wideverse">An early doom: lo, on the self-same bier,</div>
-<div class="wideverse">A fairer form, cold by her husband’s side,</div>
-<div class="wideverse">And faded every charm. She died for thee,</div>
-<div class="wideverse">For thee, her only love. In beauty’s prime,</div>
-<div class="wideverse">In youth’s triumphant hour, she died for thee.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="wideverse">Bring water from the brook, and roses spread</div>
-<div class="wideverse">O’er their pale limbs; for ne’er did wedded love</div>
-<div class="wideverse">To one sad grave consign a lovelier pair,</div>
-<div class="wideverse">Of manners gentler, or of purer heart!’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Lady Glenorchy, the younger sister of Lady Sutherland, was
-remarkable for her pious disposition. Exceedingly unfortunate in
-her marriage, she was early taught to seek consolation from things
-‘not of this world.’ I have been told that nothing could have
-been more striking than to hear this young and beautiful creature
-pouring forth her melodious notes and hymns, while most of her
-sex and age at that time exercised their voices only upon the
-wretched lyrics imported from Vauxhall and Ranelagh, or the
-questionable verses of Ramsay and his contemporaries. She met
-with her rich reward, even in this world; for she enjoyed the
-applause of the wealthy and the blessings of the poor, with that
-supreme of all pleasures&mdash;the conviction that the eternal welfare
-of those in whose fate she was chiefly interested was forwarded, if
-not perfected, by her precepts and example.<a name="FNanchor_175" id="FNanchor_175"></a><a href="#Footnote_175" class="fnanchor">[175]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">{207}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w150">
-<img src="images/illus_p_207.jpg" width="150" height="314" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Old Risps.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>It is not unworthy of notice, in this record of all that is old
-and quaint in our city, that the Lord Justice-clerk’s house was
-provided with a <em>pin</em> or <em>risp</em>, instead of the more modern convenience&mdash;a
-knocker. The Scottish ballads, in numberless passages,
-make reference to this article: no hero in those compositions ever
-comes to his mistress’s door but he <em>tirles at the pin</em>. What, then,
-was a pin? It was a small slip or bar of iron, starting out from
-the door vertically, serrated on the side towards the door, and
-provided with a small ring, which, being drawn roughly along
-the serrations or nicks, produced a harsh and grating sound, to
-summon the servant to open. Another term for the article was
-a <em>crow</em>. In the fourth eclogue of Edward Fairfax, a production
-of the reign of James VI. and I., quoted in the <cite>Muses’ Library</cite>,
-is this passage:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Now, farewell Eglon! for the sun stoops low,</div>
-<div class="verse">And calling guests before my sheep-cot’s door;</div>
-<div class="verse">Now <em>clad in white, I see my porter-crow</em>;</div>
-<div class="verse">Great kings oft want these blessings of the poor;’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>with the following note: ‘The ring of the door, called a <em>crow</em>,
-and when covered with white linen, denoted the mistress of the
-house was in travel.’ It is quite appropriate
-to this explanation that a small Latin vocabulary,
-published by Andrew Simpson in 1702,
-places among the parts of a house, ‘<em>Corvex&mdash;a
-clapper or ringle</em>.’ Hardly one specimen of
-the pin, crow, or ringle now survives in the
-Old Town. They were almost all disused
-many years ago, when knockers were generally
-substituted as more stylish. Knockers at that
-time did not long remain in repute, though
-they have never been altogether superseded,
-even by bells, in the Old Town. The comparative
-merit of knockers and pins was for a
-long time a controversial point, and many
-knockers got their heads twisted off in the
-course of the dispute. Pins were, upon the
-whole, considered very inoffensive, decent, old-fashioned
-things, being made of a modest metal, and making little<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">{208}</a></span>
-show upon a door; knockers were thought upstart, prominent,
-brazen-faced articles, and received the full share of odium always
-conferred by Scotsmen of the old school upon tasteful improvements.
-Every drunken fellow, in reeling home at night, thought
-it good sport to carry off all the knockers that came in his way;
-and as drunken gentlemen were very numerous, many acts of
-violence were committed, and sometimes a whole stair was found
-stripped of its knockers in the morning; when the voice of
-lamentation raised by the servants of the sufferers might have
-reminded one of the wailings of the Lennox dairy-women after a
-<em>creagh</em> in the days of old. Knockers were frequently used as
-missile weapons by the bucks of that day against the Town-guard;
-and the morning sun sometimes saw the High Street strewed with
-them. The aforesaid Mrs Campbell remembered residing in an
-Old Town house, which was one night disturbed in the most
-intolerable manner by a drunken party at the knocker. In the
-morning the greater part of it was found to be gone; and it was
-besides discovered, to the horror of the inmates, that part of a
-finger was left sticking in the fragments, with the appearance of
-having been forcibly wrenched from the hand.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">{209}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="MARLINS_AND_NIDDRYS_WYNDS" id="MARLINS_AND_NIDDRYS_WYNDS">MARLIN’S AND NIDDRY’S WYNDS.</a></h2>
-
-
-
-<p class="chapter_summary"><strong>Tradition of Marlin the Pavier&mdash;House of Provost Edward&mdash;Story
-of Lady Grange.</strong></p>
-
-
-<p>Where South Bridge Street now stands, there formerly
-existed two wynds, or alleys, of the better class, named
-Marlin’s and Niddry’s Wynds. Many persons of importance lived
-in these obscurities. Marlin’s Wynd, which extended from behind
-the Tron Church, and contained several bookshops and stalls, the
-favourite lounge of the lovers of old literature, was connected with
-a curious tradition, which existed at the time when Maitland
-wrote his <cite>History of Edinburgh</cite> (1753). It was said that the
-High Street was first paved or <em>causewayed</em> by one Marlin, a
-Frenchman, who, thinking that specimen of his ingenuity the best
-monument he could have, desired to be buried under it, and was
-accordingly interred at the head of this wynd, which derived its
-name from him. The tradition is so far countenanced by there
-having formerly been a space in the pavement at this spot, marked
-by six flat stones, in the shape of a grave. According, however,
-to more authentic information, the High Street was first paved in
-1532<a name="FNanchor_176" id="FNanchor_176"></a><a href="#Footnote_176" class="fnanchor">[176]</a> by John and Bartoulme Foliot, who appear to have had
-nothing in common with this legendary Marlin, except country.
-The grave of at least Bartoulme Foliot is distinctly marked by a
-flat monument in the Chapel-Royal at Holyrood House. It is
-possible, nevertheless, that Marlin may have been the more
-immediate executor or superintendent of the work.</p>
-
-<p>Niddry’s Wynd abounded in curious antique houses, many of
-which had been the residences of remarkable persons. The most
-interesting <em>bit</em> was a paved court, about half-way down, on the
-west side, called Lockhart’s Court, from its having latterly been
-the residence of the family of Lockhart of Carnwath.<a name="FNanchor_177" id="FNanchor_177"></a><a href="#Footnote_177" class="fnanchor">[177]</a> This was,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">{210}</a></span>
-in reality, a quadrangular palace, the whole being of elegant
-old architecture in one design, and accessible by a deep arched
-gateway. It was built by Nicol Edward, or Udward, who was
-provost of Edinburgh in 1591; a wealthy citizen, and styled in
-his <em>writts</em>, ‘of old descent in the burgh.’ On a mantelpiece
-within the house his arms were carved, along with an anagram
-upon his name:</p>
-
-<p class="center">
-VA D’UN VOL À CHRIST&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p><em>Go with one flight to Christ</em>; which, the reader will find, can only
-be made out by Latinising his name into <span class="smcap">Nicholaus Eduartus</span>.
-We learn from Moyses’s <cite>Memoirs</cite> that, in January 1591, this house
-was the temporary residence of James VI. and his queen, then
-recently arrived from Denmark; and that, on the 7th of February,
-the Earl of Huntly passed hence, out of the immediate royal
-presence, when he went to murder the Bonny Earl of Moray at
-Donibrissle; which caused a suspicion that His Majesty was concerned
-in that horrid outburst of feudal hate. Lockhart’s Court
-was latterly divided into several distinct habitations, one of which,
-on the north side of the quadrangle, was occupied by the family
-of Bruce of Kinnaird, the celebrated traveller. In the part on
-the south side, occupied by the Carnwath family, there was a
-mantelpiece in the drawing-room of magnificent workmanship,
-and reaching to the ceiling. The whole mansion, even in its
-reduced state, bore an appearance of security and strength which
-spoke of other times; and there was, moreover, a profound
-dungeon underground, which was only accessible by a secret trap-door,
-opening through the floor of a small closet, the most remote
-of a suite of rooms extending along the south and west sides of
-the court. Perhaps, at a time when to be rich was neither so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">{211}</a></span>
-common nor so safe as now, Provost Edward might conceal his
-hoards in this <em>massy more</em>.</p>
-
-<p>Alexander Black of Balbirney, who was provost of Edinburgh
-from 1579 to 1583, had a house at the head of the wynd. King
-James lodged in this house on the 18th of August 1584, and
-walked from it in state next day to hold a parliament in the
-Tolbooth. Here also lodged the Chancellor Thirlstain, in
-January 1591, while the king and queen were the guests of
-Nicol Edward.<a name="FNanchor_178" id="FNanchor_178"></a><a href="#Footnote_178" class="fnanchor">[178]</a> It must be understood that these visits of
-royalty were less considered in the light of an honour than of a
-tax. The king in those times went to live at the board of a
-wealthy subject when his own table happened to be scantily
-furnished; which was too often the case with poor King James.</p>
-
-<p>On the east side of the wynd, nearly opposite to Lockhart’s
-Court, was a good house,<a name="FNanchor_179" id="FNanchor_179"></a><a href="#Footnote_179" class="fnanchor">[179]</a> which, early in the last century, was
-possessed by James Erskine of Grange, best known by his judicial
-title of Lord Grange, and the brother of John, Earl of Mar.
-This gentleman has acquired an unhappy notoriety in consequence
-of his treatment of his wife. He was externally a professor of
-ultra-evangelical views of religion, and a patron of the clergy on
-that side, yet in his private life is understood to have been far
-from exemplary. The story of Lady Grange, as Mrs Erskine was
-called, had a character of romance about it which has prevented it
-from being forgotten. It also reflects a curious light upon the
-state of manners in Scotland in the early part of the eighteenth
-century. The lady was a daughter of that Chiesly of Dalry whom
-we have already seen led by an insane violence of temper to commit
-one of the most atrocious of murders.</p>
-
-
-<h3>STORY OF LADY GRANGE.<a name="FNanchor_180" id="FNanchor_180"></a><a href="#Footnote_180" class="fnanchor">[180]</a></h3>
-
-<p>Lord and Lady Grange had been married upwards of twenty
-years, and had had several children, when, in 1730, a separation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">{212}</a></span>
-was determined on between them. It is usually difficult in such
-cases to say in what degree the parties are respectively blamable;
-how far there have been positive faults on one side, and want of
-forbearance on the other, and so forth. If we were to believe the
-lady in this instance, there had been love and peace for twenty
-years, when at length Lord Grange took a sudden dislike to his
-wife, and would no longer live with her. He, on the other hand,
-speaks of having suffered long from her ‘unsubduable rage and
-madness,’ and of having failed in all his efforts to bring her
-to a reasonable conduct. There is too much reason to believe
-that the latter statement is in the main true; although, were it
-more so, it would still leave Lord Grange unjustifiable in the
-measures which he took with respect to his wife. It is traditionally
-stated that in their unhappy quarrels the lady did not scruple
-to remind her husband whose daughter she was&mdash;thus hinting at
-what she was capable of doing if she thought herself deeply
-aggrieved. However all this might be, in the year 1730 a
-separation was agreed to (with great reluctance on the part of
-the lady), his lordship consenting to give her a hundred a year
-for her maintenance so long as she should continue to live apart
-from him.</p>
-
-<p>After spending some months in the country, Lady Grange
-returned to Edinburgh, and took a lodging near her husband’s
-house, for the purpose, as she tells us, of endeavouring to induce
-him to take her back, and that she might occasionally see her
-children. According to Lord Grange, she began to torment him
-by following him and the children on the street ‘in a scandalous
-and shameful manner,’ and coming to his house, and calling reproaches
-to him through the windows,<a name="FNanchor_181" id="FNanchor_181"></a><a href="#Footnote_181" class="fnanchor">[181]</a> especially when there was
-company with him. He thus writes: ‘In his house, at the bottom
-of Niddry’s Wynd, where there is a court through which one
-enters the house, one time among others, when it was full of chairs,
-chairmen, and footmen, who attended the company that were with
-himself, or his sister Lady Jane Paterson, then keeping house
-together, she came into this court, and among that mob shamelessly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">{213}</a></span>
-cried up to the windows injurious reproaches, and would not
-go away, though entreated, till, hearing the late Lord Lovat’s
-voice, who was visiting Mr E&mdash;&mdash;, and seeing two of his servants
-among the other footmen, “Oh,” said she, “is your master here?”
-and instantly ran off.’ He speaks of her having attacked him one
-day in church; at another time she forced him to take refuge
-with his son in a tavern for two hours. She even threatened to
-assault him on the bench, ‘which he every day expected; for she
-professed that she had no shame.’</p>
-
-<p>The traditionary account of Lady Grange represents her fate as
-having been at last decided by her threatening to expose her
-husband to the government for certain treasonable practices. It
-would now appear that this was partially true. In his statement,
-Lord Grange tells us that he had some time before gone to
-London to arrange the private affairs of the Countess of Mar,
-then become unable to conduct them herself, and he had sent an
-account of his procedure to his wife, including some reflections on
-a certain great minister (doubtless Walpole), who had thwarted
-him much, and been of serious detriment to the interests of his
-family in this matter. This document she retained, and she now
-threatened to take it to London and use it for her husband’s
-disadvantage, being supported in the design by several persons
-with whom she associated. While denying that he had been
-concerned in anything treasonable, Lord Grange says, ‘he had
-already too great a load of that great minister’s wrath on his back
-to stand still and see more of it fall upon him by the treachery
-and madness of such a wife and such worthy confederates.’ The
-lady had taken a seat in a stage-coach for London.<a name="FNanchor_182" id="FNanchor_182"></a><a href="#Footnote_182" class="fnanchor">[182]</a> Lord
-Grange caused a friend to go and make interest to get her money
-returned, and the seat let to another person; in which odd
-proceeding he was successful. Thus was the journey stayed for
-the meantime; but the lady declared her resolution to go as soon
-as possible. ‘What,’ says Lord Grange, ‘could a man do with
-such a wife? There was great reason to think she would daily go
-on to do mischief to her family, and to affront and bring a blot
-on her children, especially her daughters. There were things that
-could not be redressed in a court of justice, and we had not then
-a madhouse to lock such unhappy people up in.’</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">{214}</a></span></p>
-<p>The result of his lordship’s deliberations was a plan for what he
-calls ‘sequestrating’ his wife. It appears to have been concerted
-between himself and a number of Highland chiefs, including,
-above all, the notorious Lord Lovat.<a name="FNanchor_183" id="FNanchor_183"></a><a href="#Footnote_183" class="fnanchor">[183]</a> We now turn to the lady’s
-narrative, which proceeds to tell that, on the evening of the 22nd
-of January 1732, a party of Highlandmen, wearing the livery of
-Lord Lovat, made their way into her lodgings, and forcibly seized
-her, throwing her down and gagging her, then tying a cloth over
-her head, and carrying her off as if she had been a corpse. At
-the bottom of the stair was a chair containing a man, who took
-the hapless lady upon his knees, and held her fast in his arms till
-they had got to a place in the outskirts of the town. Then they
-took her from the chair, removed the cloth from her head, and
-mounted her upon a horse behind a man, to whom she was tied;
-after which the party rode off ‘by the lee light of the moon,’ to
-quote the language of the old ballads, whose incidents the present
-resembles in character.</p>
-
-<p>The treatment of the lady by the way was, if we can believe her
-own account, by no means gentle. The leader, although a gentleman
-(Mr Forster of Corsebonny), disregarded her entreaties to be
-allowed to stop on account of cramp in her side, and only answered
-by ordering a servant to renew the bandages over her mouth.
-She observed that they rode along the Long Way (where Princes
-Street now stands), past the Castle, and so to the Linlithgow road.
-After a ride of nearly twenty miles, they stopped at Muiravonside,
-the house of Mr John Macleod, advocate, where servants appeared
-waiting to receive the lady&mdash;and thus showed that the master of
-the house had been engaged to aid in her abduction. She was
-taken upstairs to a comfortable bedroom; but a man being posted
-in the room as a guard, she could not go to bed nor take any
-repose. Thus she spent the ensuing day, and when it was night,
-she was taken out and remounted in the same fashion as before;
-and the party then rode along through the Torwood, and so to
-the place called Wester Polmaise, belonging to a gentleman of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">{215}</a></span>
-name of Stewart, whose steward or factor was one of the cavalcade.
-Here was an old tower, having one little room on each floor, as is
-usually the case in such buildings; and into one of these rooms,
-the window of which was boarded over, the lady was conducted.
-She continued here for thirteen or fourteen weeks, supplied with a
-sufficiency of the comforts of life, but never allowed to go into the
-open air; till at length her health gave way, and the factor began
-to fear being concerned in her death. By his intercession with
-Mr Forster, she was then permitted to go into the court, under a
-guard; but such was the rigour of her keepers that the garden
-was still denied to her.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w500">
-<a id="illus_c_019"></a>
-<img src="images/illus_c_019.jpg" width="500" height="678" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">THE CASTLE<br />
-from Princes Street.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap"><a href="#Page_214">Page 214.</a></span>
-</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Thus time passed drearily on until the month of August, during
-all which time the prisoner had no communication with the
-external world. At length, by an arrangement made between Lord
-Lovat and Mr Forster, at the house of the latter, near Stirling,
-Lady Grange was one night forcibly brought out, and mounted
-again as formerly, and carried off amidst a guard of horsemen.
-She recognised several of Lovat’s people in this troop, and found
-Forster once more in command. They passed by Stirling Bridge,
-and thence onward to the Highlands; but she no longer knew the
-way they were going. Before daylight they stopped at a house,
-where she was lodged during the day, and at night the march
-was resumed. Thus they journeyed for several days into the
-Highlands, never allowing the unfortunate lady to speak, and
-taking the most rigid care to prevent any one from becoming
-aware of her situation. During this time she never had off her
-clothes: one day she slept in a barn, another in an open enclosure.
-Regard to delicacy in such a case was impossible. After a
-fortnight spent at a house on Lord Lovat’s ground (probably in
-Stratherrick, Inverness-shire), the journey was renewed in the
-same style as before; only Mr Forster had retired from the party,
-and the lady found herself entirely in the hands of Frasers.</p>
-
-<p>They now crossed a loch into Glengarry’s land, where they
-lodged several nights in cow-houses or in the open air, making
-progress all the time to the westward, where the country becomes
-extremely wild. At Lochourn, an arm of the sea on the west
-coast, the unfortunate lady was transferred to a small vessel which
-was in waiting for her. Bitterly did she weep, and pitifully
-implore compassion; but the Highlanders understood not her
-language; and though they had done so, a departure from the
-orders which had been given them was not to be expected from
-men of their character. In the vessel, she found that she was in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">{216}</a></span>
-the custody of one Alexander Macdonald, a tenant of one of
-the Western Islands named Heskir, belonging to Sir Alexander
-Macdonald of Sleat; and here we have a curious indication of the
-spirit in which the Highlanders conducted such transactions. ‘I
-told him,’ says the lady, ‘that I was stolen at Edinburgh, and
-brought there by force, and that it was contrary to the laws what
-they were doing. He answered that he would not keep me, or
-any other, against their will, <em>except Sir Alexander Macdonald were
-in the affair</em>.’ While they lay in Lochourn, waiting for a wind,
-the brother and son of Macdonald of Scothouse came to see but
-not to relieve her. Other persons visited the sloop, and among
-these one William Tolmy, a tenant of the chief of Macleod, and
-who had once been a merchant at Inverness. This was the first
-person she had seen who expressed any sympathy with her. He
-undertook to bear information of her retreat to her friend and
-‘man of business,’ Mr Hope of Rankeillor, in Edinburgh; but it
-does not appear that he fulfilled his promise.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Grange remained in Macdonald’s charge at Heskir nearly
-two years&mdash;during the first year without once seeing bread, and
-with no supply of clothing; obliged, in fact, to live in the same
-miserable way as the rest of the family; afterwards some little
-indulgence was shown to her. This island was of desolate aspect,
-and had no inhabitant besides Macdonald and his wife. The
-wretchedness of such a situation for a lady who had been all her
-life accustomed to the refined society of a capital may of course
-be imagined. Macdonald would never allow her to write to any
-one; but he went to his landlord, Sir Alexander, to plead for the
-indulgences she required. On one of these occasions, Sir Alexander
-expressed his regret at having been concerned in such an affair,
-and wished he were quit of it. The wonder is how Erskine should
-have induced all these men to interest themselves in the ‘sequestration’
-of his wife. One thing is here remarkable: they were all of
-them friends of the Stuart family, as was Macleod of Macleod,
-into whose hands the lady subsequently fell. It therefore becomes
-probable that Erskine had at least convinced them that her
-seclusion from the world was necessary in some way for the
-preservation of political secrets important to them.</p>
-
-<p>In June 1734 a sloop came to Heskir to take away the lady;
-it was commanded by a Macleod, and in it she was conveyed to
-the remotest spot of ground connected with the British Islands&mdash;namely,
-the isle of St Kilda, the property of the chief of Macleod,
-and remarkable for the simple character of the poor peasantry<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">{217}</a></span>
-who occupy it. There cannot, of course, be a doubt that those
-who had an interest in the seclusion of Lady Grange regarded
-this as a more eligible place than Heskir, in as far as it was more
-out of the way, and promised better for her complete and permanent
-confinement. In some respects it was an advantageous
-change for the lady: the place was not uninhabited, as Heskir
-very nearly was; and her domestic accommodation was better.
-In St Kilda, she was placed in a house or cottage of two small
-apartments, tolerably well furnished, with a girl to wait upon
-her, and provided with a sufficiency of good food and clothing.
-Of educated persons the island contained not one, except for a
-short time a Highland Presbyterian clergyman, named Roderick
-Maclennan. There was hardly even a person capable of speaking
-or understanding the English language within reach. No books,
-no intelligence from the world in which she had once lived. Only
-once a year did a steward come to collect the rent paid in kind by
-the poor people; and by him was the lady regularly furnished
-with a store of such articles, foreign to the place, as she needed&mdash;usually
-a stone of sugar, a pound of tea, six pecks of wheat, and an
-anker of spirits.<a name="FNanchor_184" id="FNanchor_184"></a><a href="#Footnote_184" class="fnanchor">[184]</a> Thus she had no lack of the common necessaries
-of life; she only wanted society and freedom. In this way she
-spent seven dreary years in St Kilda. How she contrived to pass
-her time is not known. We learn, however, some particulars of
-her history during this period from the testimony of those who
-had a charge over her. If this is to be believed, she made
-incessant efforts, though without effect, to bribe the islanders to
-assist in liberating her. Once a stray vessel sent a boat ashore
-for water; she no sooner heard of it than she despatched the
-minister’s wife to apprise the sailors of her situation, and entreat
-them to rescue her; but Mrs Maclennan did not reach the spot
-till after they had departed. She was kind to the peasantry,
-giving them from her own stores, and sometimes had the women
-to come and dance before her; but her temper and habits were
-not such as to gain their esteem. Often she drank too much; and
-whenever any one near her committed the slightest mistake, she
-would fly into a furious passion, and even resort to violence.
-Once she was detected in an attempt, during the night, to obtain
-a pistol from above the steward’s bed, in the room next to her
-own. On his awaking and seeing her, she ran off to her own bed.
-One is disposed, of course, to make all possible allowances for a
-person in her wretched circumstances; yet there can be little<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">{218}</a></span>
-doubt, from the evidence before us, that it was a natural and
-habitual violence of temper which displayed itself during her
-residence in St Kilda.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile it was known in Edinburgh that Lady Grange had
-been forcibly carried away and placed in seclusion by orders of her
-husband; but her whereabouts was a mystery to all besides a few
-who were concerned to keep it secret. During the years which
-had elapsed since her abduction, Mr Erskine had given up his seat
-on the bench, and entered into political life as a friend of the
-Prince of Wales and opponent of Sir Robert Walpole. The
-world had wondered at the events of his domestic life, and several
-persons denounced the singular means he had adopted for obtaining
-domestic peace. But, in the main, he stood as well with society
-as he had ever done. At length, in the winter of 1740-41, a
-communication from Lady Grange for the first time reached her
-friends. It was brought by the minister Maclennan and his wife,
-who had left the island in discontent, after quarrelling with
-Macleod’s steward. The idea of a lady by birth and education
-being immured for a series of years in an outlandish place where
-only the most illiterate peasantry resided, and this by the
-command of a husband who could only complain of her irritable
-temper, struck forcibly upon public feeling, and particularly upon
-the mind of Lady Grange’s legal agent, Mr Hope of Rankeillor,
-who had all along felt a keen interest in her fate. Of Mr Hope it
-may be remarked that he was also a zealous Jacobite; yet, though
-all the persons engaged in the lady’s abduction were of that party,
-he hesitated not to take active measures on the contrary side.
-He immediately applied to the Lord Justice-clerk (supreme
-criminal judge) for a warrant to search for and liberate Lady
-Grange. This application was opposed by the friends of Mr
-Erskine, and eventually it was defeated; yet he was not on that
-account deterred from hiring a vessel, and sending it with armed
-men to secure the freedom of the lady&mdash;a step which, as it was
-illegal and dangerous, obviously implied no small risk on his own
-part. This ship proceeded no farther than the harbour called the
-Horse-shoe, in Lorn (opposite to the modern town of Oban), where
-the master quarrelled with and set on shore Mrs Maclennan, his
-guide. Apparently the voyage was not prosecuted in consequence
-of intelligence being received that the lady had been removed to
-another place, where she was kept in more humane circumstances.
-If so, its object might be considered as in part at least, though
-indirectly, accomplished.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">{219}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I have seen a warrant, signed in the holograph of Normand
-Macleod&mdash;the same insular chief who, a few years after, lost
-public respect in consequence of his desertion of the Jacobite
-cause, and showing an active hostility to Prince Charles when in
-hiding. The document is dated at Dunvegan, February 17,
-1741, and proceeds upon a rumour which has reached the writer
-that a certain gentlewoman, called Lady Grange, was carried to
-his isle of St Kilda in 1734, and has ever since been confined
-there under cruel circumstances. Regarding this as a scandal
-which he is bound to inquire into (as if it could have hitherto
-been a secret to him), he orders his baron-bailie of Harris,
-Donald Macleod of Bernera (this was a gallant fellow who went
-out in the ’Forty-five), to proceed to that island and make the
-necessary investigations. I have also seen the original precognition
-taken by honest Donald six days thereafter, when the
-various persons who had been about Lady Grange gave evidence
-respecting her. The general bearing of this testimony, besides
-establishing the fact of her confinement as a prisoner, is to the
-effect that she was treated well in all other respects, having a
-house forty feet long, with an inner room and a chimney to it,
-a curtained bed, arm-chair, table, and other articles; ample store
-of good provisions, including spirits; and plenty of good
-clothes; but that she was addicted to liquor, and liable to
-dreadful outbreaks of anger. Evidence was at the same time
-taken regarding the character of the Maclennans, upon whose
-reports Mr Hope had proceeded. It was Mr Erskine’s interest
-to establish that they were worthless persons, and to this effect
-strong testimony was given by several of the islanders, though
-it would be difficult to say with what degree of verity. The
-whole purpose of these precognitions was to meet the clamours
-raised by Mr Hope as to the barbarities to which Lady Grange
-had been subjected. They had the effect of stopping for a
-time the legal proceedings threatened by that gentleman; but
-he afterwards raised an action in the Court of Session for payment
-of the arrears of aliment or allowance due to the lady,
-amounting to £1150, and obtained decreet or judgment in the
-year 1743 against the defender in absence, though he did not
-choose to put it in force.</p>
-
-<p>The unfortunate cause of all these proceedings ceased to be a
-trouble to any one in May 1745. Erskine, writing from Westminster,
-June 1, in answer to an intimation of her death, says:
-‘I most heartily thank you, my dear friend, for the timely notice<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">{220}</a></span>
-you gave me of the death of <em>that person</em>. It would be a
-ridiculous untruth to pretend grief for it; but as it brings to my
-mind a train of various things for many years back, it gives me
-concern. Her retaining wit and facetiousness to the last surprises
-me. These qualities none found in her, no more than
-common-sense or good-nature, before she went to these parts;
-and of the reverse of all which, if she had not been irrecoverably
-possest, in an extraordinary and insufferable degree, after many
-years’ fruitless endeavours to reclaim her, she had never seen
-these parts. I long for the particulars of her death, which, you
-are pleased to tell me, I am to have by next post.’</p>
-
-<p>Mr Hope’s wife and daughters being left as heirs of Lady
-Grange, an action was raised in their name for the £1150
-formerly awarded, and for three years additional of her annuity;
-and for this compound sum decreet was obtained, which was
-followed by steps for forcing payment. The Hopes were aware,
-however, of the dubious character of this claim, seeing that Mr
-Erskine, from whatever causes, had substituted an actual subsistence
-since 1732. They accordingly intimated that they aimed
-at no personal benefit from Lady Grange’s bequest; and the
-affair terminated in Mr Erskine reimbursing Mr Hope for all
-the expenses he had incurred on behalf of the lady, including
-that for the sloop which he had hired to proceed to St Kilda for
-her rescue.</p>
-
-<p>It is humbly thought that this story casts a curious and faithful
-light upon the age of our grandfathers, showing things in a kind
-of transition from the sanguinary violence of an earlier age to the
-humanity of the present times. Erskine, not to speak of his
-office of a judge in Scotland, moved in English society of the
-highest character. He must have been the friend of Lyttelton,
-Pope, Thomson, and other ornaments of Frederick’s court; and
-as the brother-in-law of the Countess of Mar, who was sister of
-Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, he would figure in the brilliant circle
-which surrounded that star of the age of the second George. Yet
-he does not appear to have ever felt a moment’s compunction at
-leaving the mother of his children to pine and fret herself to
-death in a half-savage wilderness&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Placed far amidst the melancholy main;’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>for in a paper which expresses his feelings on the subject pretty
-freely, he justifies the ‘sequestration’ as a step required by
-prudence and decency; and in showing that the gross necessaries<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">{221}</a></span>
-of life were afforded to his wife, seems to have considered
-that his whole duty towards her was discharged. Such an insensibility
-could not be peculiar to one man: it indicates the
-temper of a class and of an age. While congratulating ourselves
-on the improved humanity of our own times, we may glance with
-satisfaction to the means which it places in our power for the
-proper treatment of patients like Mrs Erskine. Such a woman
-would now be regarded as the unfortunate victim of disease,
-and instead of being forcibly carried off under cloud of night by
-a band of Highlanders, and committed to confinement on the
-outskirts of the world, she would, with proper precautions, be
-remitted to an asylum, where, by gentle and rational management,
-it might be hoped that she would be restored to mental
-health, or, at the worst, enabled to spend the remainder of her
-days in the utmost comfort which her state admitted of.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>[1868.&mdash;About the middle of Cant’s Close,<a name="FNanchor_185" id="FNanchor_185"></a><a href="#Footnote_185" class="fnanchor">[185]</a> on the west side,
-there exists a remarkable edifice, different from all others in the
-neighbourhood. It is two
-stories in height, the second
-story being reached by an
-outside stone stair within
-a small courtyard, which
-had originally been shut in
-by a gate. The stone pillars
-of the gateway are decorated
-with balls at the top, as
-was the fashion of entrances
-to the grounds of a country
-mansion. The building is
-picturesque in character, in
-the style of the sixteenth
-century in Scotland. As
-it resembles a neat, old-fashioned
-country-house, one
-wonders to find it jammed
-up amidst tall edifices in this confined alley. Ascending the stair,
-we find that the interior consists of three or four apartments,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">{222}</a></span>
-with handsome panelled walls and elaborately carved stucco
-ceilings. The principal room has a double window on the west
-to Dickson’s Close.<a name="FNanchor_186" id="FNanchor_186"></a><a href="#Footnote_186" class="fnanchor">[186]</a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w300">
-<img src="images/illus_p_221.jpg" width="300" height="281" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Old Mansion, Cant’s Close.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Daniel Wilson, in his <cite>Memorials of Edinburgh</cite>, speaks of this
-building in reference to Dickson’s Close. He says: ‘A little
-lower down the close on the same side, an old and curious stone
-tenement bears on its lower crow-step the Haliburton arms,
-impaled with another coat, on one shield. It is a singularly
-antique and time-worn edifice, evidently of considerable antiquity.
-A curious double window projects on a corbelled base into the
-close, while the whole stone-work is so much decayed as greatly
-to add to its picturesque character. In the earliest deed which
-exists, bearing date 1582, its first proprietor, Master James
-Halyburton&mdash;a title then of some meaning&mdash;is spoken of in
-indefinite terms as <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">umq<sup>le</sup></i>, or deceased; so that it is a building
-probably of the early part of the sixteenth century.’ It is known
-that the adjoining properties on the north once pertained to
-the collegiate church of Crichton; while those on the east, in
-Strichen’s Close, comprehended the town residence of the Abbot
-of Melrose, 1526.</p>
-
-<p>The adjoining woodcut [<a href="#Page_222">p. 221</a>] will give some idea of this
-strange old mansion in Cant’s Close, with its gateway and flight of
-steps. In looking over the titles, we find that the tenement was
-conveyed in 1735 from Robert Geddes of Scotstoun, Peeblesshire,
-to George Wight, a burgess of Edinburgh, since which period it
-has gradually deteriorated; every apartment, from the ground to
-the garret, is now a dwelling for a separate family; and the
-whole surroundings are most wretched. The edifice formed one
-of the properties removed under the Improvement Act of 1867.]</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">{223}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="ABBOT_OF_MELROSES_LODGING" id="ABBOT_OF_MELROSES_LODGING">ABBOT OF MELROSE’S LODGING.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p class="chapter_summary"><strong>Sir George Mackenzie&mdash;Lady Anne Dick.</strong></p>
-
-
-<p>In Catholic times several of the great dignitaries of the Church
-had houses in Edinburgh, as the Archbishop of St Andrews
-at the foot of Blackfriars
-Wynd, the Bishop of Dunkeld
-in the Cowgate, and
-the Abbot of Cambuskenneth
-in the Lawnmarket.<a name="FNanchor_187" id="FNanchor_187"></a><a href="#Footnote_187" class="fnanchor">[187]</a>
-The Abbot of Melrose’s
-‘lodging’ appears from
-public documents to have
-been in what is now called
-Strichen’s Close, in the High
-Street, immediately to the
-west of Blackfriars Wynd.
-It had a garden extending
-down to the Cowgate and
-up part of the opposite
-slope.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w275">
-<img src="images/illus_p_223.jpg" width="275" height="405" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Strichen’s Close.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>A successor of the abbot
-in this possession was Sir
-George Mackenzie of Rosehaugh,
-king’s advocate in
-the reigns of Charles II.
-and James II., and author
-of several able works in
-Scottish law, as well as a
-successful cultivator of miscellaneous
-literature. He
-got a charter of the property
-from the magistrates in 1677. The house occupied by Sir
-George still exists,<a name="FNanchor_188" id="FNanchor_188"></a><a href="#Footnote_188" class="fnanchor">[188]</a> and appears to have been a goodly enough
-mansion for its time. It is now, however, possessed by a brass-founder<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">{224}</a></span>
-as a place of business. From Sir George the alley was
-called Rosehaugh’s Close, till, this house falling by marriage connection
-into the possession
-of Lord Strichen,
-it got the name of
-Strichen’s Close, which
-it still bears. Lord
-Strichen was a judge of
-the Court of Session for
-forty-five years subsequent
-to 1730. He was
-the direct ancestor of the
-present Lord Lovat of
-the British peerage.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w300">
-<img src="images/illus_p_224.jpg" width="300" height="281" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Back of Mackenzie’s House, looking into
-Cant’s House.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Mackenzie has still a
-place in the popular
-imagination in Edinburgh
-as the <em>Bluidy
-Mackingie</em>, his office having
-been to prosecute the
-unruly Covenanters. It
-therefore happens that
-the founder of our
-greatest national library,<a name="FNanchor_189" id="FNanchor_189"></a><a href="#Footnote_189" class="fnanchor">[189]</a> one whom Dryden regarded as a
-friend, and who was the very first writer of classic English
-prose in Scotland, is a sort of Raw-head and Bloody-bones
-by the firesides of his native capital. He lies in a beautiful
-mausoleum, which forms a conspicuous object in the Greyfriars
-Churchyard, and which describes him as an ornament to his age,
-and a man who was kind to all, ‘except a rebellious crew, from
-whose violence, with tongue and pen, he defended his country and
-king, whose virulence he stayed by the sword of justice, and whose
-ferocity he, by the force of reason, blunted, and only did not
-subdue.’ This monument was an object of horror to the good
-people of Edinburgh, as it was almost universally believed that
-the spirit of the persecutor could get no rest in its superb but
-gloomy tenement. It used to be ‘a feat’ for a set of boys, in a
-still summer evening, to march up to the ponderous doors, bedropt
-with white tears upon a black ground, and cry in at the keyhole:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Bluidy Mackingie, come out if ye daur,</div>
-<div class="verse">Lift the sneck, and draw the bar!’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">{225}</a></span></p>
-<p>after which they would run away as if some hobgoblin were in
-chase of them, probably not looking round till they were out of
-the churchyard.</p>
-
-<p>Sir George Mackenzie had a country-house called Shank, about
-ten miles to the south of Edinburgh,<a name="FNanchor_190" id="FNanchor_190"></a><a href="#Footnote_190" class="fnanchor">[190]</a> now a ruin. One day the
-Marquis of Tweeddale, having occasion to consult him about some
-law business, rode across the country, and arrived at so early an
-hour in the morning that the lawyer was not yet out of bed.
-Soliciting an immediate audience, he was admitted to the bedroom,
-where he sat down and detailed the case to Sir George, who
-gave him all necessary counsel from behind the curtains. When
-the marquis advanced to present a fee, he was startled at the
-apparition of a female hand through the curtains, in an attitude
-expressive of a readiness to receive, while no hand appeared on the
-part of Sir George. The explanation was that Sir George’s lady,
-as has been the case with many a weaker man, took entire charge
-of his purse.<a name="FNanchor_191" id="FNanchor_191"></a><a href="#Footnote_191" class="fnanchor">[191]</a></p>
-
-<p>Several of the descendants of this great lawyer have been
-remarkable for their talents. None, perhaps, possessed more
-of the <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">vivida vis animi</i> than his granddaughter, Lady Anne
-Dick of Corstorphine (also granddaughter, by the father’s side,
-to the clever but unscrupulous ‘Tarbat Register,’ the first Earl of
-Cromarty).<a name="FNanchor_192" id="FNanchor_192"></a><a href="#Footnote_192" class="fnanchor">[192]</a> This lady excited much attention in Edinburgh
-society by her eccentric manners and her droll pasquinade
-verses: one of those beings she was who astonish, perplex, and
-fidget their fellow-creatures, till at last the world feels a sort of
-relief when they are removed from the stage. She made many
-enemies by her lampoons; and her personal conduct only afforded
-them too good room for revenge. Sometimes she would dress
-herself in men’s clothes, and go about the town in search of
-adventures. One of her frolics ended rather disgracefully, for
-she and her maid, being apprehended in their disguise, were
-lodged all night in the Town Guard-house. It may be readily
-imagined that by those whom her wit had exasperated such<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">{226}</a></span>
-follies would be deeply relished and made the most of. We must
-not, therefore, be surprised at Scandal telling that Lady Anne had
-at one period lain a whole year in bed, in a vain endeavour&mdash;to
-baffle <em>himself</em>.</p>
-
-<p>Through private channels have oozed out at this late day a
-few specimens of Lady Anne’s poetical abilities; less brilliant than
-might be expected from the above character of her, yet having a
-certain air of dash and <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">espièglerie</i> which looks appropriate. They
-are partly devoted to bewailing the coldness of a certain Sir Peter
-Murray of Balmanno, towards whom she chose to act as a sort of
-she-Petrarch, but apparently in the mere pursuit of whim. One
-runs in the following tender strain:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Oh, when he dances at a ball,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">He’s rarely worth the seeing;</div>
-<div class="verse">So light he trips, you would him take</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">For some aërial being!</div>
-<div class="verse">While pinky-winky go his een,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">How blest is each bystander!</div>
-<div class="verse">How gracefully he leads the fair,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">When to her seat he hands her!</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">But when in accents saft and sweet,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">He chants forth <em>Lizzie Baillie</em>,</div>
-<div class="verse">His dying looks and attitude</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Enchant, they cannot fail ye.</div>
-<div class="verse">The loveliest widow in the land,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">When she could scarce disarm him,</div>
-<div class="verse">Alas! the belles in Roxburghshire</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Must never hope to charm him!</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">O happy, happy, happy she,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Could make him change his plan, sir,</div>
-<div class="verse">And of this rigid bachelor,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Convert the married man, sir:</div>
-<div class="verse">O happy, and thrice happy she,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Could make him change his plan, sir,</div>
-<div class="verse">And to the gentle Benedick</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Convert the single man, sir,’ &amp;c.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>In another, tired, apparently, of the apathy of this sweet youth,
-she breaks out as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Oh, wherefore did I cross the Forth,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">And leave my love behind me?</div>
-<div class="verse">Why did I venture to the north,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">With one that did not mind me?</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Had I but visited Carin!</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">It would have been much better,</div>
-<div class="verse">Than pique the prudes, and make a din</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">For careless, cold Sir Peter!</div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">{227}</a></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">I’m sure I’ve seen a better limb,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">And twenty better faces;</div>
-<div class="verse">But still my mind it ran on him,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">When I was at the races.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">At night, when we went to the ball,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Were many there discreeter;</div>
-<div class="verse">The well-bred duke, and lively Maule,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Panmure behaved much better.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">They kindly showed their courtesy,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">And looked on me much sweeter;</div>
-<div class="verse">Yet easy could I never be,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">For thinking on Sir Peter.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">I fain would wear an easy air,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">But, oh, it looked affected,</div>
-<div class="verse">And e’en the fine ambassador</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Could see he was neglected.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Though Powrie left for me the spleen,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">My temper grew no sweeter;</div>
-<div class="verse">I think I’m mad&mdash;what do I mean,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">To follow cold Sir Peter!’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Her ladyship died, without issue, in 1741.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">{228}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="BLACKFRIARS_WYND" id="BLACKFRIARS_WYND">BLACKFRIARS WYND.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="chapter_summary"><strong>Palace of Archbishop Bethune&mdash;Boarding-schools of the Last
-Century&mdash;The Last of the Lorimers&mdash;Lady Lovat.</strong></p>
-
-
-<p>Those who now look into Blackfriars Wynd&mdash;passing through
-it is out of the question&mdash;will be surprised to learn that, all
-dismal and wretched as it is in all respects, it was once a place of
-some respectability and even dignity. On several of its tall old
-<em>lands</em> may be seen inscriptions implying piety on the part of the
-founder&mdash;one, for example:</p>
-
-<p class="center">
-PAX INTRANTIBUS,<br />
-SALUS EXEUNTIBUS;<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>another:</p>
-
-<p class="center">
-MISERERE MEI, DEUS;<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>this last containing in its <em>upper floor</em> all that the adherents of
-Rome had forty years ago as a place of worship in Edinburgh&mdash;the
-chapel to which, therefore, as a matter of course, the late
-Charles X. resorted with his suite, when residing as Comte d’Artois
-in Holyrood House. The alley gets its name from having been
-the access to the Blackfriars’ Monastery on the opposite slope, and
-being built on their land.</p>
-
-
-<h3>PALACE OF ARCHBISHOP BETHUNE [OR BEATON].</h3>
-
-<p>At the foot of the wynd, on the east side, is a large mansion
-of antique appearance, forming two sides of a quadrangle, with a
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">porte-cochère</i> giving access to a court behind, and a picturesque
-overhanging turret at the exterior angle.<a name="FNanchor_193" id="FNanchor_193"></a><a href="#Footnote_193" class="fnanchor">[193]</a> This house was built
-by James Bethune, Archbishop of Glasgow (1508-1524), chancellor
-of the kingdom, and one of the Lords Regent under the Duke
-of Albany during the minority of James V. Lyndsay, in his
-<cite>Chronicles</cite>, speaks of it as ‘his owen ludging quhilk he biggit in
-the Freiris Wynd.’ Keith, at a later period, says: ‘Over the
-entry of which the arms of the family of Bethune are to be
-seen to this day.’ Common report represents it as the house
-of Cardinal Bethune, who was the nephew of the Archbishop of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">{229}</a></span>
-Glasgow; and it is not improbable that the one prelate bequeathed
-it to the other, and that it thus became what Maitland calls it,
-‘the archiepiscopal palace belonging to the see of St Andrews.’</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w450">
-<a id="illus_c_020"></a>
-<img src="images/illus_c_020.jpg" width="450" height="667" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">BLACKFRIARS’ WYND.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap"><a href="#Page_228">Page 228.</a></span>
-</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter w350">
-<img src="images/illus_p_229.jpg" width="350" height="427" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Cardinal Bethune’s House.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The ground-floor of this extensive
-building is arched over
-with strong stone-work, after
-the fashion of those houses of
-defence of the same period
-which are still scattered over
-the country. Some years ago,
-when one of the arches was
-removed to make way for a
-common ceiling, a thick layer
-of sand, firmly beaten down,
-was found between the surface
-of the vault and the floor
-above. Ground-floors thus
-formed were applied in former
-times to inferior domestic uses,
-and to the storing of articles
-of value. The chief apartments
-for living in were on
-the floor above&mdash;that is, the
-so-called <em>first floor</em>. And such
-is the case in all the best
-houses of an old fashion in the city of St Andrews at this day.</p>
-
-<p>I shall afterwards have something to say of an event of the year
-1517, with which Archbishop Bethune’s house was connected. It
-appears to have been occupied by James V. in 1528, while he was
-deliberating on the propriety of calling a parliament.<a name="FNanchor_194" id="FNanchor_194"></a><a href="#Footnote_194" class="fnanchor">[194]</a></p>
-
-<p>The Bethune palace is now, like its confrères, abandoned to the
-humblest class of tenants. Eighty years ago, however, it must
-still have been a tolerably good house, as it was then the residence
-of Bishop Abernethy Drummond, of the Scottish Episcopal communion,
-the husband of the heiress of Hawthornden. This worthy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">{230}</a></span>
-divine occupied some space in the public eye in his day, and was
-particularly active in obtaining the repeal of the penal statutes
-against his church. Some wag, figuring the surprise in high places
-at a stir arising from a quarter so obscure, penned this epigram:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Lord Sydney, to the privy-council summoned,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">By testy majesty was questioned quick:</div>
-<div class="verse">“Eh, eh! who, who’s this Abernethy Drummond,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">And where, in Heaven’s name, is his bishopric?”’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-<h3>BOARDING-SCHOOLS OF THE LAST CENTURY.</h3>
-
-<p>When the reader hears such things of the Freir Wynd, he must
-not be surprised overmuch on perusing the following advertisement
-from the <cite>Edinburgh Gazette</cite> of April 19, 1703: ‘There is a
-Boarding-school to be set up in Blackfriars Wynd, in Robinson’s
-Land, upon the west side of the wynd, near the middle thereof, in
-the first door of the stair leading to the said land, against the
-latter end of May, or first of June next, where young Ladies and
-Gentlewomen may have all sorts of breeding that is to be had in
-any part of Britain, and great care taken of their conversation.’</p>
-
-<p>I know not whether this was the same seminary which, towards
-the middle of the century, was kept by a distinguished lady named
-Mrs Euphame or Effie Sinclair, who was descended from the ancient
-family of Longformacus, in Berwickshire, being the granddaughter
-of Sir Robert Sinclair, first baronet of Longformacus, upon whom
-that dignity was conferred by King Charles II., in consideration
-of his services and losses during the civil war. Mrs Effie was
-allied to many of the best families in Scotland, who made it a
-duty to place their children under her charge; and her school was
-thus one of the most respectable in Edinburgh. By her were
-educated the beautiful Miss Duff, afterwards Countess of Dumfries
-and Stair, and, by a second marriage, lady of the Honourable
-Alexander Gordon (Lord Rockville); the late amiable and excellently
-well informed Mrs Keith, sister of Sir Robert Keith,
-commonly called, from his diplomatic services, <em>Ambassador Keith</em>;<a name="FNanchor_195" id="FNanchor_195"></a><a href="#Footnote_195" class="fnanchor">[195]</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">{231}</a></span>
-the two Misses Hume of Linthill; and Miss Rutherford, the
-mother of Sir Walter Scott. All these ladies were Scottish cousins
-to Mrs Effie. To judge by the proficiency of her scholars, although
-much of what is called accomplishment might be then left untaught,
-she must have been possessed of uncommon talents for education;
-for all the ladies before mentioned had well-cultivated minds, were
-fond of reading, wrote and spelled admirably, were well acquainted
-with history and with <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">belles-lettres</i>, without neglecting the more
-homely duties of the needle and the account-book; and, while two
-of them were women of extraordinary talents, all of them were
-perfectly well-bred in society.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w275">
-<img src="images/illus_p_231.jpg" width="275" height="176" alt="Two cows." />
-</div>
-
-<p>It may be added that many of these young ladies were sent to
-reside with and be <em>finished off</em> by the Honourable Mrs Ogilvie,
-lady of the Honourable Patrick Ogilvie of Longmay and Inchmartin,
-who was supposed to be the <em>best-bred</em> woman of her time
-in Scotland (ob. 1753). Her system was very rigorous, according
-to the spirit of the times. The young ladies were taught to sit
-quite upright; and the mother of my informant (Sir Walter Scott),
-even when advanced to nearly her eightieth year, never permitted
-her back to touch the chair in sitting. There is a remarkably
-good and characteristic anecdote told of the husband of this
-rigorous preceptress, a younger brother of the Earl of Findlater,
-whose exertions, while Lord
-High-chancellor of Scotland, in
-favour of the Union were so conspicuous.
-The younger brother, it
-appears, had condescended to trade
-a little in cattle, which was not
-considered derogatory to the dignity
-of a Scottish gentleman at that
-time, and was by no means an
-uncommon practice among them.
-However, the earl was offended at the measure, and upbraided
-his brother for it. ‘Haud your tongue, man!’ said the cattle-dealer;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">{232}</a></span>
-‘better sell nowte than sell nations,’ pronouncing the last
-word with peculiar and emphatic breadth.</p>
-
-<p>I am tempted, by the curious and valuable document
-appended, to suspect that the female accomplishments of the
-last century were little behind those of the present in point of
-useless elaboration.</p>
-
-<p>‘<em>Thursday, December 9, 1703.</em>&mdash;Near Dundee, at Dudhope,
-there is to be taught, by a gentlewoman from London, the following
-works, viz.&mdash;1. Wax-work of all sorts, as any one’s picture to the
-life, figures in shadow glasses, fruits upon trees or in dishes, all
-manner of confections, fish, flesh, fowl, or anything that can be
-made of wax.&mdash;2. Philligrim-work of any sort, whether hollow or
-flat.&mdash;3. Japan-work upon timber or glass.&mdash;4. Painting upon
-glass.&mdash;5. Sashes for windows, upon sarsnet or transparent paper.&mdash;6.
-Straw-work of any sort, as houses, birds, or beasts.&mdash;7. Shell-work,
-in sconces, rocks, or flowers.&mdash;8. Quill-work.&mdash;9. Gum-work.&mdash;10.
-Transparent-work.&mdash;11. Puff-work.&mdash;12. Paper-work.&mdash;13.
-Plate-work on timber, brass, or glass.&mdash;14. Tortoise-shell-work.&mdash;15.
-Mould-work, boxes and baskets.&mdash;16. Silver
-landskips.&mdash;17. Gimp-work.&mdash;18. Bugle-work.&mdash;19. A sort of
-work in imitation of japan, very cheap.&mdash;20. Embroidering,
-stitching, and quilting.&mdash;21. True point or tape lace.&mdash;22.
-Cutting glass.&mdash;23. Washing gauzes, or Flanders lace and
-point.&mdash;24. Pastry of all sorts, with the finest cuts and
-shapes that’s now used in London.&mdash;25. Boning fowls,
-without cutting the back.&mdash;26. Butter-work.&mdash;27. Preserving,
-conserving, and candying.&mdash;28. Pickling and
-colouring.&mdash;29. All sorts of English wines.&mdash;30. Writing
-and arithmetic.&mdash;31. Music, and the great end of dancing,
-which is a good carriage; and several other things too
-tedious here to be mentioned. Any who are desirous to
-learn the above works may board with herself at a reasonable
-rate, or may board themselves in Dundee, and may
-come to her quarterly.’&mdash;Advertisement in <cite>Edinburgh Gazette</cite>, 1703.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w100">
-<img src="images/illus_p_232.jpg" width="100" height="188" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">‘The great
-end of
-dancing.’</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Another distinguished Edinburgh boarding-school of the last
-century was kept by two ladies, of Jacobite predilections, named
-the Misses Ged, in Paterson’s Court, Lawnmarket. They were
-remarkable at least for their family connections, for it was a
-brother of theirs who, under the name of Don Patricio Ged,
-rendered such kindly and effective service to Commodore Byron,
-as gratefully recorded in the well-known <cite>Narrative</cite>, and gracefully
-touched on by Campbell in the <cite>Pleasures of Hope</cite>:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">{233}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘He found a warmer world, a milder clime,</div>
-<div class="verse">A home to rest, a shelter to defend,</div>
-<div class="verse">Peace and repose, <em>a Briton and a friend</em>.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Another member of the family, William Ged, originally a goldsmith
-in Edinburgh, was the inventor of stereotype printing.
-The Misses Ged were described by their friends as of the Geds of
-Baldridge, near Dunfermline; thorough Fife Jacobites every one of
-them. The old ladies kept a portrait of the Chevalier in their
-parlour, and looked chiefly to partisans of the Stuarts for support.
-They had another relative of less dignity, who, accepting a situation
-in the Town-guard, became liable to satiric reference from
-Robert Fergusson:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Nunc est bibendum, et bendere bickerum magnum,</div>
-<div class="verse">Cavete Town-guardum, <em>Dougal Geddum</em>, atque Campbellum.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Dougal had been a silversmith, but in his own conceit his red
-coat as a Town-guard officer made him completely military.
-Seeing a lady without a beau at the door of the Assembly Room,
-he offered his services, ‘if the arm of an old soldier could be of
-any use.’ ‘Hoot awa, Dougal,’ said the lady, accepting his
-assistance, however; ‘an auld tinkler, you mean.’</p>
-
-
-<h3>THE LAST OF THE LORIMERS.</h3>
-
-<p>To return for a moment to the archiepiscopal palace. It
-contained, about eighty years ago, a person calling himself a
-<span class="smcap">Lorimer</span>&mdash;an appellative once familiar in Edinburgh, being applied
-to those who deal in the ironwork used in saddlery.<a name="FNanchor_196" id="FNanchor_196"></a><a href="#Footnote_196" class="fnanchor">[196]</a></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">{234}</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>LADY LOVAT.</h3>
-
-<p>The widow of the rebel Lord Lovat spent a great portion of a
-long widowhood and died (1796) in a house at the head of
-Blackfriars Wynd.</p>
-
-<p>Her ladyship was a niece of the first Duke of Argyll, and born,
-as she herself expressed it, in the year <em>Ten</em>&mdash;that is, 1710. The
-politic <em>Mac Shemus</em><a name="FNanchor_197" id="FNanchor_197"></a><a href="#Footnote_197" class="fnanchor">[197]</a> marked her out as a suitable second wife,
-in consideration of the value of the Argyll connection. As he
-was above thirty years her senior, and not famed for the tenderest
-treatment of his former spouse, or for any other amiable trait of
-disposition, she endeavoured, by all gentle means, to avoid the
-match; but it was at length effected through the intervention
-of her relations, and she was carried north to take her place in
-the semi-barbarous state which her husband held at Castle Downie.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing but misery could have been expected from such an
-alliance. The poor young lady, while treated with external
-decorum, was in private subjected to such usage as might have
-tried the spirit of a Griselda. She was occasionally kept confined
-in a room by herself, from which she was not allowed to
-come forth even at meals, only a scanty supply of coarse food
-being sent to her from his lordship’s table. When pregnant, her
-husband coolly told her that if she brought forth a girl he
-would put it on the back of the fire. His eldest son by the
-former marriage was a sickly child. Lovat therefore deemed it
-necessary to raise a strong motive in the step-mother for the
-child being taken due care of during his absence in the Lowlands.
-On going from home, he would calmly inform her that any harm<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">{235}</a></span>
-befalling <em>the boys</em> in his absence would be attended with the
-penalty of her own death, for in that event he would undoubtedly
-shoot her through the head. It is added that she did, from this
-in addition to other motives, take an unusual degree of care of her
-step-son, who ever after felt towards her the tenderest love and
-gratitude. One is disposed to believe that there must be some
-exaggeration in these stories; and yet when we consider that
-it is an historical fact that Lovat applied to Prince Charles for a
-warrant to take President Forbes <em>dead or alive</em> (Forbes being his
-friend and daily intimate), it seems no extravagance that he
-should have acted in this manner to his wife. Sir Walter Scott
-tells an additional story, which helps out the picture. ‘A lady,
-the intimate friend of her youth, was instructed to visit Lady
-Lovat, as if by accident, to ascertain the truth of those rumours
-concerning her husband’s conduct which had reached the ears of
-her family. She was received by Lord Lovat with an extravagant
-affectation of welcome, and with many assurances of the happiness
-his lady would receive from seeing her. The chief then went to
-the lonely tower in which Lady Lovat was secluded, without
-decent clothes, and even without sufficient nourishment. He laid
-a dress before her becoming her rank, commanded her to put it
-on, to appear, and to receive her friend as if she were the mistress
-of the house; in which she was, in fact, a naked and half-starved
-prisoner. And such was the strict watch which he maintained,
-and the terror which his character inspired, that the visitor durst
-not ask, nor Lady Lovat communicate, anything respecting her
-real situation.’<a name="FNanchor_198" id="FNanchor_198"></a><a href="#Footnote_198" class="fnanchor">[198]</a> Afterwards, by a letter rolled up in a clew of
-yarn and dropped over a window to a confidential person, she
-was enabled to let her friends know how matters actually stood;
-and steps were then taken to obtain her separation from her
-husband. When, some years later, his political perfidy had
-brought him to the Tower&mdash;forgetting all past injuries, and
-thinking only of her duty as a wife, Lady Lovat offered to come
-to London to attend him. He returned an answer, declining
-the proposal, and containing the only expressions of kindness and
-regard which she had ever received from him since her marriage.</p>
-
-<p>The singular character of Lord Lovat makes almost every
-particular regarding him worth collecting.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w200">
-<img src="images/illus_p_235.jpg" width="200" height="93" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p>Previous to 1745, when the late Mr
-Alexander Baillie of Dochfour was a student
-at the grammar-school of Inverness,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">{236}</a></span>
-cock-fights were very common among the boys. This detestable
-sport, by the way, was encouraged by the schoolmasters of those
-days, who derived a profit from the beaten cocks, or, as they
-were called, <em>fugies</em>, which became, at the end of every game,
-their appropriated perquisite. In pursuit of cocks, Mr Baillie
-went to visit his friends in the Aird, and in the course of his
-researches was introduced to Lord Lovat, whose policy it was,
-on all occasions, to show great attentions to his neighbours and
-their children. The situation in which his lordship was found
-by the schoolboy was, if not quite unprecedented, nevertheless
-rather surprising. He was stretched out in bed between two
-Highland lasses, who, on being seen, affected out of modesty to
-hide their faces under the bedclothes. The old lord accounted
-for this strange scene by saying that his blood had become cold,
-and he was obliged to supply the want of heat by the application
-of animal warmth.</p>
-
-<p>It is said that he lay in bed for the most part of the two years
-preceding the Rebellion; till, hearing of Prince Charles’s arrival
-in Arisaig, he roused himself with sudden vehemence, crying to an
-attendant: ‘Lassie, bring me my brogues&mdash;I’ll rise <em>noo</em>!’</p>
-
-<p>One of his odd fancies was to send a retainer every day to
-Loch Ness, a distance of eight miles, for the water he drank.</p>
-
-<p>His intimacy with his neighbour President Forbes is an
-amusing affair, for the men must have secretly known full well
-what each other was, and yet policy made them keep on decent
-terms for a long course of years. Lovat’s son by the subject of
-this notice&mdash;the Honourable Archibald Campbell Fraser&mdash;was a
-boy at Petty school in 1745. The President sometimes invited
-him to dinner. One day, pulling a handful of foreign gold pieces
-out of his pocket, he carelessly asked the boy if he had ever seen
-such coins before. Here was a stroke worthy of Lovat himself,
-for undoubtedly he meant thus to be informed whether the lord
-of Castle Downie was accustomed to get remittances for the
-Chevalier’s cause from abroad.</p>
-
-<p>After the death of Lord Lovat, there arose some demur about
-his lady’s jointure, which was only £190 per annum. It was not
-paid to her for several years, during which, being destitute of
-other resources, she lived with one of her sisters. Some of her
-numerous friends&mdash;among the rest, Lord Strichen&mdash;offered her the
-loan of money to purchase a house and suffice for present maintenance.
-But she did not choose to encumber herself with debts
-which she had no certain prospect of repaying. At length the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">{237}</a></span>
-dispute about her jointure was settled in a favourable manner,
-and her ladyship received in a lump the amount of past dues,
-out of which she expended £500 in purchasing a house at the
-head of Blackfriars Wynd,<a name="FNanchor_199" id="FNanchor_199"></a><a href="#Footnote_199" class="fnanchor">[199]</a> and a further sum upon a suite of
-plain substantial furniture.</p>
-
-<p>It would surprise a modern dowager to know how much good
-Lady Lovat contrived to do amongst her fellow-creatures with
-this small allowance. It is said that the succeeding Lady of
-Lovat, with a jointure of £4000, was less distinguished for her
-benefactions. In Lady Lovat’s dusky mansion, with a waiting-maid,
-cook, and footboy, she not only maintained herself in the
-style of a gentlewoman, but could welcome every kind of Highland
-cousin to a plain but hospitable board, and even afford permanent
-shelter to several unfortunate friends. A certain Lady Dorothy
-Primrose, who was her niece, lived with her for several years,
-using the best portion of her house, namely, the rooms fronting
-the High Street, while she herself was contented with the duller
-apartments towards the <em>wynd</em>. There was another desolate old
-person, styled Mistress of Elphinstone, whom Lady Lovat supported
-as a friend and equal for many years. Not by habit a
-card-player herself, she would make up a whist-party every week
-for the benefit of <em>the Mistress</em>. At length the poor Mistress came
-to a sad fate. A wicked, perhaps half-crazy boy, grandson to
-her ladyship, having taken an antipathy to his venerable relative,
-put poison into the oatmeal porridge which she was accustomed
-to take at supper. Feeling unwell that night, she did not eat
-any, and the Mistress took the porridge instead, of which she
-died. The boy was sent away, and died in obscurity.</p>
-
-<p>An unostentatious but sincere piety marked the character of
-Lady Lovat. Perhaps her notions of Providence were carried
-to the verge of a kind of fatalism; for not merely did she receive
-all crosses and troubles as trials arranged for her benefit by a
-Higher Hand, but when a neighbouring house on one occasion took
-fire, she sat unmoved in her own mansion, notwithstanding the
-entreaties of the magistrates, who ordered a sedan to be brought
-for her removal. She said if her hour was come, it would be
-vain to try to elude her fate; and if it was not come, she would
-be safe where she was. She had a conscientiousness almost ludicrously
-nice. If detained from church on any occasion, she always
-doubled her usual oblation at the <em>plate</em> next time. When her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">{238}</a></span>
-chimney took fire, she sent her fine to the Town-guard before they
-knew the circumstance. Even the tax-collector experienced her
-ultra-rectitude. When he came to examine her windows, she
-took him to a closet lighted by a single pane, looking into a
-narrow passage between two houses. He hesitated about charging
-for such a small modicum of light, but her ladyship insisted on
-his taking note of it.<a name="FNanchor_200" id="FNanchor_200"></a><a href="#Footnote_200" class="fnanchor">[200]</a></p>
-
-<p>Lady Lovat was of small stature, had been thought a beauty,
-and retained in advanced old age much of her youthful delicacy
-of features and complexion. Her countenance bore a remarkably
-sweet and pleasing expression. When at home, her dress was
-a red silk gown, with ruffled cuffs, and sleeves puckered like a
-man’s shirt; a fly-cap, encircling the head, with a mob-cap laid
-across it, falling down over the cheeks, and tied under the chin;
-her hair dressed and powdered; a double muslin handkerchief
-round the neck and bosom; <em>lammer-beads</em>; a white lawn apron,
-edged with lace; black stockings with red gushets; high-heeled
-shoes.<a name="FNanchor_201" id="FNanchor_201"></a><a href="#Footnote_201" class="fnanchor">[201]</a> She usually went abroad in a chair, as I have been
-informed by the daughter of a lady who was one of the first
-inhabitants of the New Town, and whom Lady Lovat regularly
-visited there once every three months. As her chair emerged from
-the head of Blackfriars Wynd, any one who saw her sitting in it,
-so neat and fresh and clean, would have taken her for a queen
-in waxwork, pasted up in a glass-case.</p>
-
-<p>Lady Lovat was intimate with Lady Jane Douglas; and one
-of the strongest evidences in favour of Lord Douglas being the
-son of that lady<a name="FNanchor_202" id="FNanchor_202"></a><a href="#Footnote_202" class="fnanchor">[202]</a> was the following remarkable circumstance:
-Lady Lovat, passing by a house in the High Street, saw a child
-at a window, and remarked to a friend who was with her: ‘If I
-thought Lady Jane Douglas could be in Edinburgh, I would say
-that was her child&mdash;he is so like her!’ Upon returning home,
-she found a note from Lady Jane, informing her that she had
-just arrived in Edinburgh, and had taken lodgings in &mdash;&mdash; Land,
-which proved to be the house in which Lady Lovat had observed
-the child, and that child was young Archibald Douglas. Lady
-Lovat was a person of such strict integrity that no consideration
-could have tempted her to say what she did not think; and at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">{239}</a></span>
-the time she saw the child, she had no reason to suppose that
-Lady Jane was in Scotland.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the generosity of her disposition that when her
-grandson Simon was studying law, she at various times presented
-him with £50, and when he was to pass as an advocate she sent
-him £100. It was wonderful how she could spare such sums
-from her small jointure. Whole tribes of grand-nephews and
-grand-nieces experienced the goodness of her heart, and loved
-her with almost filial affection. She frequently spoke to them of
-her misfortunes, and was accustomed to say: ‘I dare say, bairns,
-the events of my life would make a good <em>novelle</em>; but they have
-been of so strange a nature that nobody would believe them’&mdash;meaning
-that they wanted the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">vraisemblance</i> necessary in fiction.
-She contemplated the approach of death with fortitude, and in
-anticipation of her obsequies, had her grave-clothes ready and
-the stair whitewashed. Yet the disposal of her poor remains
-little troubled her. When asked by her son if she wished to be
-placed in the burial-vault at Beaufort, she said: ‘’Deed, Archie,
-ye needna put yoursel’ to ony fash about me, for I dinna care
-though ye lay me aneath that hearthstane!’ After all, it chanced,
-from some misarrangements, that her funeral was not very promptly
-executed; whereupon a Miss Hepburn of Humbie, living in a
-floor above, remarked, ’she wondered what they were keeping her
-sae lang for&mdash;stinkin’ a’ the stair.’ This gives some idea of circumstances
-connected with Old Town life.</p>
-
-<p>The conduct of her ladyship’s son in life was distinguished by
-a degree of eccentricity which, in connection with that of his son
-already stated, tends to raise a question as to the character of
-Lord Lovat, and make us suspect that wickedness so great as his
-could only result from a certain unsoundness of mind. It is
-admitted, however, that the eldest son, Simon, who rose to be a
-major-general in the army, was a man of respectable character.
-He retained nothing of his father but a genius for making fine
-speeches.<a name="FNanchor_203" id="FNanchor_203"></a><a href="#Footnote_203" class="fnanchor">[203]</a> The late Mrs Murray of Henderland told me she was
-present at a supper-party given by some gentleman in the Horse
-Wynd, where General Fraser, eating his egg, said to the hostess:
-‘Mrs &mdash;&mdash;, other people’s eggs overflow with <em>milk</em>; but yours
-run over with <em>cream</em>!’</p>
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">{240}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="THE_COWGATE" id="THE_COWGATE">THE COWGATE.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="chapter_summary"><strong>House of Gavin Douglas the Poet&mdash;Skirmish of Cleanse-the-Causeway&mdash;College
-Wynd&mdash;Birthplace of Sir Walter Scott&mdash;The Horse
-Wynd&mdash;Tam o’ the Cowgate&mdash;Magdalen Chapel.</strong></p>
-
-
-<p>Looking at the present state of this ancient street, it is
-impossible to hear without a smile the description of it given
-by Alexander Alesse about the year 1530&mdash;<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Ubi nihil est humile aut
-rusticum, sed omnia magnifica!</i> (‘Where nothing is humble or
-homely, but everything magnificent!’) The street was, he tells
-us, that in which the nobles and judges resided, and where the
-palaces of princes were situated. The idea usually entertained
-of its early history is that it rose as an elegant suburb after the
-year 1460, when the existing city, consisting of the High Street
-alone, was enclosed in a wall. It would appear, however, that
-some part of it was built before that time, and that it was in an
-advanced, if not complete, state as a street not long after. It
-was to enclose this esteemed suburb that the city wall was extended
-after the battle of Flodden.</p>
-
-
-<h3>HOUSE OF GAVIN DOUGLAS THE POET&mdash;SKIRMISH OF
-CLEANSE-THE-CAUSEWAY.</h3>
-
-<p>So early as 1449, Thomas Lauder, canon of Aberdeen, granted
-an endowment of 40s. annually to a chaplain in St Giles’s
-Church, ‘out of his own house lying in the Cowgaite, betwixt
-the land of the Abbot of Melrose on the east, and of George
-Cochrane on the west.’ This appears to have been the same
-Thomas Lauder who was preceptor to James II., and who
-ultimately became Bishop of Dunkeld. We are told that, besides
-many other munificent acts, he purchased a lodging in Edinburgh
-<em>for himself and his successors</em>.<a name="FNanchor_204" id="FNanchor_204"></a><a href="#Footnote_204" class="fnanchor">[204]</a> That its situation was the same
-as that above described appears from a charter of Thomas
-Cameron, in 1498, referring to a house on the south side of the
-Cowgate, ‘betwixt <em>the Bishop of Dunkeld’s land on the east</em>,
-and William Rappilowe’s on the west, the common street on
-the north, and the gait that leads to the Kirk-of-Field on the
-south.’</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w550">
-<a id="illus_c_021"></a>
-<img src="images/illus_c_021.jpg" width="550" height="634" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">THE COWGATE.<br />
-‘Nothing is humble or homely, but everything magnificent!’</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap"><a href="#Page_240">Page 240.</a></span>
-</p></div>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">{241}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>From these descriptions we attain a tolerably distinct idea of
-the site of the house of the bishops of Dunkeld in Edinburgh,
-including, of course, one who is endeared to us from a peculiar
-cause&mdash;Gavin Douglas, who succeeded to the see in 1516. This
-house must have stood nearly opposite to the bottom of Niddry
-Street, but somewhat to the eastward. It would have gardens
-behind, extending up to the line of the present Infirmary Street.</p>
-
-<p>We thus not only have the pleasure of ascertaining the
-Edinburgh whereabouts of one of our most distinguished national
-poets, but we can now read, with a somewhat clearer intelligence,
-a remarkable chapter in the national history.</p>
-
-<p>It was in April 1520 that the Hamiltons (the party of the
-Earl of Arran), with Bethune, Archbishop of Glasgow, called an
-assembly of the nobility in Edinburgh, in order to secure the
-government for the earl. The rival magnate, the Earl of Angus,
-soon saw danger to himself in the great crowds of the Hamilton
-party which flocked into town. Indeed warlike courses seem to
-have been determined on by that side. Angus sent his uncle,
-the Bishop of Dunkeld, to caution them against any violence,
-and to offer that he should submit to the laws if any offence
-were laid to his charge. The reverend prelate, proceeding to
-the place of assembly, which was in the archbishop’s house,
-at the foot of Blackfriars Wynd, found the Hamilton party
-obstinate. Thinking an archbishop could not or ought not to
-allow strife to take place if he could help it, he appealed to
-Bethune, who, however, had actually prepared for battle by
-putting on armour under his rochet. ‘Upon my conscience,
-my lord,’ said Bethune, ‘I know nothing of the matter,’ at the
-same time striking his hand upon his breast, which caused the
-armour to return a rattling sound. Douglas’s remark was simply,
-‘Your conscience clatters;’ a happy pun for the occasion, clatter
-being a Scotch word signifying to tell tales. Gavin then returned
-to his lodging, and told his nephew that he must do his best to
-defend himself with arms. ‘For me,’ he said, ‘I will go to my
-chamber and pray for you.’ With our new light as to the locality
-of the Bishop of Dunkeld’s lodging, we now know that Angus and
-his uncle held their consultations on this occasion within fifty
-yards of the house in which the Hamiltons were assembled. The
-houses, in fact, nearly faced each other in the same narrow street.</p>
-
-<p>Angus now put himself at the head of his followers, who,
-though not numerous, stood in a compact body in the High
-Street. They were, moreover, the favourites of the Edinburgh<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">{242}</a></span>
-citizens, who handed spears from their windows to such as were
-not armed with that useful weapon. Presently the Hamiltons
-came thronging up from the Cowgate, through narrow lanes,
-and entering the High Street in separate streams, armed with
-swords only, were at a great disadvantage. In a short time the
-Douglases had cleared the streets of them, killing many, and
-obliging Arran himself and his son to make their escape through
-the North Loch, mounted on a coal-horse. Archbishop Bethune,
-with others, took refuge in the Blackfriars’ Monastery, where he
-was seized behind the altar and in danger of his life, when Gavin
-Douglas, learning his perilous situation, flew to save him, and with
-difficulty succeeded in his object. Here, too, local knowledge is
-important. The Blackfriars’ Monastery stood where the High
-School latterly was, a spot not more than a hundred yards from
-the houses of both Bethune and Gavin Douglas. It would not
-necessarily require more than five minutes to apprise Douglas of
-Bethune’s situation, and bring him to the rescue.</p>
-
-<p>The popular name given to this street battle is characteristic&mdash;<em>Cleanse-the-Causeway</em>.</p>
-
-
-<h3>COLLEGE WYND&mdash;BIRTHPLACE OF SIR WALTER SCOTT.</h3>
-
-<p>The old buildings of the College of Edinburgh, themselves
-mean, had for their main access, in former times, only that
-narrow dismal alley called the College Wynd,<a name="FNanchor_205" id="FNanchor_205"></a><a href="#Footnote_205" class="fnanchor">[205]</a> leading up from
-the Cowgate. Facing down this humble lane was the gateway,
-displaying a richly ornamented architrave. The wynd itself,
-strange as the averment may now appear, was the abode of
-many of the professors. The illustrious Joseph Black lived at
-one time in a house adjacent to the College gate, on the east
-side, afterwards removed to make way for North College Street.<a name="FNanchor_206" id="FNanchor_206"></a><a href="#Footnote_206" class="fnanchor">[206]</a>
-Another floor of the same building was occupied by Mr Keith,
-father of the late Sir Alexander Keith of Ravelston, Bart.; and
-there did the late Lord Keith reside in his student days. There
-was a tradition, but of a vague nature, that Goldsmith, when
-studying at the Edinburgh University, lived in the College Wynd.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w500">
-<a id="illus_c_022"></a>
-<img src="images/illus_c_022.jpg" width="500" height="660" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">OLD HOUSES, COLLEGE WYND.<br />
-Near here Sir Walter Scott was born.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap"><a href="#Page_242">Page 242.</a></span>
-</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The one peculiar glory of this humble place remains to be
-mentioned&mdash;its being the birthplace of Sir Walter Scott. In
-the third floor of the house just described, accessible by an entry<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">{243}</a></span>
-leading to a common stair behind,
-did this distinguished person
-first see the light, August
-15, 1771. It was a house of
-plain aspect, like many of its
-old neighbours yet surviving;
-its truest disadvantage, however,
-being in the unhealthiness
-of the situation, to which Sir
-Walter himself used to attribute
-the early deaths of several
-brothers and sisters born before
-him. When the house was required
-to give way for the
-public conveniency, the elder
-Scott received a fair price for
-his portion of it; he had previously
-removed to an airier
-mansion, No. 25 George Square,
-where Sir Walter spent his boyhood
-and youth.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w250">
-<img src="images/illus_p_243.jpg" width="250" height="316" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">25 George Square.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In the course of a walk through
-this part of the town in 1825, Sir Walter did me the honour to
-point out the site of the house in which he had been born. On
-his mentioning that his father had got a good price for his share
-of it, in order that it might be taken down for the public convenience,
-I took the liberty of jocularly expressing my belief that
-more money might have been made of it, and the public certainly
-<em>much more</em> gratified, if it had remained to be shown as the birthplace
-of a man who had written so many popular books. ‘Ay,
-ay,’ said Sir Walter, ‘that is very well; but I am afraid I should
-have required to be dead first, and that would not have been so
-comfortable, you know.’</p>
-
-<p>In the transition state of the College, from old to new
-buildings, the gate at the head of the wynd was shut up by
-Principal Robertson, who, however, living within the walls,
-found this passage convenient as an access to the town, and
-used it accordingly. It became the joke of a day, that from
-being the principal gate it had become only a gate for the
-Principal.<a name="FNanchor_207" id="FNanchor_207"></a><a href="#Footnote_207" class="fnanchor">[207]</a></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">{244}</a></span></p>
-
-<h3>THE HORSE WYND.</h3>
-
-<p>This alley, connecting the Cowgate with the grounds on the
-south side of the town within the walls, and broad enough for a
-carriage, is understood to have derived its name from an inn
-which long ago existed at its head, where the Gaelic Church
-long after stood. Although the name is at least as old as the
-middle of the seventeenth century, none of the buildings appear
-older than the middle of the eighteenth. They had all been
-renewed by people desirous of the benefit of such air as was to
-be had in an alley double the usual breadth. Very respectable
-members of the bar were glad to have a flat in some of the tall
-<em>lands</em> on the east side of the wynd.<a name="FNanchor_208" id="FNanchor_208"></a><a href="#Footnote_208" class="fnanchor">[208]</a></p>
-
-<p>On the west side of the wynd, about the middle, the Earl of
-Galloway had built a distinct mansion, ornamented with vases
-at top. They kept a coach and six, and it was alleged that
-when the countess made calls, the leaders were sometimes at
-the door she was going to, when she was stepping into the
-carriage at her own door. This may be called a <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">tour de force</i>
-illustration of the nearness of friends to each other in Old
-Edinburgh.</p>
-
-
-<h3>TAM O’ THE COWGATE.</h3>
-
-<p>A court of old buildings, in a massive style of architecture,
-existed, previous to 1829, on a spot in the Cowgate now occupied
-by the southern piers of George IV. Bridge. In the middle of
-the last century it was used as the Excise-office; but even this
-was a kind of declension from its original character. It is certain
-that the celebrated Thomas Hamilton, first Earl of Haddington,
-President of the Court of Session, and Secretary of State for
-Scotland, lived here at the end of the sixteenth century, renting
-the house from Macgill of Rankeillour.<a name="FNanchor_209" id="FNanchor_209"></a><a href="#Footnote_209" class="fnanchor">[209]</a> This distinguished
-person, from the circumstance of his living here, was endowed
-by his master, King James, with the nickname of <span class="smcap">Tam o’ the
-Cowgate</span>, under which title he is now better remembered than
-by any other.</p>
-
-<p>The earl, who had risen through high legal offices to the
-peerage, and who was equally noted for his penetration as a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">{245}</a></span>
-judge, his industry as a collector of decisions, and his talent for
-amassing wealth, was one evening, after a day’s hard labour in
-the public service, solacing himself with a friend over a flask of
-wine in his house in the Cowgate<a name="FNanchor_210" id="FNanchor_210"></a><a href="#Footnote_210" class="fnanchor">[210]</a>&mdash;attired, for his better ease,
-in a nightgown, cap, and slippers&mdash;when he was suddenly
-disturbed by a great hubbub which arose under his window in
-the street. This soon turned out to be a <em>bicker</em> between the
-High School youths and those of the College; and it also
-appeared that the latter, fully victorious, were, notwithstanding
-a valiant defence, in the act of driving their antagonists before
-them. The Earl of Haddington’s sympathies were awakened
-in favour of the retiring party, for he had been brought up at
-the High School, and going thence to complete his education at
-Paris, had no similar reason to affect the College. He therefore
-sprang up, dashed into the street, sided with and rallied the
-fugitives, and took a most animated share in the combat that
-ensued, so that finally the High School youths, acquiring fresh
-strength and valour at seeing themselves befriended by the prime
-judge and privy-councillor of their country (though not in his
-most formidable habiliments), succeeded in turning the scale of
-victory upon the College youths, in spite of their superior individual
-ages and strength. The earl, who assumed the command
-of the party, and excited their spirits by word as well as action,
-was not content till he had pursued the Collegianers
-through the Grassmarket, and out at the West Port,
-the gate of which he locked against their return, thus
-compelling them to spend the night in the suburbs
-and the fields. He then returned home in triumph to
-his castle of comfort in
-the Cowgate, and resumed
-the enjoyment of his friend
-and flask. We can easily
-imagine what a rare jest
-this must have been for
-King Jamie.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w350">
-<img src="images/illus_p_245.jpg" width="350" height="374" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">A Court of Old Buildings.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">{246}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>When this monarch visited Scotland in 1617, he found the
-old statesman very rich, and was informed that the people
-believed him to be in possession of the Philosopher’s Stone;
-there being no other feasible mode of accounting for his
-immense wealth, which rather seemed the effect of supernatural
-agency than of worldly prudence or talent. King James, quite
-tickled with the idea of the Philosopher’s Stone, and of so
-enviable a talisman having fallen into the hands of a Scottish
-judge, was not long in letting his friend and gossip know of the
-story which he had heard respecting him. The Lord President
-immediately invited the king, and the rest of the company
-present, to come to his house next day, when he would both do
-his best to give them a good dinner and lay open to them the
-mystery of the Philosopher’s Stone. This agreeable invitation
-was of course accepted; and the next day saw his Cowgate
-<i lang="it" xml:lang="it">palazzo</i> thronged with king and courtiers, all of whom the
-President feasted to their hearts’ content. After dinner the
-king reminded him of his Philosopher’s Stone, and expressed
-his anxiety to be speedily made acquainted with so rare a
-treasure, when the pawky lord addressed His Majesty and the
-company in a short speech, concluding with this information,
-that his whole secret lay in two simple and familiar maxims&mdash;‘Never
-put off till to-morrow what can be done to-day; nor
-ever trust to another’s hand what your own can execute.’ He
-might have added, from the works of an illustrious contemporary:</p>
-
-<p class="center">‘This is the only witchcraft I have used;’</p>
-
-<p>and none could have been more effectual.</p>
-
-<p>A ludicrous idea is obtained from the following anecdote of
-the estimation in which the wisdom of the Earl of Haddington
-was held by the king, and at the same time, perhaps, of that
-singular monarch’s usual mode of speech. It must be understood,
-by way of prefatory illustration, that King James, who
-was the author of the earl’s popular appellation, ‘<em>Tam o’ the
-Cowgate</em>,’ had a custom of bestowing such ridiculous <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">sobriquets</i>
-on his principal councillors and courtiers. Thus he conferred
-upon that grave and sagacious statesman, John, Earl of Mar,
-the nickname <em>Jock o’ Sklates</em>&mdash;probably in allusion to some
-circumstance which occurred in their young days when they
-were the fellow-pupils of Buchanan. On hearing of a meditated
-alliance between the Haddington and Mar families, His Majesty
-exclaimed, betwixt jest and earnest: ‘The Lord hand a grup <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">{247}</a></span>o’
-me! If Tam o’ the Cowgate’s son marry Jock o’ Sklates’s
-daughter, what’s to come o’ <em>me</em>?’ The good-natured monarch
-probably apprehended that so close a union betwixt two of his
-most subtle statesmen might make them too much for their
-master&mdash;as hounds are most dangerous when they hunt in couples.</p>
-
-<p>The Earl of Haddington died in 1637, full of years and
-honours. At Tyningham, the seat of his family, there are two
-portraits of his lordship, one a half-length, the other a head; as
-also his state-dress; and it is a circumstance too characteristic
-to be overlooked that in the crimson-velvet breeches there are
-no fewer than <em>nine pockets</em>! Among many of the earl’s papers
-which remain in Tyningham House, one contains a memorandum
-conveying a curious idea of the way in which public
-and political affairs were then managed in Scotland. The
-paper details the heads of a petition in his own handwriting to
-the Privy Council, and at the end is a note ‘to <em>gar</em> [that is,
-make] the chancellor’ do something else in his behalf.</p>
-
-<p>A younger son of Tam o’ the Cowgate was a person of much
-ingenuity, and was popularly known, for what reason I cannot
-tell, by the nickname of ‘Dear Sandie Hamilton.’ He had
-a foundry in the Potterrow, where he fabricated the cannon
-employed in the first Covenanting war in 1639. This artillery,
-be it remarked, was not formed exclusively of metal. The
-greater part of the composition was leather; and yet, we are
-informed, they did some considerable execution at the battle of
-Newburnford, above Newcastle (August 28, 1640), where the
-Scots drove a large advanced party of Charles I.’s troops before
-them, thereby causing the king to enter into a new treaty. The
-cannon, which were commonly called ‘Dear Sandie’s Stoups,’
-were carried in swivel fashion between two horses.</p>
-
-<p>The Excise-office had been removed, about 1730, from the
-Parliament Square to the house occupied many years before
-by Tam o’ the Cowgate. It afforded excellent accommodations
-for this important public office. The principal room on the
-second floor, towards the Cowgate, was a very superb one,
-having a stucco ceiling divided into square compartments, each
-of which contained some elegant device. To the rear of the
-house was a bowling-green, which the Commissioners of Excise
-let on lease to a person of the name of Thomson. In those
-days bowling was a much more prevalent amusement than now,
-being chiefly a favourite with the graver order of the citizens.
-There were then no fewer than three bowling-greens in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">{248}</a></span>
-grounds around Heriot’s Hospital; one in the Canongate, near
-the Tolbooth; another on the opposite side of the street; another
-immediately behind the palace of Holyrood House, where the Duke
-of York used to play when in Scotland; and perhaps several others
-scattered about the outskirts of the town. The arena behind the
-Excise-office was called Thomson’s Green, from the name of the
-man who kept it; and it may be worth while to remind the reader
-that it is alluded to in that pleasant-spirited poem by Allan
-Ramsay, in imitation of the <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Vides ut alta</i> of Horace:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Driving their ba’s frae whins or tee,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">There’s no ae gouffer to be seen,</div>
-<div class="verse">Nor doucer folk wysing a-jee</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">The byas bowls on Tamson’s green.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>The green was latterly occupied by the relict of this Thomson;
-and among the bad debts on the Excise books, all of which are
-yearly brought forward and enumerated, there still stands a sum
-of something more than six pounds against Widow Thomson,
-being the last half-year’s rent of <em>the green</em>, which the poor woman
-had been unable to pay. The north side of Brown’s Square was
-built upon part of this space of ground; the rest remained a
-vacant area for the recreation of the people dwelling in Merchant
-Street, until the erection of the bridge, which has overrun that, as
-well as every other part of the scene of this article.<a name="FNanchor_211" id="FNanchor_211"></a><a href="#Footnote_211" class="fnanchor">[211]</a></p>
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">{249}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="ST_CECILIAS_HALL" id="ST_CECILIAS_HALL">ST CECILIA’S HALL.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>Few persons now living (1847) recollect the elegant concerts
-that were given many years ago in what is now an obscure
-part of our ancient city, known by the name of St Cecilia’s Hall.
-They did such honour to Edinburgh, nearly for half a century,
-that I feel myself called on to make a brief record of them, and
-am glad to be enabled to do so by a living authority, one of the
-most fervent worshippers in the temple of the goddess. Hear,
-then, his last <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">aria parlante</i> on this interesting theme.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w275">
-<img src="images/illus_p_249.jpg" width="275" height="314" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">St Cecilia’s Hall.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>‘The concerts of St Cecilia’s Hall formed one of the most
-liberal and attractive amusements that any city in Europe could
-boast of. The hall was built on
-purpose at the foot of Niddry’s
-Wynd, by a number of public-spirited
-noblemen and gentlemen;
-and the expense of the
-concerts was defrayed by about
-two hundred subscribers paying
-two or three guineas each annually;
-and so respectable was
-the institution considered, that
-upon the death of a member
-there were generally several
-applications for the vacancy, as
-is now the case with the Caledonian
-Hunt. The concerts
-were managed by a governor
-and a set of six or more
-directors, who engaged the performers&mdash;the
-principal ones from Italy, one or two from Germany,
-and the rest of the orchestra was made up of English and native
-artists. The concerts were given weekly during most of the time
-that I attended; the instrumental music consisting chiefly of the
-concertos of Corelli and Handel, and the overtures of Bach, Abel,
-Stamitz, Vanhall, and latterly of Haydn and Pleyel; for at that
-time, and till a good many years after, the magnificent symphonies
-of Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven, which now form the most<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">{250}</a></span>
-attractive portions of all public concerts, had not reached this
-country. Those truly grand symphonies do not seem likely to be
-superseded by any similar compositions for a century to come,
-transcending so immensely, as they do, all the orchestral compositions
-that ever before appeared; yet I must not venture to
-prophesy, when I bear in mind what a powerful influence fashion
-and folly exercise upon music, as well as upon other objects of
-taste. When the overtures and quartettes of Haydn first found
-their way into this country, I well remember with what coldness
-the former were received by most of the grave Handelians, while
-at the theatres they gave delight. The old concert gentlemen
-said that his compositions wanted the solidity and full harmony
-of Handel and Corelli; and when the celebrated leader&mdash;the elder
-Cramer&mdash;visited St Cecilia’s Hall, and played a spirited charming
-overture of Haydn’s, an old amateur next to whom I was seated
-asked me: “Whase music is that, now?” “Haydn’s, sir,” said I.
-“Poor new-fangled stuff,” he replied; “I hope I shall never hear
-it again!” Many years have since rolled away, and mark what
-some among us now say: A friend, calling lately on an old lady
-much in the fashionable circle of society, heard her give directions
-to the pianist who was teaching her nieces to bring them some
-new and fashionable pieces of music, but no more of the <em>unfashionable</em>
-compositions of Haydn! Alas for those ladies whose taste in
-music is regulated by fashion, and who do not know that the
-music of Haydn is the admiration and delight of all the real
-lovers and judges of the art in Europe!</p>
-
-<p>‘The vocal department of our concerts consisted chiefly of the
-songs of Handel, Arne, Gluck, Sarti, Jornelli, Guglielmi, Paisiello,
-Scottish songs, &amp;c.; and every year, generally, we had an oratorio
-of Handel performed, with the assistance of a principal bass
-and a tenor singer, and a few chorus-singers from the English
-cathedrals; together with some Edinburgh amateurs,<a name="FNanchor_212" id="FNanchor_212"></a><a href="#Footnote_212" class="fnanchor">[212]</a> who cultivated
-that sacred and sublime music; Signor and Signora
-Domenico Corri, the latter our <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">prima donna</i>, singing most of the
-principal songs, or most interesting portions of the music. On
-such occasions the hall was always crowded to excess by a splendid<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">{251}</a></span>
-assemblage, including all the beauty and fashion of our city. A
-supper to the directors and their friends at Fortune’s Tavern
-generally followed the oratorio, where the names of the chief
-beauties who had graced the hall were honoured by their healths
-being drunk: the champion of the lady whom he proposed as his
-toast being sometimes challenged to maintain the pre-eminence of
-her personal charms by the admirer of another lady filling a glass
-of double depth to her health, and thus forcing the champion of
-the first lady to <em>say more</em> by drinking a still deeper bumper in
-honour of her beauty; and if this produced a rejoinder from the
-other, by his seizing and quaffing the cup of <em>largest</em> calibre, there
-the contest generally ended, and the deepest drinker <em>saved</em> his
-lady, as it was phrased, although he might have had some difficulty
-in saving himself from a flooring while endeavouring to regain his
-seat.<a name="FNanchor_213" id="FNanchor_213"></a><a href="#Footnote_213" class="fnanchor">[213]</a> Miss Burnet of Monboddo and Miss Betsy Home, reigning
-beauties of the time, were said more than once to have been the
-innocent cause of the fall of man in this way. The former was
-gifted with a countenance of heavenly sweetness and expression,
-which Guido, had he beheld it, would have sought to perpetuate
-upon canvas as that of an angel; while the other lady, quite
-piquant and brilliant, might have sat to Titian for a Hebe or one
-of the Graces. Miss Burnet died in the bloom of youth, universally
-regretted both for her personal charms and the rare endowments
-of her mind. Miss Home was happily married to Captain Brown,
-her ardent admirer, who had made her his <em>toast</em> for years, and
-vowed he would continue to do so till he toasted her <em>Brown</em>.
-This sort of exuberant loyalty to beauty was by no means uncommon
-at the convivial meetings of those days, when “time had
-not thinned our flowing hair, nor bent us with his iron hand.”</p>
-
-<p>‘Let me call to mind a few of those whose lovely faces at the
-concerts gave us the sweetest zest for the music. Miss Cleghorn
-of Edinburgh, still living in single-blessedness; Miss Chalmers of
-Pittencrief, who married Sir William Miller of Glenlee, Bart.; Miss
-Jessie Chalmers of Edinburgh, who was married to Mr Pringle of
-Haining; Miss Hay of Hayston, who married Sir William Forbes
-of Pitsligo, Bart.; Miss Murray of Lintrose, who was called the
-<em>Flower of Strathmore</em>, and upon whom Burns wrote the song:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">“Blithe, blithe, and merry was she,</div>
-<div class="verse">Blithe was she but and ben;</div>
-<div class="verse">Blithe by the banks of the Earn,</div>
-<div class="verse">And blithe in Glenturit Glen.”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">{252}</a></span></p>
-<p>She married David Smith, Esq. of Methven, one of the Lords of
-Session; Miss Jardine of Edinburgh, who married Mr Home
-Drummond of Blairdrummond&mdash;their daughter, if I mistake not,
-is now the Duchess of Athole; Miss Kinloch of Gilmerton, who
-married Sir Foster Cunliffe of Acton, Bart.; Miss Lucy Johnston
-of East Lothian, who married Mr Oswald of Auchincruive; Miss
-Halket of Pitferran, who became the wife of the celebrated Count
-Lally-Tollendal; and Jane, Duchess of Gordon, celebrated for her
-wit and spirit, as well as for her beauty. These, with Miss Burnet
-and Miss Home, and many others whose names I do not distinctly
-recollect, were indisputably worthy of all the honours conferred
-upon them. But beauty has tempted me to digress too long from
-my details relative to the hall and its concerts, to which I return.</p>
-
-<p>‘The hall [built in 1762 from a design of Mr Robert Mylne,
-after the model of the great opera theatre of Parma] was an
-exact oval, having a concave elliptical ceiling, and was remarkable
-for the clear and perfect conveyance of sounds, without
-responding echoes, as well as for the judicious manner in which
-the seating was arranged. In this last respect, I have seen no
-concert-room equal to it either in London or Paris. The orchestra
-was erected at the upper end of the hall, opposite to the door of
-entrance; a portion of the area, in the centre or widest part, was
-without any seats, and served as a small promenade, where friends
-could chat together during the intervals of performance. The
-seats were all <em>fixed</em> down on both sides of the hall, and each side
-was raised by a gradual elevation from the level area, backward,
-the rows of seats behind each other, till they reached a passage a
-few feet broad, that was carried quite round the hall behind the
-last of the elevated seats; so that when the audience was seated,
-each half of it fronted the other&mdash;an arrangement much preferable
-to that commonly adopted, of placing all the seats upon a <em>level</em>
-behind each other, for thus the whole company must look one way,
-and see each other’s <em>backs</em>. A private staircase at the upper end
-of the hall, not seen by the company, admitted the musicians into
-the orchestra; in the front of which stood a harpsichord, with
-the singers, and the principal violoncellist; and behind these, on
-a platform a little elevated, were the violins, and other stringed
-and wind instruments, just behind which stood a noble organ.
-The hall, when filled, contained an audience of about four hundred.
-No money was taken for admission, tickets being given gratis to
-the lovers of music, and to strangers. What a pity that such a
-liberal and gratifying institution should have ceased to exist!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">{253}</a></span>
-But after the New Town arose, the Old was deserted by the upper
-classes: the hall was too small for the increased population, and
-concerts were got up at the Assembly Rooms and Corri’s Rooms
-by the professional musicians, and by Corri himself. Now a
-capacious Music Hall is erected behind the Assembly Rooms,
-where a pretty good subscription concert is carried on; and from
-the increased facility of intercourse between Paris, London, and
-Edinburgh, it seems probable that concerts by artists of the
-highest talents will ere long be set on foot in Edinburgh in this
-fine hall, diversified sometimes by oratorios or Italian operas.</p>
-
-<p>‘Before concluding this brief memoir of St Cecilia’s Hall
-Concerts, I shall mention the chief performers who gave attractions
-to them. These were Signor and Signora Domenico Corri, from
-Rome; he with a falsetto voice, which he managed with much
-skill and taste; the signora with a fine, full-toned, flexible soprano
-voice. Tenducci, though not one of the band, nor resident among
-us, made his appearance occasionally when he came to visit the
-Hopetoun family, his liberal and steady patrons; and while he
-remained he generally gave some concerts at the hall, which made
-quite a sensation among the musicals. I considered it a jubilee
-year whenever Tenducci arrived, as no singer I ever heard sang
-with more expressive simplicity, or was more efficient, whether he
-sang the classical songs of Metastasio, or those of Arne’s <cite>Artaxerxes</cite>,
-or the simple melodies of Scotland. To the latter he gave such
-intensity of interest by his impassioned manner, and by his clear
-enunciation of the words, as equally surprised and delighted us.
-I never can forget the pathos and touching effect of his <cite>Gilderoy</cite>,
-<cite>Lochaber no more</cite>, <cite>The Braes of Ballenden</cite>, <cite>I’ll never leave thee</cite>,
-<cite>Roslin Castle</cite>, &amp;c. These, with the <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Verdi prati</i> of Handel, <cite>Fair
-Aurora</cite> from Arne’s <cite>Artaxerxes</cite>, and Gluck’s <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">Che faro</i>, were above
-all praise. Miss Poole, Mr Smeaton, Mr Gilson, and Mr Urbani
-were also for a time singers at the hall&mdash;chiefly of English and
-Scottish songs.</p>
-
-<p>‘In the instrumental department we had Signor Puppo, from
-Rome or Naples, as leader and violin concerto player, a most
-capital artist; Mr Schetky, from Germany, the principal violoncellist,
-and a fine solo concerto player; Joseph Reinagle, a very
-clever violoncello and viola player; Mr Barnard, a very elegant
-violinist; Stephen Clarke, an excellent organist and harpsichord
-player; and twelve or fifteen violins, basses, flutes, violas, horns,
-and clarionets, with extra performers often from London. Upon
-the resignation of Puppo, who charmed all hearers, Stabilini<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">{254}</a></span>
-succeeded him, and held the situation till the institution was at
-an end: he had a good round tone, though, to my apprehension,
-he did not exceed mediocrity as a performer.</p>
-
-<p>‘But I should be unpardonable if I omitted to mention the
-most accomplished violin-player I ever heard, Paganini only
-excepted&mdash;I mean Giornovicki, who possessed in a most extraordinary
-degree the various requisites of his beautiful art:
-execution peculiarly brilliant, and finely articulated as possible;
-a tone of the richest and most exquisite quality; expression of
-the utmost delicacy, grace, and tenderness; and an animation
-that commanded your most intense and eager attention. Paganini
-did not appear in Edinburgh till [thirty years] after the hall was
-closed. There, as well as at private parties, I heard Giornovicki
-often, and always with no less delight than I listened to Paganini.<a name="FNanchor_214" id="FNanchor_214"></a><a href="#Footnote_214" class="fnanchor">[214]</a>
-Both, if I may use the expression, threw their whole hearts and
-souls into their Cremonas, bows, and fingers.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">“Hall of sweet sounds, adieu, with all thy fascinations of langsyne,</div>
-<div class="verse">My dearest reminiscences of music all are thine.”’</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="right">
-<cite>G. T. Octogenarius Edinburgensis</cite>, Feb. 1847.<a name="FNanchor_215" id="FNanchor_215"></a><a href="#Footnote_215" class="fnanchor">[215]</a><br />
-</p></div></div>
-
-<p>Stabilini, to whom our dear G. T. refers, and who died in 1815,
-much broken down by dissipation, was obliged, against his will, to
-give frequent attendance at the private concerts of one of these
-gentlemen performers, where Corelli’s trios were in great vogue.
-There was always a capital supper afterwards, at which Stab (so
-he was familiarly called) ate and drank for any two. A waggish<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">{255}</a></span>
-friend, who knew his opinion of Edinburgh amateurs, meeting him
-next day, would ask: ‘Well, Mr Stabilini, what sort of music had
-you the other night at &mdash;&mdash; &mdash;&mdash;’s?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Vera good soaper, sir; vera good soaper!’</p>
-
-<p>‘But tell us the verse you made about one of these parties.’</p>
-
-<p>Stabilini, twitching up his shirt-collar, a common trick of his,
-would say:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘A piece ov toarkey for a hungree bellee</div>
-<div class="verse">Is moatch sup<em>eer</em>ior to Corelli!’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>The accent, the manner, the look with which this was delivered, is
-said to have been beyond expression rich.</p>
-
-<p>It is quite remarkable, when we consider the high character of
-the popular melodies, how late and slow has been the introduction
-of a taste for the higher class of musical compositions into Scotland.
-The Earl of Kelly, a man of yesterday, was the first Scotsman who
-ever composed music for an orchestra.<a name="FNanchor_216" id="FNanchor_216"></a><a href="#Footnote_216" class="fnanchor">[216]</a> This fact seems sufficient.
-It is to be feared that the beauty of the melodies is itself partly to
-be blamed for the indifference to higher music. There is too great
-a disposition to rest with the distinction thus conferred upon the
-nation; too many are content to go no further for the enjoyments
-which music has to give. It would be well if, while not forgetting
-those beautiful simple airs, we were more generally to open our
-minds to the still richer charms of the German and the Italian
-muses.</p>
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">{256}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="THE_MURDER_OF_DARNLEY" id="THE_MURDER_OF_DARNLEY">THE MURDER OF DARNLEY.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>While this event is connected with one of the most problematical
-points in our own history, or that of any other
-nation, it chances that the whole topography of the affair is very
-distinctly recorded. We know not only the exact spot where the
-deed was perpetrated, but almost every foot of the ground over
-which the perpetrators walked on their way to execute it. It is
-chiefly by reason of the depositions and confessions brought out
-by the legal proceedings against the inferior instruments that this
-minute knowledge is attained.</p>
-
-<p>The house in which the unfortunate victim resided at the time
-was one called the Prebendaries’ Chamber, being part of the suite
-of domestic buildings connected with the collegiate church of
-St-Mary-in-the-Fields (usually called the <em>Kirk o’ Field</em>). Darnley
-was brought to lodge here on the 30th of January 1566-7. He
-had contracted the smallpox at Glasgow, and it was thought
-necessary, or pretended to be thought necessary, to lodge him in
-this place for air, as also to guard against infecting the infant
-prince, his son, who was lodged in Holyrood House. The house,
-which then belonged, by gift, to a creature of the Earl of Bothwell,
-has been described as so very mean as to excite general surprise.
-Yet, speaking by comparison, it does not appear to have been a
-bad temporary lodging for a person in Darnley’s circumstances.
-It consisted of two stories, with a <em>turnpike</em> or spiral staircase
-behind. The gable adjoined to the town-wall, which there ran in
-a line east and west, and the cellar had a postern opening through
-that wall. In the upper floor were a chamber and closet, with a
-little gallery having a window also through the town-wall.<a name="FNanchor_217" id="FNanchor_217"></a><a href="#Footnote_217" class="fnanchor">[217]</a> Here<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">{257}</a></span>
-Darnley was deposited in an old purple travelling-bed. Underneath
-his room was an apartment in which the queen slept for one
-or two nights before the murder took place. On the night of
-Sunday, February 9, she was attending upon her husband in his
-sick-room, when the servants of the Earl of Bothwell deposited the
-powder in her room, immediately under the king’s bed. The
-queen afterwards took her leave, in order to attend the wedding of
-two of her servants at the palace.</p>
-
-<p>It appears, from the confessions of the wretches executed for
-this foul deed, that as they returned from depositing the powder
-they saw ‘the Queenes grace gangand before thame with licht
-torches up the Black Frier Wynd.’ On their returning to Bothwell’s
-lodging at the palace, that nobleman prepared himself for
-the deed by changing his gay suit of ‘hose, stockit with black
-velvet, passemented with silver, and doublett of black satin of the
-same maner,’ for ‘ane uther pair of black hose,<a name="FNanchor_218" id="FNanchor_218"></a><a href="#Footnote_218" class="fnanchor">[218]</a> and ane canvas
-doublet white, and tuke his syde [long] riding-cloak about him, of
-sad English claith, callit the new colour.’ He then went, attended
-by Paris, the queen’s servant, Powry, his own porter, Pate Wilson,
-and George Dalgleish, ‘downe the turnepike altogedder, and along
-the bak of the Queene’s garden, till you come to the bak of the
-cunyie-house [mint], and the bak of the stabbillis, till you come to
-the Canongate fornent the Abbey zett.’ After passing up the
-Canongate, and gaining entry with some difficulty by the Netherbow
-Port, ‘thai gaid up abone Bassentyne’s hous on the south side
-of the gait,<a name="FNanchor_219" id="FNanchor_219"></a><a href="#Footnote_219" class="fnanchor">[219]</a> and knockit at ane door beneath the sword slippers,
-and callit for the laird of Ormistounes, and one within answerit he
-was not thair; and thai passit down a cloiss beneath the Frier
-Wynd [<em>apparently Toddrick’s Wynd</em>], and enterit in at the zett of
-the Black Friers, till thay came to the back wall and dyke of the
-town-wall, whair my lord and Paris past in over the wall.’ The
-explosion took place soon after, about two in the morning. The
-earl then came back to his attendants at this spot, and ‘thai past
-all away togidder out at the Frier zett, and sinderit in the Cowgait.’
-It is here evident that the alley now called the High School
-Wynd was the avenue by which the conspirators approached<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">{258}</a></span>
-the scene of their atrocity. Bothwell himself, with part of his
-attendants, went up the same wynd ‘be east the Frier Wynd,’ and
-crossing the High Street, endeavoured to get out of the city by
-leaping a broken part of the town-wall in Leith Wynd, but finding
-it too high, was obliged to rouse once more the porter at the
-Netherbow. They then passed&mdash;for every motion of the villains
-has a strange interest&mdash;down St Mary’s Wynd, and along the south
-back of the Canongate to the earl’s lodgings in the palace.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w400">
-<img src="images/illus_p_258.jpg" width="400" height="538" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">High School Wynd.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The house itself, by this explosion, was destroyed, ‘<em>even</em>,’ as the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">{259}</a></span>
-queen tells in a letter to her ambassador in France, ‘<em>to the very
-grund-stane</em>.’ The bodies of the king and his servant were found
-next morning in a garden or field on the outside of the town-wall.
-The buildings connected with the Kirk o’ Field were afterwards
-converted into the College of King James, now our Edinburgh
-University. The hall of the Senatus in the new buildings occupies
-nearly the exact site of the Prebendaries’ Chamber, the ruins of
-which are laid down in De Witt’s map of 1648.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">{260}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="MINT_CLOSE" id="MINT_CLOSE">MINT CLOSE.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="chapter_summary"><strong>The Mint&mdash;Robert Cullen&mdash;Lord Chancellor Loughborough.</strong></p>
-
-
-<p>The <em>Cunyie House</em>, as the Scottish Mint used to be called, was
-near Holyrood Palace in the days of Queen Mary. In the
-regency of Morton a large house was erected for it in the Cowgate,
-where it may still be seen,<a name="FNanchor_220" id="FNanchor_220"></a><a href="#Footnote_220" class="fnanchor">[220]</a> with the following inscription over the
-door:</p>
-
-<p class="center">
-BE. MERCYFULL. TO. ME. O. GOD. 1574.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>In the reign of Charles II. other buildings were added behind,
-forming a neat quadrangle; and here was the Scottish coin
-produced till the Union, when a separate coinage was given up
-and this establishment abandoned; though, to gratify prejudice,
-the offices were still kept up as sinecures. This court with its
-buildings was a sanctuary for persons prosecuted for debt, as was
-the King’s Stables, a mean place at the west end of the Grassmarket.
-There was, however, a small den near the top of the
-oldest building, lighted by a small window looking up the Cowgate,
-which was used as a jail for debtors or other delinquents condemned
-by the Mint’s own officers.</p>
-
-<p>In the western portion of the old building, accessible by a stair
-from the court, is a handsome room with an alcove ceiling, and
-lighted by two handsomely proportioned windows, which is known
-to have been the council-room of the Mint, being a portion of the
-private mansion of the master. Here, in May 1590, on a Sunday
-evening, the town of Edinburgh entertained the Danish lords who
-accompanied James VI. and his queen from her native court&mdash;namely,
-Peter Monk, the admiral of Denmark; Stephen Brahe,
-captain of Eslinburg [perhaps a relative of Tycho?]; Braid Ransome
-Maugaret; Nicholaus Theophilus, Doctor of Laws; Henry
-Goolister, captain of Bocastle; William Vanderwent; and some
-others. For this banquet, ‘maid in Thomas Aitchinsoune, master
-of the cunyie-house lugeing,’ it was ordered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">{261}</a></span> ‘that the thesaurer
-caus by and lay in foure punsheouns wyne; John Borthuik baxter
-to get four bunnis of beir, with foure gang of aill, and to furneis
-breid; Henry Charteris and Roger Macnacht to caus hing the
-hous with tapestrie, set the burdis, furmis, chandleris [<em>candlesticks</em>],
-and get flowris; George Carketill and Rychert Doby to provyde
-the cupbuirds and men to keep thame; and my Lord Provest was
-content to provyde naprie and twa dozen greit veschell, and to
-avance ane hunder pund or mair, as thai sall haif a do.’</p>
-
-<p>In the latter days of the Mint as an active establishment, the
-coining-house was in the ground-floor of the building, on the north
-side of the court; in the adjoining house, on the east side, was the
-finishing-house, where the money was polished and fitted for circulation.
-The chief instruments used in coining were a hammer
-and steel dies, upon which the device was engraved. The metal,
-being previously prepared of the proper fineness and thickness, was
-cut into longitudinal slips, and a square piece being cut from the
-slip, it was afterwards rounded and adjusted to the weight of the
-money to be made. The blank pieces of metal were then placed
-between two dies, and the upper one was struck with a hammer.
-After the Restoration another method was introduced&mdash;that of
-the mill and screw, which, modified by many improvements, is
-still in use. At the Union, the ceremony of destroying the dies of
-the Scottish coinage took place in the Mint. After being heated
-red-hot in a furnace, they were defaced by three impressions of a
-broad-faced <em>punch</em>, which were of course visible on the dies as long
-as they existed; but it must be recorded that all these implements,
-which would now have been great curiosities, are lost, and none of
-the machinery remains but the press, which, weighing about half a
-ton, was rather too large to be readily appropriated, or perhaps it
-would have followed the rest.</p>
-
-<p>The floors over the coining-house&mdash;bearing the letters, <span class="smcap lowercase">C. R. II.</span>,
-surmounting a crown, and the legend, <span class="smcap lowercase">GOD SAVE THE KING, 1674</span>,
-originally the mansion of the master&mdash;were latterly occupied by the
-eminent Dr Cullen, whose family were all born here, and who died
-here himself in 1792.</p>
-
-
-<h3>ROBERT CULLEN.</h3>
-
-<p>Robert Cullen, the son of the physician, made a great impression
-on Edinburgh society by his many delightful social qualities, and
-particularly his powers as a mimic of the Mathews genus. He
-manifested this gift in his earliest years, to the no small discomposure
-of his grave old father. One evening, when Dr Cullen was
-going to the theatre, Robert entreated to be taken along with him,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">{262}</a></span>
-but for some reason was condemned to remain at home. Some
-time after the departure of the doctor, Mrs Cullen heard him come
-along the passage, as if from his own room, and say at her door:
-‘Well, after all, you may let Robert go.’ Robert was accordingly
-allowed to depart for the theatre, where his appearance gave no
-small surprise to his father. On the old gentleman coming home
-and remonstrating with his lady for allowing the boy to go, it was
-discovered that the voice which seemed to give the permission had
-proceeded from the young wag himself.</p>
-
-<p>In maturer years, Cullen could not only mimic any voice or
-mode of speech, but enter so thoroughly into the nature of any
-man that he could supply exactly the ideas which he was likely
-to use. His imitations were therefore something much above
-mimicries&mdash;they were artistic representations of human character.
-He has been known in a social company, where another individual
-was expected, to stand up, in the character of that person, and
-return thanks for the proposal of his health; and this was done
-so happily that when the individual did arrive and got upon his
-legs to speak for himself, the company was convulsed with an
-almost exact repetition of what Cullen had previously uttered, the
-manner also and every inflection of the voice being precisely alike.
-In relating anecdotes, of which he possessed a vast store, he usually
-prefaced them with a sketch of the character of the person referred
-to, which greatly increased the effect, as the story then told characteristically.
-These sketches were remarked to be extremely
-graphic and most elegantly expressed.</p>
-
-<p>When a young man, residing with his father, he was very
-intimate with Dr Robertson, the Principal of the university. To
-show that Robertson was not likely to be easily imitated, it may
-be mentioned, from the report of a gentleman who has often heard
-him making public orations, that when the students observed him
-pause for a word, and would themselves mentally supply it, they
-invariably found that the word which he did use was different from
-that which they had hit upon. Cullen, however, could imitate
-him to the life, either in his more formal speeches or in his
-ordinary discourse. He would often, in entering a house which
-the Principal was in the habit of visiting, assume his voice in the
-lobby and stair, and when arrived at the drawing-room door, astonish
-the family by turning out to be&mdash;Bob Cullen. Lord Greville, a
-pupil of the Principal’s, having been one night detained at a
-protracted debauch, where Cullen was also present, the latter
-gentleman next morning got admission to the bedroom of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">{263}</a></span>
-young nobleman, where, personating Dr Robertson, he sat down
-by the bedside, and with all the manner of the reverend Principal,
-gave him a sound lecture for having been out so late last night.
-Greville, who had fully expected this visit, lay in remorseful
-silence, and allowed his supposed monitor to depart without saying
-a word. In the course of a quarter of an hour, however, when the
-real Dr Robertson entered, and commenced a harangue exactly
-duplicating that just concluded, he could not help exclaiming that
-it was <em>too bad</em> to give it him twice over. ‘Oh, I see how it is,’
-said Robertson, rising to depart; ‘that rogue Bob Cullen must
-have been with you.’ The Principal became at length accustomed
-to Bob’s tricks, which he would seem, from the following anecdote,
-to have regarded in a friendly spirit. Being attended during an
-illness by Dr Cullen, it was found necessary to administer a liberal
-dose of laudanum. The physician, however, asked him, in the first
-place, in what manner laudanum affected him. Having received
-his answer, Cullen remarked, with surprise, that he had never
-known any one affected in the same way by laudanum besides
-his son Bob. ‘Ah,’ said Robertson, ‘<em>does the rascal take me off
-there too?</em>’</p>
-
-<p>Mr Cullen entered at the Scottish bar in 1764, and, distinguishing
-himself highly as a lawyer, was raised to the bench
-in 1796, when he took the designation of Lord Cullen. He
-cultivated elegant literature, and contributed some papers of
-acknowledged merit to the <cite>Mirror</cite> and <cite>Lounger</cite>; but it was in
-conversation that he chiefly shone.</p>
-
-<p>The close adjoining to the Mint contains several old-fashioned
-houses of a dignified appearance. In a floor of one bearing the
-date 1679, and having a little court in front, Alexander Wedderburn,
-Earl of Rosslyn and Lord Chancellor of England, resided
-while at the Scottish bar. This, as is well known, was a very
-brief interval; for a veteran barrister having one day used the
-term ‘presumptuous boy’ with reference to him, and his own
-caustic reply having drawn upon him a rebuke from the bench, he
-took off his gown, and making a bow, said he would never more
-plead where he was subjected to insult, but would seek a wider
-field for his exertions. His subsequent rapid rise at the English
-bar is matter of history. It is told that, returning to Edinburgh
-at the end of his life, after an absence of many years, he wished
-to see the house where he had lived while a Scotch advocate.
-Too infirm to walk, he was borne in a chair to the foot of the
-Mint Close to see this building. One thing he was particularly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">{264}</a></span>
-anxious about. While residing here, he had had five holes made
-in the little court to play at some bowling game of which he was
-fond. He wished, above all things, to see these holes once more,
-and when he found they were still there, he expressed much satisfaction.
-Churchill himself might have melted at such an anecdote
-of the old days of him who was</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Pert at the bar, and in the senate loud.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>About midway up the close is a turreted mansion, accessible
-from Hyndford’s Close, and having a tolerably good garden connected
-with it. This was, in 1742, the residence of the Earl of
-Selkirk; subsequently it was occupied by Dr Daniel Rutherford,
-professor of botany. Sir Walter Scott, who, being a nephew of
-that gentleman, was often in the house in his young days, communicated
-to me a curious circumstance connected with it. It
-appears that the house immediately adjacent was not furnished
-with a stair wide enough to allow of a coffin being carried down
-in decent fashion. It had, therefore, what the Scottish law calls
-a <em>servitude</em> upon Dr Rutherford’s house, conferring the perpetual
-liberty of bringing the deceased inmates through a passage into
-that house and down <em>its</em> stair into the lane.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">{265}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="MISS_NICKY_MURRAY" id="MISS_NICKY_MURRAY">MISS NICKY MURRAY.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>The dancing assemblies of Edinburgh were for many years,
-about the middle of the last century, under the direction and
-dictatorship of the Honourable Miss Nicky Murray, one of the
-sisters of the Earl of Mansfield. Much good sense, firmness,
-knowledge of the world and of the histories of individuals, as well
-as a due share of patience and benevolence, were required for this
-office of unrecognised though real power; and it was generally
-admitted that Miss Murray possessed the needful qualifications in
-a remarkable degree, though rather more marked by good manners
-than good-nature. She and her sisters lived for many years in a
-floor of a large building at the head of Bailie Fife’s Close&mdash;a now
-unhallowed locality, where, I believe, Francis Jeffrey attended his
-first school. In their narrow mansion, the Miss Murrays received
-flights of young lady-cousins from the country, to be finished
-in their manners and introduced into society. No light task
-must theirs have been, all things considered. I find a highly
-significant note on the subject inserted by an old gentleman in an
-interleaved copy of my first edition: ‘It was from Miss Nicky
-Murray’s&mdash;a relation of the Gray family&mdash;that my father ran off
-with my mother, then not sixteen years old.’</p>
-
-<p>The Assembly Room of that time was in the <em>close</em> where the
-Commercial Bank was afterwards established.<a name="FNanchor_221" id="FNanchor_221"></a><a href="#Footnote_221" class="fnanchor">[221]</a> First there was a
-lobby, where chairs were disburdened of their company, and where
-a reduced gentleman, with pretensions to the title of Lord Kirkcudbright&mdash;descendant
-of the once great Maclellans of Galloway&mdash;might
-have been seen selling gloves; this being the person alluded
-to in a letter written by Goldsmith while a student in Edinburgh:
-‘One day, happening to slip into Lord Kilcobry’s&mdash;don’t be surprised,
-his lordship is only a glover!’ The dancing-room opened
-directly from the lobby, and above stairs was a tea-room. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">{266}</a></span>
-former had a railed space in the centre, within which the dancers
-were arranged, while the spectators sat round on the outside; and
-no communication was allowed between the different sides of this
-sacred pale. The lady-directress had a high chair or throne at
-one end. Before Miss Nicky Murray, Lady Elliot of Minto and
-Mrs Brown of Coalstoun, wives of judges, had exercised this lofty
-authority, which was thought honourable on account of the
-charitable object of the assemblies. The arrangements were of a
-rigid character, and certainly tending to dullness. There being
-but one set allowed to dance at a time, it was seldom that any
-person was twice on the floor in one night. The most of the time
-was spent in acting the part of lookers-on, which threw great
-duties in the way of conversation upon the gentlemen. These
-had to settle with a partner for the year, and were upon no
-account permitted to change, even for a single night. The appointment
-took place at the beginning of the season, usually at
-some private party or ball given by a person of distinction, where
-the fans of the ladies were all put into a gentleman’s cocked hat;
-the gentlemen put in their hands and took a fan, and to whomsoever
-the fan belonged, that was to be his partner for the season.
-In the general rigours of this system, which sometimes produced
-ludicrous combinations, there was, however, one palliative&mdash;namely,
-the fans being all distinguishable from each other, and the gentleman
-being in general as well acquainted with the fan as the face
-of his mistress, and the hat being open, it was possible to peep
-in, and exercise, to a certain extent, a principle of selection,
-whereby he was perhaps successful in procuring an appointment to
-his mind. All this is spiritedly given in a poem of Sir Alexander
-Boswell:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Then were the days of modesty of mien!</div>
-<div class="verse">Stays for the fat, and quilting for the lean;</div>
-<div class="verse">The ribboned stomacher, in many a plait,</div>
-<div class="verse">Upheld the chest, and dignified the gait;</div>
-<div class="verse">Some Venus, brightest planet of the train,</div>
-<div class="verse">Moved in a lustering <em>halo</em>, propped with cane.</div>
-<div class="verse">Then the <em>Assembly Close</em> received the fair&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">Order and elegance presided there&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">Each gay Right Honourable had her place,</div>
-<div class="verse">To walk a minuet with becoming grace.</div>
-<div class="verse">No racing to the dance, with rival hurry&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">Such was thy sway, O famed Miss Nicky Murray!</div>
-<div class="verse">Each lady’s fan a chosen Damon bore,</div>
-<div class="verse">With care selected many a day before;</div>
-<div class="verse">For, unprovided with a favourite beau,</div>
-<div class="verse">The nymph, chagrined, the ball must needs forego;</div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">{267}</a></span>
-<div class="verse">But, previous matters to her taste arranged,</div>
-<div class="verse"><em>Certes</em>, the constant couple never changed;</div>
-<div class="verse">Through a long night, to watch fair Delia’s will,</div>
-<div class="verse">The same dull swain was at her elbow still.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>A little before Miss Nicky’s time, it was customary for gentlemen
-to walk alongside the chairs of their partners, with their
-swords by their sides, and so escort them home. They called
-next afternoon upon their Dulcineas to inquire how they were
-and drink tea. The fashionable time for seeing company in those
-days was the evening, when people were all abroad upon the street,
-as in the forenoon now, making calls and <em>shopping</em>. The people
-who attended the assemblies were very <em>select</em>. Moreover, they
-were all known to each other; and the introduction of a stranger
-required nice preliminaries. It is said that Miss Murray, on
-hearing a young lady’s name pronounced for the first time, would
-say: ‘Miss &mdash;&mdash;, of what?’ If no territorial addition could be
-made, she manifestly cooled. Upon one occasion, seeing a man at
-the assembly who was born in a low situation and raised to wealth
-in some humble trade, she went up to him, and, without the least
-deference to his fine-laced coat, taxed him with presumption in
-coming there, and turned him out of the room.</p>
-
-<p>Major Topham praises the regularity and propriety observed at
-the assemblies, though gently insinuating their heaviness. He says:
-‘I was never at an assembly where the authority of the manager
-was so observed or respected. With the utmost politeness, affability,
-and good-humour, Miss Murray attends to every one. All
-petitions are heard, and demands granted, which appear reasonable.
-The company is so much the more obliged to Miss Murray, as the
-task is by no means to be envied. The crowd which immediately
-surrounds her on entering the room, the impetuous applications
-of <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">chaperons</i>, maiden-aunts, and the earnest entreaties of lovers to
-obtain a ticket in one of the first sets for the dear object, render
-the fatigue of the office of lady-directress almost intolerable.’<a name="FNanchor_222" id="FNanchor_222"></a><a href="#Footnote_222" class="fnanchor">[222]</a></p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">{268}</a></span></p>
-<p>Early hours were kept in those days, and the stinted time was
-never exceeded. When the proper hour arrived for dissolving the
-party, and the young people would crowd round the throne to
-petition for one other set, up rose Miss Nicky in unrelenting
-rigidity of figure, and with one wave of her hand silenced the
-musicians:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Quick from the summit of the grove they fell,</div>
-<div class="verse">And left it inharmonious.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">{269}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="THE_BISHOPS_LAND" id="THE_BISHOPS_LAND">[THE BISHOP’S LAND.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>On the north side of the High Street, a hundred yards or so
-below the North Bridge, there existed previous to 1813 an
-unusually large and handsome old <em>land</em> or building named the
-<em>Bishop’s Land</em>. It rested upon an arcade or <i lang="it" xml:lang="it">piazza</i>, as it is called,
-and the entry in the first floor bore the ordinary legend:</p>
-
-<p class="center">
-BLISSIT BE ZE LORD FOR ALL HIS GIFTIS,
-</p>
-
-<p>together with the date 1578, and a shield impaled with two coats
-of arms. Along the front of this floor was a balcony composed of
-brass, a thing unique in the ancient city. The house had been
-the Edinburgh residence of Archbishop John Spottiswood. Most
-unfortunately the whole line of building towards the street was
-burned down in the year 1813.</p>
-
-<p>In the latter part of the last century the Bishop’s Land was
-regarded as a very handsome residence, and it was occupied accordingly
-by persons of consideration. The dictum of an old citizen
-to me many years ago was: ‘Nobody without livery-servants lived
-in the Bishop’s Land.’ Sir Stuart Threipland of Fingask occupied
-the first floor. His estate, forfeited by his father in 1716, was
-purchased back by him, with money obtained through his wife, in
-1784; and the title, which was always given to him by courtesy,
-was restored as a reality to his descendants by George IV. He
-had himself been engaged in the affair of 1745-6, and had accompanied
-‘the Prince’ in some part of his wanderings. In the hands
-of this ‘fine old <em>Scottish</em> gentleman,’ for such he was, his house
-in the Bishop’s Land was elegantly furnished, there being in
-particular some well-painted portraits of royal personages&mdash;<em>not
-of the reigning house</em>. These had all been sent to his father and
-himself by the persons represented in them, who thus showed their
-gratitude for efforts made and sufferings incurred in their behalf.
-There were five windows to the street, three of them lighting the
-drawing-room; the remaining two lighted the eldest son’s room.
-A dining-room, Sir Stuart’s bedroom, his sister Janet’s (who kept
-house for him) room, and other apartments were in the rear, some
-lighted from the adjacent close&mdash;and these still exist, having been
-spared by the fire. The kitchen and servants’ rooms were below.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">{270}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In the next floor above lived the Hamiltons of Pencaitland; in
-the next again, the Aytouns of Inchdairnie. Mrs Aytoun, who
-was a daughter of Lord Rollo, would sometimes come down the
-stair in a winter evening, lighting herself with a little wax-taper,
-to drink tea with <em>Mrs</em> Janet Threipland, for so she called herself,
-though unmarried. In the uppermost floor of all lived a reputable
-tailor and his family. All the various tenants, including the
-tailor, were on good neighbourly terms with each other; a pleasant
-thing to tell of this bit of the old world, which has left nothing
-of the same kind behind it in these later days, when we all live at
-a greater distance, physical and moral, from each other.]</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">{271}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="JOHN_KNOXS_MANSE" id="JOHN_KNOXS_MANSE">JOHN KNOX’S MANSE.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>The lower portion of the High Street, including <em>the Netherbow</em>,
-was, till a recent time, remarkable for the antiquity of the
-greater number of the buildings, insomuch that no equal portion
-of the city was more distinctly a memorial of the general appearance
-of the whole as it was in the sixteenth and seventeenth
-centuries. On the north side of the High Street, immediately
-adjacent to the Netherbow, there was a nest of tall wooden-fronted
-houses of one character, and the age of which generally
-might be guessed from the date existing upon one&mdash;1562. This
-formed a perfect example of the <em>High Gait</em> as it appeared to
-Queen Mary, excepting that the open booths below had been
-converted into close shops. The <em>fore-stairs</em>&mdash;that is, outside
-stairs ascending to the <em>first floor</em> (technically so called), from
-which the women of Edinburgh reviled the hapless queen as she
-rode along the street after her surrender at Carberry&mdash;were
-unchanged in this little district.</p>
-
-<p>The popular story regarding houses of this kind is that they
-took their origin in an inconvenience which was felt in having
-the Boroughmoor covered with wood, as it proved from that
-circumstance a harbour for robbers. To banish the robbers, it
-was necessary to extirpate the wood. To get this done, the
-magistrates granted leave to the citizens to project their house-fronts
-seven feet into the street, provided they should execute
-the work with timber cut from the Boroughmoor. Robert
-Fergusson follows up this story in a burlesque poem by relating
-how, consequently,</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Edina’s mansions with lignarian art</div>
-<div class="verse">Were piled and fronted. Like an ark she seemed</div>
-<div class="verse">To lie on mountain’s top, with shapes replete,</div>
-<div class="verse">Clean and unclean&mdash;&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse">To Jove the Dryads prayed, nor prayed in vain,</div>
-<div class="verse">For vengeance on her sons. At midnight drear</div>
-<div class="verse">Black showers descend, and teeming myriads rise</div>
-<div class="verse">Of bugs abhorrent’&mdash;&mdash;</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>The only authentic information to be obtained on the point is
-presented by Maitland, when he tells us that the clearing of the
-Boroughmoor of timber took place in consequence of a charter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">{272}</a></span>
-from James IV. in 1508. He says nothing of robbers, but attributes
-the permission granted by the magistrates for the making
-of wooden projections merely to their desire of getting sale for
-their timber. After all, I am inclined to trace this fashion
-to taste. The wooden fronts appear to have originated in open
-galleries&mdash;an arrangement often spoken of in early writings.
-These, being closed up or formed into a range of windows, would
-produce the wooden-fronted house. It is remarkable that the
-wooden fronts do not in many instances bear the appearance of
-afterthoughts, as the stone structure within often shows such
-an arrangement of the fore wall as seems designed to connect
-the projecting part with the chambers within, or to give these
-chambers as much as possible of the borrowed light. At the same
-time, it is somewhat puzzling to find, in the closes below the
-buildings, gateways with hooks for hinges seven feet or so from
-the present street-front&mdash;an arrangement which does not appear
-necessary on the supposition that the houses were built designedly
-with a stone interior and a wooden projection.</p>
-
-<p>In the Netherbow the street receives a contraction from the
-advance of the houses on the north side, thus closing a species
-of parallelogram, of which the Luckenbooths formed the upper
-extremity&mdash;the market-place of our ancient city. The uppermost
-of the prominent houses&mdash;having of course two fronts
-meeting in a right angle, one fronting to the line of street, the
-other looking up the High Street&mdash;is pointed to by tradition as
-the residence or manse of John Knox during his incumbency
-as minister of Edinburgh, from 1560 till (with few interruptions)
-his death in 1572. It is a picturesque building of three above-ground
-floors, constructed of substantial ashlar masonry, but on
-a somewhat small scale, and terminating in curious gables and
-masses of chimneys. A narrow door, right in the angle, gives
-access to a small room, lighted by one long window presented
-to the westward, and apparently the <em>hall</em> of the mansion in
-former times. Over the window and door is this legend, in an
-unusually old kind of lettering:</p>
-
-<p class="center">
-LVFE·GOD·ABVFE·AL·AND·YI·NYCHTBOVR·[AS·]YI·SELF·
-</p>
-
-<p>The word ‘as’ is obliterated. The words are, in modern
-English, simply the well-known scriptural command: ‘Love
-God above all, and thy neighbour as thyself.’ Perched upon
-the corner above the door is a small effigy of the Reformer,
-preaching in a pulpit, and pointing with his right hand to a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">{273}</a></span>
-stone above his head in that direction, which presents in rude
-sculpture the sun bursting from clouds, with the name of the
-Deity inscribed on his disc in three languages:</p>
-
-<p class="center">
-ΘΕΟΣ<br />
-DEUS<br />
-GOD<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>Dr M’Crie, in his <cite>Life of John Knox</cite>, states that the Reformer,
-on commencing duty in Edinburgh at the conclusion of the
-struggles with the queen-regent, ‘lodged in the house of David
-Forrest, a burgess of Edinburgh, from which he removed to the
-lodging which had belonged to Durie, Abbot of Dunfermline.’
-The magistrates acted liberally towards their minister, giving
-him a salary of two hundred pounds Scottish money, and paying
-his house-rent for him, at the rate of fifteen merks yearly. In
-October 1561 they ordained the Dean of Guild, ‘with al diligence,
-to mak ane warm studye of dailles to the minister, Johne Knox,
-within his hous, aboue the hall of the same, with lyht and
-wyndokis thereunto, and all uther necessaris.’ This study is
-generally supposed to have been a very small wooden projection,
-of the kind described a few pages back, still seen on the front
-of the <em>first floor</em>. Close to it is a window in the angle of the
-building, from which Knox is said by tradition to have occasionally
-held forth to multitudes below.</p>
-
-<p>The second floor, which is accessible by two narrow spiral
-stairs, one to the south, another to the west, contains a tolerably
-spacious room, with a ceiling ornamented by stucco mouldings,
-and a window presented to the westward. A partition has at
-one time divided this room from a narrow one towards the
-north, the ceiling of which is composed of the beams and
-flooring of the attic flat, all curiously painted with flower-work
-in an ancient taste. Two inferior rooms extend still farther to
-the northward. It is to be remarked that the wooden projection
-already spoken of extends up to this floor, so that there is here
-likewise a small room in front; it contains a fireplace, and a
-recess which might have been a cupboard or a library, besides
-two small windows. That this fireplace, this recess, and also
-the door by which the wooden chamber is entered from the
-decorated room should all be formed in the front wall of the
-house, and with a necessary relation to the wooden projection,
-strikes one as difficult to reconcile with the idea of that projection
-being an afterthought; the appearances rather indicate
-the whole having been formed at once, as parts of one design.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">{274}</a></span>
-The attic floor exhibits strong oaken beams, but the flooring is
-in bad order.</p>
-
-<p>In the lower part of the house there is a small room, said by
-tradition to have been used in times of difficulty for the purpose
-of baptising children; there is also a well to supply the house
-with water, besides a secret stair, represented as communicating
-subterraneously with a neighbouring alley.</p>
-
-<p>From the size of this house, and the variety of accesses to it,
-it becomes tolerably certain that Knox could have occupied only
-a portion of it. The question arises, which part did he occupy?
-Probability seems decidedly in favour of the <em>first floor</em>&mdash;that
-containing the window from which he is traditionally said to
-have preached, and where his effigy appears. An authentic fact
-in the Reformer’s life favours this supposition. When under
-danger from the hostility of the queen’s party in the castle&mdash;in
-the spring of 1571&mdash;‘one evening a musket-ball was fired in at
-his window, and lodged in the roof of the apartment in which
-he was sitting. It happened that he sat at the time in a
-different part of the room from that which he had been accustomed
-to occupy, otherwise the ball, from the direction it took,
-must have struck him’ (M’Crie). The second floor is too high
-to have admitted of a musket being fired in at one of the
-windows. A ball fired in at the ground-floor would not have
-struck the ceiling. The only feasible supposition in the case is
-that the Reformer dwelt in the <em>first floor</em>, which was not beyond
-an assassin’s aim, and yet at such a height that a ball fired from
-the street would hit the ceiling.<a name="FNanchor_223" id="FNanchor_223"></a><a href="#Footnote_223" class="fnanchor">[223]</a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w500">
-<a id="illus_c_023"></a>
-<img src="images/illus_c_023.jpg" width="500" height="545" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">JOHN KNOX’S MANSE.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap"><a href="#Page_274">Page 274.</a></span>
-</p></div>
-</div>
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">{275}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="HYNDFORDS_CLOSE" id="HYNDFORDS_CLOSE">HYNDFORD’S CLOSE.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>At the bottom of the High Street, on the south side, there is
-an uncommonly huge and dense mass of stone buildings or
-<em>lands</em>, penetrated only by a few narrow closes. One of these is
-Hyndford’s Close, a name indicating the
-noble family which once had lodgment in
-it. This was a Scotch peerage not without
-its glories&mdash;witness particularly the
-third earl, who acted as ambassador in
-succession to Prussia, to Russia, and to
-Vienna. It is now extinct: its <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">bijouterie</i>,
-its pictures, including portraits of Maria
-Theresa, and other royal and imperial
-personages, which had been presented as
-friendly memorials to the ambassador,
-have all been dispersed by the salesman’s
-hammer, and Hyndford’s Close, on my
-trying to get into it lately (1868), was
-inaccessible (literally) from filth.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w200">
-<img src="images/illus_p_275.jpg" width="200" height="500" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Hyndford’s Close.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The entry and stair at the head of the
-close on the west side was a favourite
-residence, on account of the ready access
-to it from the street. In the second
-floor of this house lived, about the beginning
-of the reign of George III., Lady
-Maxwell of Monreith, and there brought
-up her beautiful daughters, one of whom
-became Duchess of Gordon. The house
-had a dark passage, and the kitchen door
-was passed in going to the dining-room,
-according to an agreeable old practice in
-Scotch houses, which lets the guests know
-on entering what they have to expect.
-The fineries of Lady Maxwell’s daughters
-were usually hung up, after washing, on a screen in this passage
-to dry; while the coarser articles of dress, such as shifts and petticoats,
-were slung decently out of sight at the window, upon a projecting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">{276}</a></span>
-contrivance similar to a dyer’s pole, of which numerous
-specimens still exist at windows in the Old Town for the convenience
-of the poorer inhabitants.</p>
-
-<p>So easy and familiar were the manners of the great in those
-times, fabled to be so stiff and decorous, that Miss Eglintoune,
-afterwards Lady Wallace, used to be sent with the tea-kettle
-across the street to the Fountain Well for water to make tea.
-Lady Maxwell’s daughters were the wildest romps imaginable.
-An old gentleman, who was their relation, told me that the first
-time he saw these beautiful girls was in the High Street, where
-Miss Jane, afterwards Duchess of Gordon, was riding upon a
-sow, which Miss Eglintoune thumped lustily behind with a stick.
-It must be understood that in the middle of the eighteenth
-century vagrant swine went as commonly about the streets of
-Edinburgh as dogs do in our own day, and were more generally
-fondled as pets by the children of the last generation.<a name="FNanchor_224" id="FNanchor_224"></a><a href="#Footnote_224" class="fnanchor">[224]</a> It may,
-however, be remarked that the sows upon which the Duchess
-of Gordon and her witty sister rode, when children, were not
-the common vagrants of the High Street, but belonged to Peter
-Ramsay, of the inn in St Mary’s Wynd, and were among the
-last that were permitted to roam abroad. The two romps used
-to watch the animals as they were let loose in the forenoon
-from the stable-yard (where they lived among the horse-litter),
-and get upon their backs the moment they issued from the close.</p>
-
-<p>The extraordinary cleverness, the genuine wit, and the delightful
-<em>abandon</em> of Lady Wallace made an extraordinary impression
-on Scottish society in her day. It almost seemed as if some
-faculty divine had inspired her. A milliner bringing home a
-cap to her when she was just about to set off to the Leith races
-was so unlucky as to tear it against the buckle of a porter’s knee
-in the street. ‘No matter,’ said her ladyship; and instantly
-putting it on, restored all to grace by a single pin. The cap
-thus misarranged was found so perfectly exquisite that ladies
-tore their caps on nails, and pinned them on in the hope of
-imitating it. It was, however, a grace beyond the reach of art.</p>
-
-<p>Of the many <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">bon mots</i> attributed to her, one alone seems<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">{277}</a></span>
-worthy, from its being unhackneyed, of appearing here. The
-son of Mr Kincaid, king’s printer&mdash;a great Macaroni, as the
-phrase went; that is, dandy&mdash;was nicknamed, from his father’s
-lucrative patent, <em>Young Bibles</em>. This beau entering a ballroom
-one evening, some of the company asked who was that extraordinary-looking
-young man. ‘Only Young Bibles,’ quoth Lady
-Wallace, ‘bound in calf, and gilt, but not lettered!’</p>
-
-<p>[In the same stair in Hyndford’s Close lived another lady of
-rank, and one who, for several reasons, filled in her time a broad
-space in society. This was Anne, Countess of Balcarres, the
-progenitrix of perhaps as many persons as ever any woman was
-in the same space of time. Her eldest daughter, Anne, authoress
-of the ballad of <cite>Auld Robin Gray</cite>, was, of all her eleven children,
-the one whose name is most likely to continue in remembrance&mdash;yea,
-though another of them put down the Maroon war in
-the West Indies. When in Hyndford’s Close, Lady Balcarres
-had for a neighbour in the same alley Dr Rutherford, the uncle
-of Sir Walter Scott; and young Walter, often at his uncle’s,
-occasionally accompanied his aunt ‘Jeanie’ to Lady Balcarres’s.
-Forty years after, having occasion to correspond with Lady
-Anne Barnard, <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">née</i> Lindsay, he told her: ‘I remember all the
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">locale</i> of Hyndford’s Close perfectly, even to the Indian screen
-with Harlequin and Columbine, and the harpsichord, though I
-never had the pleasure of hearing Lady Anne play upon it. I
-suppose the close, once too clean to soil the hem of your
-ladyship’s garment, is now a resort for the lowest mechanics&mdash;and
-so wears the world away.... It is, to be sure, more
-picturesque to lament the desolation of towers on hills and
-haughs, than the degradation of an Edinburgh close; but I
-cannot help thinking on the simple and cosie retreats where
-worth and talent, and elegance to boot, were often nestled, and
-which now are the resort of misery, filth, poverty, and vice.’<a name="FNanchor_225" id="FNanchor_225"></a><a href="#Footnote_225" class="fnanchor">[225]</a></p>
-
-<p>The late Mrs Meetham, a younger sister of Miss Spence
-Yeaman, of Murie, in the Carse of Gowrie, had often heard
-her grand-aunt, Miss Molly Yeaman, describe, from her own
-recollection, the tea-drinkings of the Countess of Balcarres in
-Hyndford’s Close. The family was not rich, and it still retained
-something of its ancient Jacobitism. The tea-drinkings, as was
-not uncommon, took place in my lady’s bedroom. At the foot
-of a four-posted bed, exhibiting a finely worked coverlet, stood
-John, an elderly man-servant, and a <em>character</em>, in full Balcarres<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">{278}</a></span>
-livery, an immense quantity of worsted lace on his coat.
-Resting with his arm round a bedpost, he was ready to hand
-the kettle when required. As the ladies went chattering on,
-there would sometimes occur a difficulty about a date or a
-point in genealogy, and then John was appealed to to settle the
-question. For example, it came to be debated how many of the
-Scotch baronetcies were real; for, as is still the case, many of
-them were known to be fictitious, or assumed without legal
-grounds. Here John was known to be not only learned, but
-eloquent. He began: ‘Sir James Kinloch, Sir Stuart Threipland,
-Sir John Wedderburn, Sir &mdash;&mdash; Ogilvy, Sir James Steuart
-of Coltness’ [all of them forfeited baronets, be it observed]:
-‘these, leddies, are the only <em>real</em> baronets. For the rest, I do
-believe, the Deil’&mdash;&mdash;then a figurative declaration not fit for
-modern print, but which made the Balcarres party only laugh,
-and declare to John that they thought him not far wrong.]</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">{279}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="HOUSE_OF_THE_MARQUISES_OF_TWEEDDALE_THE" id="HOUSE_OF_THE_MARQUISES_OF_TWEEDDALE_THE">HOUSE OF THE MARQUISES OF TWEEDDALE&mdash;THE
-BEGBIE TRAGEDY.</a></h2>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter w300">
-<img src="images/illus_p_279.jpg" width="300" height="521" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Tweeddale Court.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The town mansion of the Marquises
-of Tweeddale was one of
-large extent and dimensions, in a
-court which still bears the title of
-that family, nearly opposite to the
-mansion of John
-Knox.<a name="FNanchor_226" id="FNanchor_226"></a><a href="#Footnote_226" class="fnanchor">[226]</a> When
-John, the fourth
-marquis, was Secretary
-of State for
-Scotland, in the
-reign of George
-II., this must have
-been a dwelling of
-considerable importance
-in the eyes of
-his countrymen. It
-had a good garden
-in the rear, with a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">{280}</a></span>
-yard and coach entry from the Cowgate. Now all the buildings
-and ‘pertinents’ are in the occupation of Messrs Oliver &amp; Boyd,
-the well-known publishers.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w250">
-<img src="images/illus_p_280.jpg" width="250" height="355" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Scene of the Begbie Murder.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The passage from the street into Tweeddale Court is narrow
-and dark, and about fifteen yards in length. Here, in 1806, when
-the mansion was possessed as a banking-house by the British Linen
-Company, there took place an extraordinary tragedy. About five
-o’clock of the evening
-of the 13th of November,
-when the short
-midwinter day had
-just closed, a child,
-who lived in a house
-accessible from the
-close, was sent by her
-mother with a kettle
-to obtain a supply of
-water for tea from
-the neighbouring well.
-The little girl, stepping
-with the kettle
-in her hand out of the
-public stair into the
-close, stumbled in the
-dark over something
-which lay there, and
-which proved to be the
-body of a man just
-expiring. On an alarm
-being given, it was
-discovered that this
-was William Begbie, a
-porter connected with
-the bank, in whose
-heart a knife was stuck up to the haft, so that he bled to death
-before uttering a word which might tend to explain the dismal
-transaction. He was at the same time found to have been robbed
-of a package of notes to the value of above four thousand pounds,
-which he had been entrusted, in the course of his ordinary duty,
-to carry from the branch of the bank at Leith to the head-office.<a name="FNanchor_227" id="FNanchor_227"></a><a href="#Footnote_227" class="fnanchor">[227]</a><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">{281}</a></span>
-The blow had been given with an accuracy and a calculation of
-consequences showing the most appalling deliberation in the
-assassin; for not only was the knife directed straight into the
-most vital part, but its handle had been muffled in a bunch of
-soft paper, so as to prevent, as was thought, any sprinkling of
-blood from reaching the person of the murderer, by which he
-might have been by some chance detected. The knife was
-one of those with broad thin blades and wooden handles which
-are used for cutting bread, and its rounded front had been ground
-to a point, apparently for the execution of this horrible deed.
-The unfortunate man left a wife and four children to bewail his
-loss.</p>
-
-<p>The singular nature and circumstances of Begbie’s murder
-occasioned much excitement in the public mind, and every effort
-was of course made to discover the guilty party. No house of a
-suspicious character in the city was left unsearched, and parties
-were despatched to watch and patrol all the various roads leading
-out into the country. The bank offered a reward of five hundred
-pounds for such information as might lead to the conviction of
-the offender or offenders; and the government further promised
-the king’s pardon to any except the actual murderer who, having
-been concerned in the deed, might discover their accomplices.
-The sheriff of Edinburgh, Mr Clerk Rattray, displayed the
-greatest zeal in his endeavours to ascertain the circumstances of
-the murder, and to detect and seize the murderer, but with surprisingly
-little success. All that could be ascertained was that
-Begbie, in proceeding up Leith Walk on his fatal mission, had
-been accompanied by ‘a man;’ and that about the supposed
-time of the murder ‘a man’ had been seen by some children to
-run out of the close into the street and down Leith Wynd, a
-lane leading off from the Netherbow at a point nearly opposite
-to the close. There was also reason to believe that the knife had
-been bought in a shop about two o’clock on the day of the
-murder, and that it had been afterwards ground upon a grinding-stone
-and smoothed on a hone. A number of suspicious characters
-were apprehended and examined; but all, with one exception, produced
-satisfactory proofs of their innocence. The exception was
-a carrier between Perth and Edinburgh, a man of dissolute and
-irregular habits, of great bodily strength, and known to be a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">{282}</a></span>
-dangerous and desperate character. He was kept in custody for
-a considerable time on suspicion, having been seen in the Canongate,
-near the scene of the murder, a very short time after it was
-committed. It has since been ascertained that he was then going
-about a different business, the disclosure of which would have
-subjected him to a capital punishment. It was in consequence
-of the mystery he felt himself impelled to preserve on this subject
-that he was kept so long in custody; but at length facts and
-circumstances came out to warrant his discharge, and he was
-discharged accordingly.</p>
-
-<p>Months rolled on without eliciting any evidence respecting the
-murder, and, like other wonders, it had ceased in a great measure
-to engage public attention, when, on the 10th of August 1807,
-a journeyman mason, in company with two other men, passing
-through the Bellevue grounds in the neighbourhood of the city,
-found, in a hole in a stone enclosure by the side of a hedge, a
-parcel containing a large quantity of bank-notes, bearing the
-appearance of having been a good while exposed to the weather.
-After consulting a little, the men carried the package to the
-sheriff’s office, where it was found to contain about £3000 in large
-notes, being those which had been taken from Begbie. The
-British Linen Company rewarded the men with two hundred
-pounds for their honesty; but the circumstance passed without
-throwing any light on the murder itself.</p>
-
-<p>Up to the present day the murderer of Begbie has not been
-discovered; nor is it probable, after the space of time which has
-elapsed, that he will ever be so. It is most likely that the grave
-has long closed upon him. The only person on whom public
-suspicion alighted with any force during the sixteen years ensuing
-upon the transaction was a medical practitioner in Leith, a dissolute
-man and a gambler, who put an end to his own existence
-not long after the murder. But I am not acquainted with any
-particular circumstances on which this suspicion was grounded
-beyond the suicide, which might spring from other causes. It was
-not till 1822 that any further light was thrown on this mysterious
-case. In a work then published under the title of <cite>The Life and
-Trial of James Mackoull</cite>, there was included a paper by Mr
-Denovan, the Bow Street officer, the object of which was to prove
-that Mackoull was the murderer, and which contained at least one
-very curious statement.</p>
-
-<p>Mr Denovan had discovered in Leith a man, then acting as
-a teacher, but who in 1806 was a sailor-boy, and who had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">{283}</a></span>
-witnessed some circumstances immediately connected with the
-murder. The man’s statement was as follows: ‘I was at that
-time (November 1806) a boy of fourteen years of age. The
-vessel to which I belonged had made a voyage to Lisbon, and
-was then lying in Leith harbour. I had brought a small present
-from Portugal for my mother and sister, who resided in the
-Netherbow, Edinburgh, immediately opposite to Tweeddale’s Close,
-leading to the British Linen Company’s Bank. I left the vessel
-late in the afternoon, and as the articles I had brought were
-contraband, I put them under my jacket, and was proceeding
-up Leith Walk, when I perceived a tall man carrying a yellow-coloured
-parcel under his arm, and a genteel man, dressed in a
-black coat, dogging him. I was a little afraid: I conceived the
-man who carried the parcel to be a smuggler, and the gentleman
-who followed him to be a custom-house or excise officer. In
-dogging the man, the supposed officer went from one side of
-the Walk to the other [the Walk is a broad street], as if afraid
-of being noticed, but still kept about the same distance behind
-him. I was afraid of losing what I carried, and shortened sail
-a little, keeping my eyes fixed on the person I supposed to be
-an officer, until I came to the head of Leith Street, when I saw
-the smuggler take the North Bridge, and the custom-house officer
-go in front of the Register Office; here he looked round him,
-and imagining he was looking for me, I hove to, and watched
-him. He then looked up the North Bridge, and, as I conceive,
-followed the smuggler, for he went the same way. I stood a
-minute or two where I was, and then went forward, walking
-slowly up the North Bridge. I did not, however, see either of
-the men before me; and when I came to the south end or head
-of the Bridge, supposing that they might have gone up the High
-Street or along the South Bridge, I turned to the left, and reached
-the Netherbow, without again seeing either the smuggler or the
-officer. Just, however, as I came opposite to Tweeddale’s Close,
-<em>I saw the custom-house officer come running out of it with something
-under his coat</em>: I think he ran down the street. Being much
-alarmed, and supposing that the officer had also seen me and
-knew what I carried, I deposited my little present in my mother’s
-with all possible speed, and made the best of my way to Leith,
-without hearing anything of the murder of Begbie until next day.
-On coming on board the vessel, I told the mate what a narrow
-escape I conceived I had made: he seemed somewhat alarmed
-(having probably, like myself, smuggled some trifling article from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">{284}</a></span>
-Portugal), and told me in a peremptory tone that I should not go
-ashore again without first acquainting him. I certainly heard of
-the murder before I left Leith, and concluded that the man I saw
-was the murderer; but the idea of waiting on a magistrate and
-communicating what I had seen never struck me. We sailed in
-a few days thereafter from Leith; and the vessel to which I
-belonged having been captured by a privateer, I was carried to
-a French prison, and only regained my liberty at the last peace.
-I can now recollect distinctly the figure of the man I saw; he was
-well dressed, had a genteel appearance, and wore a black coat.
-I never saw his face properly, for he was before me the whole way
-up the Walk; I think, however, he was a stout big man, but not
-so tall as the man I then conceived to be a smuggler.’</p>
-
-<p>This description of the supposed custom-house officer coincides
-exactly with that of the appearance of Mackoull; and other circumstances
-are given which almost make it certain that he was the
-murderer. This Mackoull was a London rogue of unparalleled
-effrontery and dexterity, who for years haunted Scotland, and effected
-some daring robberies. He resided in Edinburgh from September
-1805 till the close of 1806, and during that time frequented a
-coffee-house in the <em>Ship Tavern</em> at Leith. He professed to be a
-merchant expelled by the threats of the French from Hamburg,
-and to live by a new mode of dyeing skins, but in reality he
-practised the arts of a gambler and a pickpocket. He had a
-mean lodging at the bottom of New Street in the Canongate, near
-the scene of the murder of Begbie, to which it is remarkable
-that <em>Leith Wynd</em> was the readiest as well as most private access
-from that spot. No suspicion, however, fell upon Mackoull
-at this period, and he left the country for a number of years, at
-the end of which time he visited Glasgow, and there effected a
-robbery of one of the banks. For this crime he did not escape
-the law. He was brought to trial at Edinburgh in 1820, was
-condemned to be executed, but died in jail while under reprieve
-from his sentence.</p>
-
-<p>The most striking part of the evidence which Mr Denovan
-adduces against Mackoull is the report of a conversation which
-he had with that person in the condemned cell of the Edinburgh
-jail in July 1820, when Mackoull was very doubtful of being
-reprieved. To pursue his own narrative, which is in the third
-person: ‘He told Captain Sibbald [the superior of the prison]
-that he intended to ask Mackoull a single question relative to
-the murder of Begbie, but would first humour him by a few jokes,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">{285}</a></span>
-so as to throw him off his guard, and prevent him from thinking
-he had called for any particular purpose [it is to be observed that
-Mr Denovan had a professional acquaintance with the condemned
-man]; but desired Captain Sibbald to watch the features of the
-prisoner when he (Denovan) put his hand to his chin, for he
-would then put the question he meant. After talking some time
-on different topics, Mr Denovan put this very simple question to
-the prisoner: “By the way, Mackoull, if I am correct, you resided
-at the foot of New Street, Canongate, in November 1806&mdash;did
-you not?” He stared&mdash;he rolled his eyes, and, as if falling
-into a convulsion, threw himself back upon his bed. In this condition
-he continued for a few moments, when, as if recollecting
-himself, he started up, exclaiming wildly: “No, &mdash;&mdash; &mdash;&mdash;! I
-was then in the East Indies&mdash;in the West Indies. What do you
-mean?” “I mean no harm, Mackoull,” he replied; “I merely
-asked the question for my own curiosity; for I think when you
-left these lodgings you went to Dublin. Is it not so?” “Yes,
-yes, I went to Dublin,” he replied; “and I wish I had remained
-there still. I won £10,000 there at the tables, and never knew
-what it was to want cash, although you wished the folks here to
-believe that they locked me up in Old Start (Newgate), and
-brought down your friend Adkins to swear he saw me there: this
-was more than your duty.” He now seemed to rave, and lose all
-temper, and his visitor bade him good-night, and left him.’</p>
-
-<p>It appears extremely probable, from the strong circumstantial
-evidence which has been offered by Mr Denovan, that Mackoull
-was the murderer of Begbie.</p>
-
-<p>One remaining fact regarding the Netherbow will be listened to
-with some interest. It was the home&mdash;perhaps the native spot&mdash;of
-William Falconer, the author of <cite>The Shipwreck</cite>, whose father
-was a wigmaker in this street.<a name="FNanchor_228" id="FNanchor_228"></a><a href="#Footnote_228" class="fnanchor">[228]</a></p>
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">{286}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="THE_LADIES_OF_TRAQUAIR" id="THE_LADIES_OF_TRAQUAIR">[THE LADIES OF TRAQUAIR.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>Lady Lovat was at the head of a genus of old ladies of
-quality, who, during the last century, resided in third and
-fourth <em>flats</em> of Old Town houses, wore pattens when they went
-abroad, had miniatures of the Pretender next their hearts, and
-gave tea and card parties regularly every fortnight. Almost every
-generation of a Scottish family of rank, besides throwing off its
-swarm of male cadets, who went abroad in quest of fortune, used
-to produce a corresponding number of daughters, who stayed at
-home, and for the most part became old maids. These gentlewomen,
-after the death of their parents, when, of course, a brother
-or nephew succeeded to the family seat and estate, were compelled
-to leave home, and make room for the new laird to bring up a
-new generation, destined in time to experience the same fate.
-Many of these ladies, who in Catholic countries would have found
-protection in nunneries, resorted to Edinburgh, where, with the
-moderate family provision assigned them, they passed inoffensive
-and sometimes useful lives, the peace of which was seldom broken
-otherwise than by irruptions of their grand-nephews, who came
-with the hunger of High School boys, or by the more stately calls
-of their landed cousins and brothers, who rendered their visits the
-more auspicious by a pound of hyson for the caddy, or a replenishment
-of rappee for the snuff-box. The <em>leddies</em>, as they were
-called, were at once the terror and the admiration of their neighbours
-in the stair, who looked up to them as the patronesses of
-the <em>land</em>, and as shedding a light of gentility over the flats below.</p>
-
-<p>In the best days of the Old Town, people of all ranks lived very
-closely and cordially together, and the whole world were in a
-manner next-door neighbours. The population being dense, and
-the town small, the distance between the houses of friends was
-seldom considerable. When a hundred friends lived within the
-space of so many yards, the company was easily collected, and
-consequently meetings took place more frequently, and upon more
-trivial occasions, than in these latter days of stately dinners and
-fantastic balls. Tea&mdash;simple tea&mdash;was then almost the only meal
-to which invitations were given. Tea-parties, assembling at four
-o’clock, were resorted to by all who wished for elegant social
-intercourse. There was much careful ceremonial in the dispensation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">{287}</a></span>
-of those pretty, small china cups, individualised by the
-numbers marked on each of the miniature spoons which circulated
-with them, and of which four or five returns were not uncommon.
-The spoon in the saucer indicated a wish for more&mdash;in the cup
-the reverse. A few tunes on the spinnet, a Scotch song from
-some young lady (solo), and the unfailing whist-table furnished
-the entertainment. At eight o’clock to a minute would arrive the
-sedan, or the lass with the lantern and pattens, and the whole
-company would be at home before the eight o’clock drum of the
-Town-guard had ceased to beat.</p>
-
-<p>In a house at the head of the Canongate, but having its entrance
-from St Mary’s Wynd, and several stairs up, lived two old maiden
-ladies of the house of Traquair&mdash;the Ladies Barbara and Margaret
-Stuart. They were twins, the children of Charles, the fourth earl,
-and their birth on the 3rd of September, the anniversary of the
-death of Cromwell, brought a Latin epigram from Dr Pitcairn&mdash;of
-course previous to 1713, which was the year of his own death.
-The learned doctor anticipated for them ‘timid wooers,’ but they
-nevertheless came to old age unmarried. They drew out their
-innocent, retired lives in this place, where, latterly, one of their
-favourite amusements was to make dolls, and little beds for them
-to lie on&mdash;a practice not quite uncommon in days long gone by,
-being to some degree followed by Queen Mary.<a name="FNanchor_229" id="FNanchor_229"></a><a href="#Footnote_229" class="fnanchor">[229]</a></p>
-
-<p>I may give, in the words of a long-deceased correspondent, an
-anecdote of the ladies of Traquair, referring to the days when
-potatoes had as yet an equivocal reputation, and illustrative of
-the frugal scale by which our ‘leddies’ were in use to measure the
-luxuries of their table. ‘Upon the return one day of their
-weekly ambassador to the market, and the anxious investigation
-by the old ladies of the contents of Jenny’s basket, the little
-morsel of mutton, with a portion of accompanying off-falls, was
-duly approved of. “But, Jenny, what’s this in the bottom of
-the basket?” “Oo, mem, just a dozen o’ ’taties that Lucky,
-the green-wife, wad ha’e me to tak’&mdash;they wad eat sae fine wi’ the
-mutton.” “Na, na, Jenny; tak’ back the ’taties&mdash;we need nae
-provocatives in this house.”’</p>
-
-<p>The latest survivor of these Traquair ladies died in 1794.]</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">{288}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="GREYFRIARS_CHURCHYARD" id="GREYFRIARS_CHURCHYARD">GREYFRIARS CHURCHYARD.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="chapter_summary"><strong>Signing of the Covenant&mdash;Henderson’s Monument&mdash;Bothwell
-Bridge Prisoners&mdash;A Romance.</strong></p>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter w75">
-<img src="images/illus_p_288a.jpg" width="75" height="174" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter w275">
-<img src="images/illus_p_288b.jpg" width="275" height="433" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Henderson’s Monument,
-Greyfriars.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>This old cemetery&mdash;the burial-place of Buchanan,<a name="FNanchor_230" id="FNanchor_230"></a><a href="#Footnote_230" class="fnanchor">[230]</a> George
-Jameson the painter, Principal Robertson, Dr Blair, Allan
-Ramsay, Henry Mackenzie, and many other men of note&mdash;whose
-walls are a circle of aristocratic sepulchres, will ever be memorable
-as the scene of the Signing of the Covenant; the document
-having first been produced in the church, after a sermon by
-Alexander Henderson, and signed by all the congregation,
-from the Earl of Sutherland downward, after which it was
-handed out to the multitudes assembled in the kirkyard, and
-signed on the flat monuments, amidst tears,
-prayers, and aspirations which could find no
-words; some writing with their blood! Near
-by, resting well from all these struggles,
-lies the preacher under a square obelisk-like
-monument; near also rests, in equal peace,
-the Covenant’s enemy, Sir George Mackenzie.
-The inscriptions on Henderson’s
-stone were ordered by Parliament to be
-erased at the Restoration; and small depressions
-are pointed out in it as having<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">{289}</a></span>
-been inflicted by bullets from the soldiery when executing this
-order. With the ’88 came a new order of things, and the
-inscriptions were then quietly reinstated.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w450">
-<a id="illus_c_024"></a>
-<img src="images/illus_c_024.jpg" width="450" height="691" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">GREYFRIARS’ CHURCHYARD.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap"><a href="#Page_288">Page 288.</a></span>
-</p></div>
-</div>
-
-
-<h3>BOTHWELL BRIDGE PRISONERS.</h3>
-
-<p>As if there had been some destiny in the matter, the Greyfriars
-Churchyard became connected with another remarkable event in
-the religious troubles of the seventeenth century. At the south-west
-angle, accessible by an old gateway bearing emblems of
-mortality, and which is fitted with an iron-rail gate of very old
-workmanship, is a kind of supplement to the burying-ground&mdash;an
-oblong space, now having a line of sepulchral enclosures on each
-side, but formerly empty. On these enclosures the visitor may
-remark, as he passes, certain names venerable in the history of
-science and of letters; as, for instance, Joseph Black and Alexander
-Tytler. On one he sees the name of Gilbert Innes of Stow, who
-left a million, to take six feet of earth here. These, however, do
-not form the matter in point. Every lesser particular becomes
-trivial beside the extraordinary use to which the place was put by
-the Government in the year 1679. Several hundred of the prisoners
-taken at Bothwell Bridge were confined here in the open air, under
-circumstances of privation now scarcely credible. They had hardly
-anything either to lie upon or to cover them; their allowance of
-provision was four ounces of bread per day, with water derived
-from one of the city pipes, which passed near the place. They
-were guarded by day by eight and through the night by twenty-four
-men; and the soldiers were told that if any prisoner escaped,
-they should answer it life for life by cast of dice. If any prisoner
-rose from the ground by night, he was shot at. Women alone
-were permitted to commune with them, and bring them food or
-clothes; but these had often to stand at the entrance from morning
-till night without getting access, and were frequently insulted and
-maltreated by the soldiers, without the prisoners being able to
-protect them, although in many cases related by the most endearing
-ties. In the course of several weeks a considerable number of the
-prisoners had been liberated upon signing a bond, in which they
-promised never again to take up arms against the king or without
-his authority; but it appears that about four hundred, refusing
-mercy on such terms, were kept in this frightful bivouac for five
-months, being only allowed at the approach of winter to have
-shingle huts erected over them, which was boasted of as a great<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">{290}</a></span>
-mercy. Finally, on the 15th of November, a remnant, numbering
-two hundred and fifty-seven, were put on board a ship to be sent
-to Barbadoes. The vessel was wrecked on one of the Orkney
-Islands, when only about forty came ashore alive.</p>
-
-<p>From the gloom of this sad history there is shed one ray of
-romance. Amongst the charitable women of Edinburgh who came
-to minister to the prisoners, there was one attended by a daughter&mdash;a
-young and, at least by right of romance, a fair girl. Every
-few days they approached this iron gate with food and clothes,
-either from their own stores or collected among neighbours.
-Between the young lady and one of the juvenile prisoners an
-attachment sprang up. Doubtless she loved him for the dangers
-he had passed in so good a cause, and he loved her because she
-pitied them. In happier days, long after, when their constancy
-had been well tried by an exile which he suffered in the plantations,
-this pair were married, and settled in Edinburgh, where
-they had sons and daughters. A respectable elderly citizen tells
-me he is descended from them.<a name="FNanchor_231" id="FNanchor_231"></a><a href="#Footnote_231" class="fnanchor">[231]</a></p>
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">{291}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="STORY_OF_MRS_MACFARLANE" id="STORY_OF_MRS_MACFARLANE">STORY OF MRS MACFARLANE.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="chapter_summary"><strong>‘Let them say I am romantic; so is every one said to be that either admires
-a fine thing or does one. On my conscience, as the world goes, ’tis hardly worth
-anybody’s while to do one for the honour of it. Glory, the only pay of generous
-actions, is now as ill paid as other just debts; and neither Mrs Macfarlane for
-immolating her lover, nor you for constancy to your lord, must ever hope to be
-compared to Lucretia or Portia.’&mdash;<em>Pope to Lady Mary W. Montagu.</em></strong></p>
-
-
-<p>Pope here alludes to a tragical incident which took place in
-Edinburgh on the 2nd of October 1716. The victim was a
-young Englishman, who had been sent down to Scotland as a
-Commissioner of Customs. It appears that Squire Cayley, or
-Captain Cayley, as he was alternatively called, had become the
-slave of a shameful passion towards Mrs Macfarlane, a woman of
-uncommon beauty, the wife of Mr John Macfarlane, Writer to the
-Signet in Edinburgh. One Saturday forenoon Mrs Macfarlane
-was exposed, by the treachery of Captain Cayley’s landlady, with
-whom she was acquainted, to an insult of the most atrocious kind
-on his part, in the house where he lodged, which seems to have
-been situated in a close in the Cowgate, opposite to what were
-called the Back Stairs.<a name="FNanchor_232" id="FNanchor_232"></a><a href="#Footnote_232" class="fnanchor">[232]</a> Next Tuesday Mr Cayley waited upon
-Mrs Macfarlane at her own house, and was shown into the drawing-room.
-According to an account given out by his friends, he was
-anxious to apologise for his former rudeness. From another
-account, it would appear that he had circulated reports derogatory
-to the lady’s honour, which she was resolved to punish. A third
-story represents him as having repeated the insult which he had
-formerly offered; whereupon she went into another room, and
-presently came back with a pair of pistols in her hand. On her
-bidding him leave the house instantly, he said: ‘What, madam,
-d’ye design to act a comedy?’ To which she answered that ‘<em>he
-would find it a tragedy if he did not retire</em>.’ The infatuated man<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">{292}</a></span>
-not obeying her command, she fired one of the pistols, which,
-however, only wounded him slightly in the left wrist, the bullet
-slanting down into the floor. The mere instinct, probably, of self-preservation
-caused him to draw his sword; but before he could
-use it she fired the other pistol, the shot of which penetrated his
-heart. ‘This dispute,’ says a letter of the day, ‘was so close that
-Mr Cayley’s shirt was burnt at the sleeves with the fire of one of
-the pistols, and his cravat and the breast of his shirt with the fire
-of the other.’<a name="FNanchor_233" id="FNanchor_233"></a><a href="#Footnote_233" class="fnanchor">[233]</a> Mrs Macfarlane immediately left the room, locking
-the door upon the dead body, and sent a servant for her husband,
-who was found at a neighbouring tavern. On his coming home
-about an hour after, she took him by the sleeve, and leading him
-into the room where the corpse lay, explained the circumstances
-which had led to the bloody act. Mr Macfarlane said: ‘Oh,
-woman! what have you done?’ But soon seeing the necessity for
-prompt measures, he went out again to consult with some of his
-friends. ‘They all advised,’ says the letter just quoted, ‘that he
-should convey his wife away privately, to prevent her lying in jail,
-till a precognition should be taken of the affair, and it should
-appear in its true light. Accordingly [about six o’clock], she
-walked down the High Street, followed by her husband at a little
-distance, and now absconds.</p>
-
-<p>‘The thing continued a profound secret to all except those
-concerned in the house till past ten at night, when Mr Macfarlane,
-having provided a safe retreat for his wife, returned and gave
-orders for discovering it to the magistrates, who went and viewed
-the body of the deceased, and secured the house and maid, and all
-else who may become evidence of the fact.’</p>
-
-<p>Another contemporary says: ‘I saw his [Cayley’s] corpse after
-he was cereclothed, and saw his blood where he lay on the floor for
-twenty-four hours after he died, just as he fell; so it was a difficulty
-to straight him.’</p>
-
-<p>A careful investigation was made into every circumstance connected
-with this fatal affair, but without demonstrating anything
-except the passionate rashness or magnanimity of the fair homicide.
-Mr Macfarlane was discharged upon his own affirmation that he
-knew nothing of the deed till after it had taken place. A pamphlet
-was published by Mrs Murray, Mr Cayley’s landlady, who seems
-to have kept a grocery shop in the Cowgate, vindicating herself
-from the imputation which Mrs Macfarlane’s tale had thrown upon<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">{293}</a></span>
-her character; but to this there appeared an answer, from some
-friend of the other party, in which the imputation was fixed almost
-beyond the possibility of doubt. Mrs Murray denied that Mrs
-Macfarlane had been in her house on the Saturday before the
-murder; but evidence was given that she was seen issuing from the
-close in which Mrs Murray resided, and, after ascending the Back
-Stairs, was observed passing through the Parliament Square towards
-her own house.</p>
-
-<p>It will surprise every one to learn that this Scottish Lucrece was
-a woman of only nineteen or twenty years of age, and some months
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">enceinte</i>, at the time when she so boldly vindicated her honour.
-She was a person of respectable connections, being a daughter of
-Colonel Charles Straiton, ‘a gentleman of great honour,’ says one
-of the letters already quoted, and who further appears to have
-been entrusted with high negotiations by the Jacobites during the
-reign of Queen Anne. By her mother, she was granddaughter to
-Sir Andrew Forrester.</p>
-
-<p>Of the future history of Mrs Macfarlane we have but one glimpse,
-but it is of a romantic nature. Margaret Swinton, who was the
-aunt of Sir Walter Scott’s mother, and round whom he and his
-boy-brothers used to close to listen to her tales, remembered being
-one Sunday left by her parents at home in their house of Swinton
-in Berwickshire, while the rest of the family attended church.
-Tiring of the solitude of her little nursery, she stole quietly downstairs
-to the parlour, which she entered somewhat abruptly. There,
-to her surprise, she beheld the most beautiful woman she had ever
-seen, sitting at the breakfast-table making tea. She believed it
-could be no other than one of those enchanted queens whom she
-had heard of in fairy tales. The lady, after a pause of surprise,
-came up to her with a sweet smile, and conversed with her, concluding
-with a request that she would speak only to her mamma
-of the stranger whom she had seen. Presently after, little Margaret
-having turned her back for a few moments, the beautiful vision had
-vanished. The whole appeared like a dream. By-and-by the
-family returned, and Margaret took her mother aside that she
-might talk of this wonderful apparition. Mrs Swinton applauded
-her for thus observing the injunction which had been laid upon
-her. ‘Had you not,’ she added, ‘it might have cost that lady her
-life.’ Subsequent explanations made Margaret aware that she had
-seen the unfortunate Mrs Macfarlane, who, having some claim of
-kindred upon the Swinton family, had been received by them, and
-kept in a secret room till such time as she could venture to make<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">{294}</a></span>
-her way out of the country. On Margaret looking away for a
-moment, the lady had glided by a sliding panel into her Patmos
-behind the wainscot, and thus unwittingly increased the child’s
-apprehension of the whole being an event out of the course of
-nature.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">{295}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="THE_CANONGATE" id="THE_CANONGATE">THE CANONGATE.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="chapter_summary"><strong>Distinguished Inhabitants in Former Times&mdash;Story of a Burning&mdash;Morocco’s
-Land&mdash;New Street.</strong></p>
-
-
-<p>The Canongate, which takes its name from the Augustine canons
-of Holyrood (who were permitted to build it by the charter
-of David I. in 1128, and afterwards ruled it as a burgh of regality),
-was formerly the court end of the town. As the main avenue
-from the palace into the city, it has borne upon its pavement the
-burden of all that was beautiful, all that was gallant, all that has
-become historically interesting in Scotland for the last six or seven
-hundred years. It still presents an antique appearance, although
-many of the houses are modernised. There is one with a date from
-Queen Mary’s reign,<a name="FNanchor_234" id="FNanchor_234"></a><a href="#Footnote_234" class="fnanchor">[234]</a> and many may be guessed, from their appearance,
-to be of even an earlier era. Previously to the Union, when
-the palace ceased to be occasionally inhabited, as it had formerly
-been, by at least the vicar of majesty in the person of the Commissioner
-to the Parliament, the place was densely inhabited by
-persons of distinction. Allan Ramsay, in lamenting the death of
-Lucky Wood, says:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="wideverse">‘Oh, Canigate, puir elrich hole,</div>
-<div class="wideverse">What loss, what crosses does thou thole!</div>
-<div class="wideverse">London and death gars thee look droll,</div>
-<div class="wideverse indent4">And hing thy head;</div>
-<div class="wideverse">Wow but thou has e’en a cauld coal</div>
-<div class="wideverse indent4">To blaw indeed;’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>and mentions in a note that this place was ‘the greatest sufferer
-by the loss of our members of parliament, which London now
-enjoys, many of them having had their houses there;’ a fact which
-Maitland confirms. Innumerable traces are to be found, in old
-songs and ballads, of the elegant population of the Canongate in a
-former day. In the piteous tale of Marie Hamilton&mdash;one of the
-Queen’s Maries&mdash;occurs this simple but picturesque stanza:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘As she cam’ doun the Cannogait,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">The Cannogait sae free,</div>
-<div class="verse">Mony a lady looked owre her window,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Weeping for this ladye.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">{296}</a></span></p>
-<p>An old popular rhyme expresses the hauteur of these Canongate
-dames towards their city neighbours of the male sex:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘The lasses o’ the Canongate,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Oh they are wondrous nice;</div>
-<div class="verse">They winna gi’e a single kiss</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">But for a double price.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Gar hang them, gar hang them,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Hich upon a tree;</div>
-<div class="verse">For we’ll get better up the gate</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">For a bawbee!’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<div class="figcenter w350">
-<img src="images/illus_p_297.jpg" width="350" height="466" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Weir’s Close, Canongate&mdash;wretchedly squalid.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Even in times comparatively modern, this faubourg was inhabited
-by persons of very great consideration.<a name="FNanchor_235" id="FNanchor_235"></a><a href="#Footnote_235" class="fnanchor">[235]</a> Within the memory of
-a lady living in 1830, it used to be a common thing to hear, among
-other matters of gossip, ‘<em>that there was to be a braw flitting<a name="FNanchor_236" id="FNanchor_236"></a><a href="#Footnote_236" class="fnanchor">[236]</a> in the
-Canongate to-morrow</em>;’ and parties of young people were made up
-to go and see the fine furniture brought out, sitting perhaps for
-hours in the windows of some friend on the opposite side of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">{297}</a></span>
-street, while cart after cart was laden with magnificence.<a name="FNanchor_237" id="FNanchor_237"></a><a href="#Footnote_237" class="fnanchor">[237]</a> Many
-of the houses to this day are fit for the residence of a first-rate
-family in every respect
-but <em>vicinage</em>
-and <em>access</em>. The
-last grand blow was
-given to the place
-by the opening of
-the road along the
-Calton Hill in
-1817, which rendered
-it no longer
-the avenue of approach
-to the city
-from the east. Instead
-of profiting by
-the comparative retirement
-which it
-acquired on that
-occasion, it seemed
-to become the more
-wretchedly squalid
-from its being the
-less under notice&mdash;as
-a gentleman
-dresses the least
-carefully when not
-expecting visitors.
-It is now a secluded and, in general, meanly inhabited suburb,
-only accessible by ways which, however lightly our fathers and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">{298}</a></span>
-grandfathers might regard them, are hardly now pervious to a lady
-or gentleman without shocking more of the senses than one, besides
-the difficulty of steering one’s way through the herds of the idle
-and the wretched who encumber the street.</p>
-
-<p>One of the houses near the head of the Canongate, on the north
-side of the street, was indicated to me by an old lady a few years
-ago as that which tradition in her young days pointed to in connection
-with a wild story related in the notes to <cite>Rokeby</cite>. She had
-often heard the tale told, nearly in the same manner as it has been
-given by Scott, and the site of the house concerned in the tragedy
-was pointed out to her by her seniors. Perhaps the reader will
-again excuse a quotation from the writings of our late gifted fellow-townsman:
-if to be related at all&mdash;and surely in a work devoted
-to Edinburgh popular legends it could not rightly be overlooked&mdash;it
-may as well be given in the language of the prince of modern
-<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">conteurs</i>:</p>
-
-<p>‘About the beginning of the eighteenth century, when the large
-castles of the Scottish nobles, and even the secluded hotels, like
-those of the French <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">noblesse</i>, which they possessed in Edinburgh,
-were sometimes the scenes of strange and mysterious transactions,
-a divine of singular sanctity was called up at midnight to pray
-with a person at the point of death. This was no unusual summons;
-but what followed was alarming. He was put into a sedan-chair,
-and after he had been transported to a remote part of the town,
-the bearers insisted upon his being blindfolded. The request was
-enforced by a cocked pistol, and submitted to; but in the course
-of the discussion, he conjectured, from the phrases employed by the
-chairmen, and from some part of their dress, not completely concealed
-by their cloaks, that they were greatly above the menial
-station they assumed. After many turns and windings, the chair
-was carried upstairs into a lodging, where his eyes were uncovered,
-and he was introduced into a bedroom, where he found a lady,
-newly delivered of an infant. He was commanded by his attendants
-to say such prayers by her bedside as were fitting for a person
-not expected to survive a mortal disorder. He ventured to remonstrate,
-and observe that her safe delivery warranted better hopes.
-But he was sternly commanded to obey the orders first given, and
-with difficulty recollected himself sufficiently to acquit himself of
-the task imposed on him. He was then again hurried into the
-chair; but as they conducted him downstairs he heard the report
-of a pistol. He was safely conducted home; a purse of gold was
-forced upon him; but he was warned, at the same time, that the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">{299}</a></span>
-least allusion to this dark transaction would cost him his life. He
-betook himself to rest, and after long and broken musing, fell into
-a deep sleep. From this he was awakened by his servant, with the
-dismal news that a fire of uncommon fury had broken out in the
-house of &mdash;&mdash;, near the head of the Canongate, and that it was
-totally consumed; with the shocking addition that the daughter
-of the proprietor, a young lady eminent for beauty and accomplishments,
-had perished in the flames. The clergyman had his
-suspicions, but to have made them public would have availed
-nothing. He was timid; the family was of the first distinction;
-above all, the deed was done, and could not be amended. Time
-wore away, however, and with it his terrors. He became unhappy
-at being the solitary depositary of this fearful mystery, and mentioned
-it to some of his brethren, through whom the anecdote
-acquired a sort of publicity. The divine, however, had been long
-dead, and the story in some degree forgotten, when a fire broke out
-again on the very same spot where the house of &mdash;&mdash; had formerly
-stood, and which was now occupied by buildings of an inferior
-description. When the flames were at their height, the tumult
-which usually attends such a scene was suddenly suspended by
-an unexpected apparition. A beautiful female, in a nightdress
-extremely rich, but at least half a century old, appeared in the
-very midst of the fire, and uttered these tremendous words in her
-vernacular idiom: “<em>Anes</em> burned, <em>twice</em> burned; the <em>third</em> time I’ll
-scare you all!” The belief in this story was formerly so strong
-that on a fire breaking out, and seeming to approach the fatal
-spot, there was a good deal of anxiety testified, lest the apparition
-should make good her denunciation.’</p>
-
-<p>A little way farther down the Canongate, on the same side, is
-an old-fashioned house called <em>Morocco’s Land</em>, having an alley
-passing under it, over which is this inscription<a name="FNanchor_238" id="FNanchor_238"></a><a href="#Footnote_238" class="fnanchor">[238]</a>&mdash;a strange cry of
-the spirit of man to be heard in a street:</p>
-
-<p class="center">
-MISERERE MEI, DOMINE: A PECCATO, PROBRO,<br />
-DEBITO, ET MORTE SUBITA, LIBERA ME.
-</p>
-
-<p>From whom this exclamation proceeded I have never learned; but
-the house, which is of more modern date than the legend, has a
-story connected with it. It is said that a young woman belonging
-to Edinburgh, having been taken upon a voyage by an African
-rover, was sold to the harem of the Emperor of Morocco, with
-whom she became a favourite. Mindful, like her countrymen in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">{300}</a></span>
-general, of her native land and her relations, she held such a
-correspondence with home as led to a brother of hers entering into
-merchandise, and conducting commercial transactions
-with Morocco. He was successful, and realised a
-little fortune, out of which he built this stately
-mansion. From gratitude, or out of a feeling
-of vanity regarding his imperial brother-in-law,
-he erected a statue of that personage
-in front of his house&mdash;a black,
-naked figure, with a turban and a
-necklace of beads; such being the
-notion which a Scottish artist
-of those days entertained
-of the personal
-aspect of the chief of
-one of the Mohammedan
-states of
-Africa. And this
-figure, perched in a
-little stone pulpit,
-still exists. As to
-the name bestowed
-upon the house, it
-would most probably
-arise from the man
-being in the first place called
-<em>Morocco</em> by way of sobriquet,
-as is common when any one
-becomes possessed by a particular
-subject, and often
-speaks of it.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w75">
-<img src="images/illus_p_300b.jpg" width="75" height="204" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter w275">
-<img src="images/illus_p_300a.jpg" width="275" height="517" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Morocco’s Land.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>A little farther along is
-the opening of New Street,
-a modern offshoot of the
-ancient city, dating from a
-time immediately before the
-rise of the New Town. Many
-persons of consequence lived
-here: Lord Kames, in a neat house at the top, on the east side&mdash;an
-edifice once thought so fine that people used to bring their
-country cousins to see it; Lord Hailes, in a house more than half-way
-down, afterwards occupied by Mr Ruthven, mechanist; Sir<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">{301}</a></span>
-Philip Ainslie, in another house in the same row. The passers-by
-were often arrested by the sight of Sir Philip’s preparations for a
-dinner-party through the open windows, the show of plate being
-particularly great. Now all these mansions are left to become
-workshops. <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Sic transit.</i><a name="FNanchor_239" id="FNanchor_239"></a><a href="#Footnote_239" class="fnanchor">[239]</a> Opposite to Kames’s house is a small
-circular arrangement of causeway, indicating where St John’s Cross
-formerly stood. Charles I., at his ceremonial entry into Edinburgh
-in 1633, knighted the provost at St John’s Cross.<a name="FNanchor_240" id="FNanchor_240"></a><a href="#Footnote_240" class="fnanchor">[240]</a></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">{302}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w400">
-<img src="images/illus_p_302.jpg" width="400" height="525" alt="ST JOHN STREET." />
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="ST_JOHN_STREET" id="ST_JOHN_STREET">ST JOHN STREET.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="chapter_summary"><strong>Lord Monboddo’s Suppers&mdash;The Sister of Smollett&mdash;Anecdote
-of Henry Dundas.</strong></p>
-
-
-<p>St John Street, so named with reference to St John’s Cross
-above mentioned, was one of the heralds of the New Town. In
-the latter half of the last century it was occupied solely by persons
-of distinction&mdash;nobles, judges, and country gentleman; now it is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">{303}</a></span>
-possessed as exclusively by persons of the middle rank. In No. 13
-lived that eccentric genius, Lord Monboddo, whose supper-parties,
-conducted in classic taste, frequented by the <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">literati</i>, and for a
-time presided over by an angel in the form of a daughter of his
-lordship, were of immense attraction in their day. In a stair at
-the head of this street lived the sister of the author of <cite>Roderick
-Random</cite>.</p>
-
-<p>Smollett’s life as a literary adventurer in London, and the full
-participation he had in the woes of authors by profession, have
-perhaps conveyed an erroneous idea of his birth and connections.
-The Smolletts of Dumbartonshire were in reality what was called
-in Scotland a good old family. The novelist’s own grandfather
-had been one of the commissioners for the Union between England
-and Scotland. And it is an undoubted fact that Tobias himself,
-if he had lived two or three years longer, would have become the
-owner of the family estate, worth about a thousand a year. All
-this, to any one conversant with the condition of the Scottish
-gentry in the early part of the last century, will appear quite
-consistent with his having been brought up as a druggist’s
-apprentice in Glasgow&mdash;‘the bubbly-nosed callant, wi’ the stane
-in his pouch,’ as his master affectionately described him, with
-reference to his notorious qualities as a Pickle.</p>
-
-<p>The sister of Smollett&mdash;she who, failing him, did succeed to the
-family property&mdash;was a Mrs Telfer, domiciled as a gentle widow
-in a common stair at the head of St John Street (west side), first
-door up. She is described as a somewhat stern-looking specimen
-of her sex, with a high cast of features, but in reality a good-enough-natured
-woman, and extremely shrewd and intelligent.
-One passion of her genus possessed her&mdash;whist. A relative tells
-me that one of the city magistrates, who was a tallow-chandler,
-calling upon her one evening, she said: ‘Come awa, bailie, and
-take a trick at the cartes.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Troth, ma’am,’ said he, ‘I hav’na a bawbee in my pouch.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Tut, man, ne’er mind that,’ replied the lady; ‘let’s e’en play
-for a pund o’ candles!’</p>
-
-<p>During his last visit to Edinburgh (1766)&mdash;the visit which
-occasioned <cite>Humphry Clinker</cite>&mdash;Smollett lived in his sister’s house.
-A person who recollects seeing him there describes him as dressed
-in black clothes, tall, and extremely handsome, but quite unlike
-the portraits at the front of his works, all of which are disclaimed
-by his relations. The unfortunate truth appears to be that the
-world is in possession of no genuine likeness of Smollett! He was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">{304}</a></span>
-very peevish, on account of the ill-health to which he had been so
-long a martyr, and used to complain much of a severe ulcerous
-disorder in his arm.</p>
-
-<p>His wife, according to the same authority, was a Creole, with a
-dark complexion, though, upon the whole, rather pretty&mdash;a fine
-lady, but a silly woman. Yet she had been the Narcissa of
-<cite>Roderick Random</cite>.<a name="FNanchor_241" id="FNanchor_241"></a><a href="#Footnote_241" class="fnanchor">[241]</a></p>
-
-<p>In <cite>Humphry Clinker</cite>, Smollett works up many observations of
-things and persons which he had made in his recent visit to
-Scotland. His relative Commissary Smollett, and the family seat
-near Loch Lomond, receive ample notice. The story in the family
-is that while Matthew Bramble was undoubtedly himself, he
-meant in the gay and sprightly Jerry Melford to describe his
-sister’s son, Major Telfer, and in Liddy to depict his own daughter,
-who was destined to be the wife of the major, but, to the inexpressible
-and ineffaceable grief of her father, died before the
-scheme could be accomplished. Jerry, it will be recollected, ‘got
-some damage from the bright eyes of the charming Miss R&mdash;&mdash;n,
-whom he had the honour to dance with at the ball.’ Liddy
-contracted an intimate friendship with the same person. This
-young beauty was Eleonora Renton, charming by the true right
-divine, for she was daughter of Mr Renton of Lamerton, by Lady
-Susan Montgomery, one of the fair offshoots of the house of
-Eglintoune, described in a preceding article. A sister of hers
-was married to Smollett’s eldest nephew, Telfer, who became
-inheritor of the family estate, and on account of it took the
-surname of Smollett: a large modern village in Dumbartonshire
-takes its name from this lady. It seems to have been this
-connection which brought the charming Eleonora under the
-novelist’s attention. She afterwards married Charles Sharpe of
-Hoddam, and became the mother of Charles Kirkpatrick Sharpe,
-the well-known antiquary. Strange to say, the lady whose bright
-eyes had flamed upon poor Smollett’s soul in the middle of the
-last century, was living so lately as 1836.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w450">
-<a id="illus_c_025"></a>
-<img src="images/illus_c_025.jpg" width="450" height="671" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">ST JOHN’S CLOSE.<br />
-Entrance to Canongate Kilwinning Mason Lodge.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap"><a href="#Page_305">Page 305.</a></span>
-</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>When Smollett was confined in the King’s Bench Prison for the
-libel upon Admiral Knowles, he formed an intimacy with the
-celebrated Tenducci. This melodious singing-bird had recently<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">{305}</a></span>
-got his wings clipped by his creditors, and was mewed up in the
-same cage with the novelist. Smollett’s friendship proceeded to
-such a height that he paid the vocalist’s debts from his own purse,
-and procured him his liberty. Tenducci afterwards visited
-Scotland, and was one night singing in a private circle, when
-somebody told him that a lady present was a near relation of his
-benefactor; upon which the grateful Italian prostrated himself
-before her, kissed her hands, and acted so many fantastic extravagances,
-after the foreign fashion, that she was put extremely out
-of countenance.</p>
-
-<p>On the west side of the street, immediately to the south of the
-Canongate Kilwinning Mason Lodge, there is a neat self-contained
-house of old fashion, with a flower-plot in front. This was the
-residence of &mdash;&mdash; Anderson, merchant in Leith, the father of seven
-sons, all of whom attained respectable situations in life: one was
-the late Mr Samuel Anderson of St Germains, banker. They had
-been at school with Mr Henry Dundas (afterwards Lord Melville);
-and when he had risen to high office, he called one day on Mr
-Anderson, and expressed his earnest wish to have the pleasure of
-dining with his seven school companions, all of whom happened at
-that time to be at home. The meeting took place at Mr Dundas’s,
-and it was a happy one, particularly to the host, who, when the
-hour of parting arrived, filled a bumper in high elation to their
-healths, and mentioned that they were the only men who had ever
-dined with him since he became a public servant who had not
-asked some favour either for themselves or their friends.</p>
-
-<p>The house adjoining to the one last mentioned&mdash;having its
-gable to the street, and a garden to the south&mdash;was, about 1780,
-the residence of the Earl of Wemyss. A Lady Betty Charteris,
-of this family, occupied the one farthest to the south on that side
-of the street. She was a person of romantic history, for, being
-thwarted in an affair of the heart, she lay in bed for twenty-six
-years, till dismissed to the world where such troubles are unknown.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">{306}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w400">
-<img src="images/illus_p_306.jpg" width="400" height="261" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="MORAY_HOUSE" id="MORAY_HOUSE">MORAY HOUSE.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>In the Canongate there is a house which has had the fortune to
-be connected with more than one of the most interesting points
-in our history. It is usually styled Moray House, being the
-entailed property of the noble family of Moray. The large
-proportions and elegant appearance of this mansion distinguish it
-from all the surrounding buildings, and in the rear (1847) there is
-a fine garden, descending in the old fashion by a series of terraces.
-Though long deserted by the Earls of Moray, it has been till a
-recent time kept in the best order, being occupied by families of
-respectable character.<a name="FNanchor_242" id="FNanchor_242"></a><a href="#Footnote_242" class="fnanchor">[242]</a></p>
-
-<p>This house was built in the early part of the reign of Charles
-I. (about 1628) by Mary, Countess of Home, then a widow. Her
-ladyship’s initials, M. H., appear, in cipher fashion, underneath
-her coronet upon various parts of the exterior; and over one of
-the principal windows towards the street there is a lozenge shield,
-containing the two lions rampant which form the coat armorial of
-the Home family. Lady Home was an English lady, being the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">{307}</a></span>
-daughter of Edward Sutton, Lord Dudley. She seems to have
-been unusually wealthy for the dowager of a Scottish earl, for in
-1644 the English Parliament repaid seventy thousand pounds
-which she had lent to the Scottish Covenanting Government; and
-she is found in the same year lending seven thousand to aid in
-paying the detachment of troops which that Government had sent
-to Ireland. She was also a sufferer, however, by the civil war, in
-as far as Dunglass House, which was blown up in 1640, by
-accident, when in the hands of the Covenanters, belonged to her
-in liferent. To her affluent circumstances, and the taste which
-she probably brought with her from her native country, may be
-ascribed the superior style of this mansion, which not only displays
-in the outside many traces of the elegant architecture which
-prevailed in England in the reign of James I., but contains two
-state apartments, decorated in the most elaborate manner, both
-in the walls and ceilings, with the favourite stucco-work of that
-reign. On the death of Lady Home the house passed (her ladyship
-having no surviving male issue) to her daughters and co-heiresses,
-Margaret, Countess of Moray, and Anne, Countess (afterwards
-Duchess) of Lauderdale, between whom the entire property of their
-father, the first Earl of Home, appears to have been divided, his
-title going into another line. By an arrangement between the
-two sisters, the house became, in 1645, the property of the
-Countess of Moray and her son James, Lord Doune.</p>
-
-<p>It stood in this condition as to ownership, though still popularly
-called ‘Lady Home’s Lodging,’ when, in the summer of 1648,
-Oliver Cromwell paid his first visit to Edinburgh. Cromwell had
-then just completed the overthrow of the army of the <em>Engagement</em>&mdash;a
-gallant body of troops which had been sent into England by
-the more Cavalier party of the Scottish Covenanters, in the hope
-of rescuing the king from the hands of the sectaries. The
-victorious general, with his companion Lambert, took up his
-quarters in this house, and here received the visits of some of the
-leaders of the less loyal party of the Covenanters&mdash;the Marquis of
-Argyll, the Chancellor Loudoun, the Earl of Lothian, the Lords
-Arbuthnot, Elcho, and Burleigh, and the Reverend Messrs David
-Dickson, Robert Blair, and James Guthrie. ‘What passed among
-them,’ says Bishop Henry Guthrie in his <cite>Memoirs</cite>, ‘came not to
-be known infallibly; but it was talked very loud that he did
-communicate to them his design in reference to the king, and had
-their assent thereto.’ It is scarcely necessary to remark that this
-was probably no more than a piece of Cavalier scandal, for there<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">{308}</a></span>
-is no reason to believe that Cromwell, if he yet contemplated the
-death of the king, would have disclosed his views to men still so
-far tinctured with loyalty as those enumerated. Cromwell’s object
-in visiting Edinburgh on this occasion and in holding these
-conferences, was probably limited to the reinstatement of the ultra-Presbyterian
-party in the government, from which the Duke of
-Hamilton and other loyalists had lately displaced it.</p>
-
-<p>When, in 1650, the Lord Lorn, eldest son of the Marquis of
-Argyll, was married to Lady Mary Stuart, eldest daughter of the
-Earl of Moray, the wedding feast ‘stood,’ as contemporary writers
-express it, at the Earl of Moray’s house in the Canongate. The
-event so auspicious to these great families was signalised by a
-circumstance of a very remarkable kind. A whole week had been
-passed in festivity by the wedded pair and their relations, when,
-on Saturday the 18th of May, the Marquis of Montrose was
-brought to Edinburgh, an excommunicated and already condemned
-captive, having been taken in the north in an unsuccessful attempt
-to raise a Cavalier party for his young and exiled prince. When
-the former relative circumstances of Argyll and Montrose are
-called to mind&mdash;when it is recollected that they had some years
-before struggled for an ascendancy in the civil affairs of Scotland,
-that Montrose had afterwards chased Argyll round and round the
-Highlands, burned and plundered his country undisturbed, and on
-one occasion overthrown his forces in a sanguinary action, while
-Argyll looked on from a safe distance at sea&mdash;the present relative
-circumstances of the two chiefs become a striking illustration of
-the vicissitudes in personal fortune that characterise a time of civil
-commotion. Montrose, after riding from Leith on a sorry horse,
-was led into the Canongate by the Watergate, and there placed
-upon a low cart, driven by the common executioner. In this
-ignominious fashion he was conducted up the street towards the
-prison, in which he was to have only two days to live, and in
-passing along was necessarily brought under the walls and windows
-of Moray House. On his approach to that mansion, the Marquis
-of Argyll, his lady, and children, together with the whole of the
-marriage-party, left their banqueting, and stepping out to a
-balcony which overhangs the street, there planted themselves to
-gaze on the prostrated enemy of their house and cause. Here,
-indeed, they had the pleasure of seeing Montrose in all external
-circumstances reduced beneath their feet; but they had not
-calculated on the strength of nature which enabled that extraordinary
-man to overcome so much of the bitterness of humiliation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">{309}</a></span>
-and of death. He is said to have gazed upon them with so much
-serenity that they shrank back with some degree of discomposure,
-though not till the marchioness had expressed her spite at the
-fallen hero by spitting at him&mdash;an act which in the present age
-will scarcely be credible, though any one well acquainted with the
-history of the seventeenth century will have too little reason to
-doubt it.</p>
-
-<p>In a Latin manuscript of this period, the gardens connected
-with the house of the Earl of Moray are spoken of as ‘of such
-elegance, and cultivated with so much care, as to vie with those
-of warmer countries, and perhaps even of England itself. And
-here,’ pursues the writer, ‘you may see how much the art and
-industry of man may avail in supplying the defects of nature.
-Scarcely any one would believe it possible to give so much beauty
-to a garden in this frigid clime.’ One reason for the excellence of
-the garden may have been its southern exposure. On the uppermost
-of its terraces there is a large and beautiful thorn, with pensile
-leaves; on the second there are some fruit-trees, the branches of
-which have been caused to spread out in a particular way, so as to
-form a kind of cup, possibly for the reception of a pleasure-party,
-for such fantastic twistings of nature were not uncommon among
-our ancestors. In the lowest level of the garden there is a little
-receptacle for water, beside which is the statue of a fishing-boy,
-having a basket of fish at his feet, and a <em>clam-shell</em> inverted upon
-his head.<a name="FNanchor_243" id="FNanchor_243"></a><a href="#Footnote_243" class="fnanchor">[243]</a> Here is also a small building, surmounted by two lions
-holding female shields, and which may therefore be supposed
-contemporaneous with the house: this was formerly a summer-house,
-but has latterly been expanded into the character of a
-conservatory. Tradition vaguely reports it as the place where the
-Union between England and Scotland was signed; though there is
-also a popular story of that fact having been accomplished in a
-<em>laigh shop</em> of the High Street (marked No. 117), at one time a
-tavern, and known as the <em>Union Cellar</em>.<a name="FNanchor_244" id="FNanchor_244"></a><a href="#Footnote_244" class="fnanchor">[244]</a> Probably the rumour,
-in at least the first instance, refers only to private arrangements
-connected with the passing of the celebrated statute in question.
-The Chancellor Earl of Seafield inhabited Moray House at that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">{310}</a></span>
-time on lease, and nothing could be more likely than that he
-should there have after-dinner consultations on the pending
-measure, which might in the evening be adjourned to this garden
-retreat.</p>
-
-<p>It would appear that about this period the garden attached
-to the house was a sort of a public promenade or lounging-place;
-as was also the garden connected with Heriot’s Hospital. In
-this character it forms a scene in the licentious play called <cite>The
-Assembly</cite>, written in 1692 by Dr Pitcairn. <em>Will</em>, ‘a discreet
-smart gentleman,’ as he is termed in the prefixed list of <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">dramatis
-personæ</i>, but in reality a perfect debauchee, first makes an
-appointment with Violetta, his mistress, to meet her in this place;
-and as she is under the charge of a sourly devout aunt, he has
-to propound the matter in metaphorical language. Pretending
-to expound a particular passage in the Song of Solomon for
-the benefit of the dame, he thus gives the hint to her young
-protégée:</p>
-
-<p>‘<em>Will.</em> “Come, my beloved, let us walk in the fields, let us
-lodge in the villages.” The same metaphor still. The kirk
-not having the liberty of bringing her servant to her mother’s
-house, resolveth to meet him in the villages, such as the Canongate,
-in respect of Edinburgh; and the vineyard, such as <em>my
-Lady Murray’s Yards</em>, to use a homely comparison.</p>
-
-<p>‘<em>Old Lady.</em> A wondrous young man this!</p>
-
-<p class="center">*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;*</p>
-
-<p>‘<em>Will.</em> The eighth chapter towards the close: “Thou that
-dwellest in the gardens, cause me to hear thy voice.”</p>
-
-<p>‘<em>Violetta.</em> That’s still alluding to the metaphor of a gallant,
-who, by some signs, warns his mistress to make haste&mdash;a whistle
-or so. The same with early in the former chapter; that is to
-say, to-morrow by six o’clock. Make haste to accomplish our
-loves.</p>
-
-<p>‘<em>Old L.</em> Thou art a hopeful girl; I hope God has blest my
-pains on thee.’</p>
-
-<p>In terms of this curious assignation, the third act opens in a
-walk in Lady Murray’s Yards, where Will meets his beloved
-Violetta. After a great deal of badinage, in the style of Dryden’s
-comedies, which were probably Dr Pitcairn’s favourite models, the
-dialogue proceeds in the following style:</p>
-
-<p>‘<em>Will.</em> I’ll marry you at the rights, if you can find in your
-heart to give yourself to an honest fellow of no great fortune.</p>
-
-<p>‘<em>Vio.</em> In truth, sir, methinks it were fully as much for my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">{311}</a></span>
-future comfort to bestow myself, and any little fortune I have,
-upon you, as some reverend spark in a band and short cloak,
-with the patrimony of a good gift of prayer, and as little sense
-as his father, who was hanged in the Grassmarket for murdering
-the king’s officers, had of honesty.</p>
-
-<p>‘<em>Will.</em> Then I must acknowledge, my dear madam, I am most
-damnably in love with you, and must have you by foul or fair
-means; choose you whether.</p>
-
-<p>‘<em>Vio.</em> I’ll give you fair-play in an honest way.</p>
-
-<p>‘<em>Will.</em> Then, madam, I can command a parson when I please;
-and if you be half so kind as I could wish, we’ll take a hackney,
-and trot up to some honest curate’s house: besides, a guinea or
-so will be a charity to him perhaps.</p>
-
-<p>‘<em>Vio.</em> Hold a little; I am hardly ready for that yet,’ &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>After the departure of this hopeful couple, Lord Huffy and
-Lord Whigriddin, who are understood to have been intended for
-Lord Leven (son of the Earl of Melville) and the Earl of Crawford,
-enter the gardens, and hold some discourse of a different kind.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">{312}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w350">
-<img src="images/illus_p_312.jpg" width="350" height="273" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="THE_SPEAKING_HOUSE" id="THE_SPEAKING_HOUSE">THE SPEAKING HOUSE.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>The mansion on which I venture to confer this title is an old
-one of imposing appearance, a little below Moray House.
-It is conspicuous by three gables presented to the street, and by
-the unusual space of linear ground which it occupies. Originally,
-it has had no door to the street. A <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">porte-cochère</i> gives admittance
-to a close behind, from which every part of the house had been
-admissible, and when this gateway was closed the inhabitants
-would be in a tolerably defensible position. In this feature the
-house gives a striking idea of the insecurity which marked the
-domestic life of three hundred years ago.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w500">
-<a id="illus_c_026"></a>
-<img src="images/illus_c_026.jpg" width="500" height="557" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">BAKEHOUSE CLOSE.<br />
-Back of ‘Speaking House.’</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap"><a href="#Page_313">Page 313.</a></span>
-</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>It was built in the year of the assassination of the Regent Moray,
-and one is somewhat surprised to think that, at so dark a crisis
-of our national history, a mansion of so costly a character should
-have taken its rise. The owner, whatever grade he held, seems to
-have felt an apprehension of the popular talk on the subject of
-his raising so elegant a mansion; and he took a curious mode
-of deprecating its expression. On a tablet over the ground-floor
-he inscribes: <span class="smcap lowercase">HODIE MIHI: CRAS TIBI. CUR IGITUR CURAS?</span> along
-with the year of the erection, 1570. This is as much as to say:
-‘I am the happy man to-day; your turn may come to-morrow.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">{313}</a></span>
-Why, then, should you repine?’ One can imagine from a
-second tablet, a little way farther along the front, that as
-the building proceeded, the storm of public remark and outcry
-had come to be more and more bitter, so that the soul of the
-owner got stirred up into a firm and defying anger. He exclaims
-(for, though a lettered inscription, one feels it as an exclamation):
-<span class="smcap">Ut Tu Linguæ tuæ, sic Ego Mear. aurium, Dominus sum</span> (‘As
-thou of thy tongue, so I of my ears, am lord’); thus quoting,
-in his rage on this petty occasion, an expression said to have been
-used in the Roman senate by Titus Tacitus when repelling the
-charges of Lucius Metellus.<a name="FNanchor_245" id="FNanchor_245"></a><a href="#Footnote_245" class="fnanchor">[245]</a> Afterwards he seems to have cooled
-into a religious view of the predicament, and in a third legend
-along the front he tells the world: <span class="smcap">Constanti pectori res
-mortalium umbra</span>; ending a little farther on with an emblem of
-the Christian hope of the Resurrection, ears of wheat springing
-from a handful of bones. It is a great pity that we should not
-know who was the builder and owner of this house, since he has
-amused us so much with the history of his feelings during the
-process of its erection. A friend at my elbow suggests&mdash;a
-schoolmaster! But who ever heard of a schoolmaster so handsomely
-remunerated by his profession as to be able to build a
-house?</p>
-
-<p>Nothing else is known of the early history of this house beyond
-the fact of the Canongate magistrates granting a charter for it
-to the Hammermen of that burgh, September 10, 1647.<a name="FNanchor_246" id="FNanchor_246"></a><a href="#Footnote_246" class="fnanchor">[246]</a> It was,
-however, in 1753 occupied by a person of no less distinction than
-the Dowager Duchess of Gordon.<a name="FNanchor_247" id="FNanchor_247"></a><a href="#Footnote_247" class="fnanchor">[247]</a></p>
-
-<p>In the alley passing under this mansion there is a goodly
-building of more modern structure, forming two sides of a quadrangle,
-with a small court in front divided from the lane by a
-wall in which there is a large gateway. Amidst filthiness indescribable,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">{314}</a></span>
-one discerns traces of former elegance: a crest over the
-doorway&mdash;namely, a cock mounted on a trumpet, with the motto
-‘<span class="smcap">Vigilantibus</span>,’ and the date 1633; over two upper windows,
-the letters ‘S. A. A.’ and ‘D. M. H.’ These memorials, with
-certain references in the charter before mentioned, leave no
-room for doubt that this was the house of Sir Archibald
-Acheson of Abercairny,
-Secretary
-of State for Scotland
-in the reign
-of Charles I., and
-ancestor to the
-Earl of Gosford
-in Ireland, who
-to this day bears
-the same crest
-and motto. The
-letters are the
-initials of Sir Archibald
-and his wife, Dame
-Margaret Hamilton.
-Here of course was the
-<em>court</em> of Scotland for
-a certain time, the Secretary
-of State being the
-grand dispenser of patronage
-in our country
-at that period&mdash;<em>here</em>,
-where nothing but the
-extremest wretchedness
-is now to be seen! That boastful bird, too, still seeming to
-assert the family dignity, two hundred years after it ceased to
-have any connection with the spot! Verily there are some moral
-preachments in these dark old closes if modern refinement could
-go to hear the sermon!</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w350">
-<img src="images/illus_p_314.jpg" width="350" height="369" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Acheson House.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Sir Archibald Acheson acquired extensive lands in Ireland,<a name="FNanchor_248" id="FNanchor_248"></a><a href="#Footnote_248" class="fnanchor">[248]</a>
-which have ever since been in the possession of his family. It
-was a descendant of his, and of the same name, who had the
-gratification of becoming the landlord of Swift at Market-hill,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">{315}</a></span>
-and whom the dean was consequently led to celebrate in many
-of his poems. Swift seems to have been
-on the most familiar terms with this
-worthy knight and his lady; the latter
-he was accustomed to call <em>Skinnibonia</em>,
-<em>Lean</em>, or <em>Snipe</em>, as the humour inclined
-him. The inimitable comic painting of
-her ladyship’s maid Hannah, in the
-debate whether Hamilton’s Bawn should
-be turned into a malt-house or a barrack,
-can never perish from our literature.
-In like humour, the dean asserts the
-superiority of himself and his brother-tenant
-Colonel Leslie, who had served
-much in Spain, over the knight:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Proud baronet of Nova Scotia,</div>
-<div class="verse">The dean and Spaniard much reproach ye.</div>
-<div class="verse">Of their two fames the world enough rings;</div>
-<div class="verse">Where are thy services and sufferings?</div>
-<div class="verse">What if for nothing once you kissed,</div>
-<div class="verse">Against the grain, a monarch’s fist?</div>
-<div class="verse">What if among the courtly tribe,</div>
-<div class="verse">You lost a place and saved a bribe?</div>
-<div class="verse">And then in surly mood came here</div>
-<div class="verse">To fifteen hundred pounds a year,</div>
-<div class="verse">And fierce against the Whigs harangued?</div>
-<div class="verse">You never ventured to be hanged.</div>
-<div class="verse">How dare you treat your betters thus?</div>
-<div class="verse">Are you to be compared to us?’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Speaking also of a celebrated thorn at Market-hill, which had
-long been a resort of merry-making parties, he reverts to the
-Scottish Secretary of former days:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Sir Archibald, that valorous knight,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">The lord of all the fruitful plain,</div>
-<div class="verse">Would come and listen with delight,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">For he was fond of rural strain:</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Sir Archibald, whose favourite name</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Shall stand for ages on record,</div>
-<div class="verse">By Scottish bards of highest fame,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Wise Hawthornden and Stirling’s lord.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<div class="figcenter w275">
-<img src="images/illus_p_315.jpg" width="275" height="256" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p>The following letter to Sir Archibald from his friend Sir James<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">{316}</a></span>
-Balfour, Lord Lyon, occurs amongst the manuscript stores of the
-latter gentleman in the Advocates’ Library:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p>
-‘To Sir <span class="smcap">Archibald Achesone</span>,<br />
-<span class="ml2">one of the Secretaries of Staite.</span>
-</p>
-
-<p>‘<span class="smcap">Worthy Sir</span>&mdash;Your letters, full of Spartanical brevity to the first view,
-bot, againe overlooked, Demosthenicall longe; stuffed full of exaggerations
-and complaints; the yeast of your enteirest affections, sent to quicken a
-slumbring friend as you imagine, quho nevertheless remains vigilant of you
-and of the smallest matters, which may aney wayes adde the least rill of
-content to the ocean of your happiness; quherfor you may show your comerad,
-and intreat him from me, as from one that trewly loves and honors his best
-pairts, that now he vold refraine, both his tonge and pen, from these quhirkis
-and obloquies, quherwith he so often uses to stain the name of grate personages,
-for hardly can he live so reteiredly, in so voluble ane age, without becoming
-at one tyme or uther obnoxious to the blow of some courtier. So begging
-God to bless you, I am your&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Ja. Balfour</span>.</p>
-<p>
-‘<span class="smcap">London</span>, <em>9 Apryll 1631.</em>’<br />
-</p></div>
-
-<p>Twenty years before the Duchess of Gordon lived in the venerable
-house at the head of the close, a preceding dowager resided
-in another part of the town. This was the distinguished Lady
-Elizabeth Howard (daughter of the Duke of Norfolk, by Lady
-Anne Somerset, daughter of the Marquis of Worcester), who
-occasioned so much disturbance in the end of Queen Anne’s reign
-by the Jacobite medal which she sent to the Faculty of Advocates.
-Her grace lived in a house at the Abbeyhill, where, as we are
-informed by Wodrow, in a tone of pious horror,<a name="FNanchor_249" id="FNanchor_249"></a><a href="#Footnote_249" class="fnanchor">[249]</a> she openly kept
-a kind of college for instructing young people in Jesuitism and
-Jacobitism together. In this labour she seems to have been
-assisted by the Duchess of Perth, a kindred soul, whose enthusiasm
-afterwards caused the ruin of her family, by sending her son into
-the insurrection of 1745.<a name="FNanchor_250" id="FNanchor_250"></a><a href="#Footnote_250" class="fnanchor">[250]</a> The Duchess of Gordon died here in
-1732. I should suppose the house to have been that respectable
-old villa, at the extremity of the suburb of Abbeyhill, in which
-the late Baron Norton, of the Court of Exchequer, lived for many
-years. It was formerly possessed by Baron Mure, who, during the
-administration of the Earl of Bute, exercised the duties and dispensed
-the patronage of the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">sous-ministre</i> for Scotland, under the
-Hon. Stuart Mackenzie, younger brother of the Premier. This<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">{317}</a></span>
-was of course in its turn the <em>court</em> of Scotland; and from the
-description of a gentleman old enough to remember attending the
-levees (Sir W. M. Bannatyne), I should suppose that it was as
-much haunted by suitors of all kinds as ever were the more elegant
-halls of Holyrood House. Baron Mure, who was the personal
-friend of Earl Bute, died in 1774.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">{318}</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h2><a name="PANMURE_HOUSE_ADAM_SMITH" id="PANMURE_HOUSE_ADAM_SMITH">PANMURE HOUSE&mdash;ADAM SMITH.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>At the bottom of a close a little way below the Canongate
-Church, there is a house which a few years ago bore the
-appearance of one of those small semi-quadrangular manor-houses
-which were prevalent in the country about the middle of the
-seventeenth century.
-It is now
-altered, and
-brought into juxtaposition
-with
-the coarse details
-of an ironfoundry,
-yet still is not
-without some
-traits of its
-original style. The
-name of Panmure
-House takes the
-mind back to the
-Earls of Panmure,
-the fourth of
-whom lost title
-and estates for his
-concern in the
-affair of 1715;
-but I am not certain
-of any earlier
-proprietor of this
-family than
-William Maule,
-nephew of the
-attainted earl,
-created Earl of Panmure as an Irish title in 1743. <em>He</em> possessed
-the house in the middle of the last century.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w350">
-<img src="images/illus_p_318.jpg" width="350" height="406" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Back of Canongate Tolbooth&mdash;Tolbooth Wynd.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>All reference to rank in connection with this house appears
-trivial in comparison with the fact that it was the residence of
-Adam Smith from 1778, when he came to live in Edinburgh as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">{319}</a></span>
-a commissioner of the customs, till his death in 1790, when he
-was interred in a somewhat obscure situation at the back of the
-Canongate Tolbooth. In his time the house must have seen
-the most intellectual company to be had in Scotland; but it had
-not the honour of being the birthplace of any of Smith’s great
-works. His last and greatest&mdash;the book which has undoubtedly
-done more for the good of the community than any other ever
-produced in Scotland&mdash;was the work of ten quiet, studious years
-previous to 1778, during which the philosopher lived in his
-mother’s house in Kirkcaldy.</p>
-
-<p>The gentle, virtuous character of Smith has left little for the
-anecdotist. The utmost simplicity marked the externals of the
-man. He said very truly (being in possession of a handsome
-library) that ‘he was only a beau in his books.’ Leading an
-abstracted, scholarly life, he was ill-fitted for common worldly
-affairs. Some one remarked to a friend of mine while Smith still
-lived: ‘How strange to think of one who has written so well on
-the principles of exchange and barter&mdash;he is obliged to get a
-friend to buy his horse-corn for him!’ The author of the <cite>Wealth
-of Nations</cite> never thought of marrying. His household affairs
-were managed to his perfect contentment by a female cousin, a
-Miss Jeanie Douglas, who almost necessarily acquired a great
-control over him. It is said that the amiable philosopher, being
-fond of a bit sugar, and chid by her for taking it, would sometimes,
-in sauntering backwards and forwards along the parlour, watch
-till Miss Jeanie’s back was turned in order to supply himself with
-his favourite morsel. Such things are not derogatory to greatness
-like Smith’s: they link it to human nature, and secure for it the
-love, as it had previously possessed the admiration, of common
-men.</p>
-
-<p>The one personal circumstance regarding Smith which has made
-the greatest impression on his fellow-citizens is the rather too
-well-known anecdote of the two fishwomen. He was walking
-along the streets one day, deeply abstracted, and speaking in a
-low tone to himself, when he caught the attention of two of these
-many-petticoated ladies, engaged in selling their fish. They
-exchanged significant looks, bearing strong reference to the
-restraints of a well-managed lunatic asylum, and then sighed one
-to the other: ‘Aih, sirs; and he’s weel put on too!’&mdash;that is,
-well dressed; his gentleman-like condition making the case appear
-so much the more piteous.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">{320}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="JOHN_PATERSON_THE_GOLFER" id="JOHN_PATERSON_THE_GOLFER">JOHN PATERSON THE GOLFER.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>In the Canongate, nearly opposite to Queensberry House, is a
-narrow, old-fashioned mansion, of peculiar form, having a coat-armorial
-conspicuously placed at the top, and a plain slab over
-the doorway containing the following inscriptions:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Cum victor ludo, Scotis qui proprius, esset,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Ter tres victores post redimitus avos,</div>
-<div class="verse">Patersonus, humo tunc educebat in altum</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Hanc, quæ victores tot tulit una, domum.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘I hate no person.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>It appears that this quatrain was the production of Dr
-Pitcairn, while the
-sentence below is an
-anagram upon the
-name of <span class="smcap">John
-Patersone</span>. The
-stanza expresses that
-‘when Paterson had
-been crowned victor
-in a game peculiar
-to Scotland, in which
-his ancestors had
-also been often victorious,
-he then
-built this mansion,
-which one conquest
-raised him
-above all his predecessors.’
-We must
-resort to tradition
-for an explanation
-of this obscure
-hint.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w275">
-<img src="images/illus_p_320.jpg" width="275" height="310" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Golfers’ Land.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Till a recent
-period, golfing had
-long been conducted
-upon the Links of Leith.<a name="FNanchor_251" id="FNanchor_251"></a><a href="#Footnote_251" class="fnanchor">[251]</a> It had even been the sport of princes on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">{321}</a></span>
-that field. We are told by Mr William Tytler of Woodhouselee
-that Charles I. and the Duke of York (afterwards James II.)
-played at golf on Leith Links, in succession, during the brief
-periods of their residence in Holyrood. Though there is an
-improbability in this tale as far as Charles is concerned, seeing
-that he spent too short a time in Edinburgh to have been able
-to play at a game notorious for the time necessary in acquiring
-it, I may quote the anecdote related by Mr Tytler: ‘That while
-he was engaged in a party at golf on the green or Links of
-Leith, a letter was delivered into his hands, which gave him the
-first account of the insurrection and rebellion in Ireland; on
-reading which, he suddenly called for his coach, and leaning on
-one of his attendants, and in great agitation, drove to the palace
-of Holyrood House, from whence next day he set out for London.’
-Mr Tytler says, regarding the Duke of York, that he ‘was
-frequently seen in a party at golf on the Links of Leith with
-some of the nobility and gentry. I remember in my youth to
-have often conversed with an old man named Andrew Dickson,
-a golf-club maker, who said that, when a boy, he used to carry
-the duke’s golf-clubs, and run before him, and announce where
-the balls fell.’<a name="FNanchor_252" id="FNanchor_252"></a><a href="#Footnote_252" class="fnanchor">[252]</a></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w500">
-<a id="illus_c_027"></a>
-<img src="images/illus_c_027.jpg" width="500" height="699" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">GOLFERS ON LEITH LINKS.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap"><a href="#Page_320">Page 320.</a></span>
-</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Tradition reports that when the duke lived in Holyrood House
-he had on one occasion a discussion with two English noblemen
-as to the native country of golf; his Royal Highness asserting
-that it was peculiar to Scotland, while they as pertinaciously
-insisted that it was an English game as well. Assuredly, whatever
-may have been the case in those days, it is not now an
-English game in the proper sense of the words, seeing that it is
-only played to the south of the Tweed by a few fraternities of
-Scotsmen, who have acquired it in their own country in youth.
-However this may be, the two English nobles proposed, good-humouredly,
-to prove its English character by taking up the
-duke in a match to be played on Leith Links. James, glad of
-an opportunity to make popularity in Scotland, in however small
-a way, accepted the challenge, and sought for the best partner
-he could find. By an association not at this day surprising to
-those who practise the game, the heir-presumptive of the British
-throne played in concert with a poor shoemaker named John
-Paterson, the worthy descendant of a long line of illustrious
-golfers. If the two southrons were, as might be expected,
-inexperienced in the game, they had no chance against a pair,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">{322}</a></span>
-one member of which was a good player. So the duke got the
-best of the practical argument; and Paterson’s merits were
-rewarded by a gift of the sum played for. The story goes on to
-say that John was thus enabled to build a somewhat stylish
-house for himself in the Canongate, on the top of which, being
-a Scotsman, and having of course a pedigree, he clapped the
-Paterson arms&mdash;three pelicans vulned; on a chief three mullets;
-crest, a dexter hand grasping a golf-club; together with the
-motto&mdash;dear to all golfers&mdash;<span class="smcap">Far and Sure</span>.</p>
-
-<p>It must be admitted there is some uncertainty about this tale.
-The house, the inscriptions, and arms only indicate that Paterson
-built the house after being a victor at golf, and that Pitcairn had
-a hand in decorating it. One might even see, in the fact of the
-epigram, as if a gentleman wit were indulging in a jest at the
-expense of some simple plebeian, who held all notoriety honourable.
-It might have been expected that if Paterson had been enriched
-by a match in which he was connected with the Duke of York, a
-Jacobite like Pitcairn would have made distinct allusion to the
-circumstance. The tradition, nevertheless, seems too curious to
-be entirely overlooked, and the reader may therefore take it at
-its worth.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">{323}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="LOTHIAN_HUT" id="LOTHIAN_HUT">[LOTHIAN HUT.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>The noble family of Lothian had a mansion in Edinburgh,
-though of but a moderate dignity. It was a small house
-situated in a spare piece of ground at the bottom of the Canongate,
-on the south side. Latterly it was leased to Professor Dugald
-Stewart, who, about the end of the last century, here entertained
-several English pupils of noble rank&mdash;among others, the Hon.
-the Henry Temple, afterwards Lord Palmerston.<a name="FNanchor_253" id="FNanchor_253"></a><a href="#Footnote_253" class="fnanchor">[253]</a> About 1825
-building was taken down to make room for a brewery.</p>
-
-<p>About the middle of the last century, Lothian Hut was
-occupied by the wife of the fourth marquis, a lady of great
-lineage, being the only daughter of Robert, Earl of Holderness,
-and great-granddaughter of Charles Louis, Elector Palatine.
-Her ladyship was a person of grand character, while yet
-admittedly very amiable. As a piece of very old gossip, the
-Lady Marchioness, on first coming to live in the Hut, found
-herself in want of a few trifling articles from a milliner, and
-sent for one who was reputed to be the first of the class then
-in Edinburgh&mdash;namely, Miss Ramsay. But there were two
-Miss Ramsays. They had a shop on the east side of the Old
-Lyon Close, on the south side of the High Street, and there
-made ultimately a little fortune, which enabled them to build
-the villa of Marionville, near Restalrig (called <em>Lappet Hall</em> by
-the vulgar). The Misses Ramsay, receiving a message from so
-grand a lady, instead of obeying the order implicitly, came
-together, dressed out in a very splendid style, and told the
-marchioness that every article they wore was ‘at the very top
-of the fashion.’ The marchioness, disgusted with their forwardness<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">{324}</a></span>
-and affectation, said she would take their specimens into
-consideration, and wished them a good-morning. According to
-our gossiping authority, she then sent for Mrs Sellar, who carried
-on the millinery business in a less pretentious style at a place
-in the Lawnmarket where Bank Street now stands. (I like the
-localities, for they bring the Old Town of a past age so clearly
-before us.) Mrs Sellar made her appearance at Lothian Hut in
-a plain, decorous manner. Her head-dress consisted of a mob-cap
-of the finest lawn, tied under her chin; over which there
-was a hood of the same stuff. She wore a cloak of plain black
-silk without any lace, and had no bonnet, the use of which was
-supplied by the hood. Mrs Sellar’s manners were elegant and
-pleasing. When she entered, the marchioness rose to receive
-her. On being asked for her patterns, she stepped to the door
-and brought in two large boxes, which had been carried behind
-her by two women. The articles, being produced, gave great
-satisfaction, and her ladyship never afterwards employed any
-other milliner. So the story ends, in the manner of the good-boy
-books, in establishing that milliners ought not to be too
-prone to exhibit their patterns upon their own persons.]</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">{325}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="HENRY_PRENTICE_AND_POTATOES" id="HENRY_PRENTICE_AND_POTATOES">HENRY PRENTICE AND POTATOES.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>No doubt is entertained on any hand that the field-culture of
-the potato was first practised in Scotland by a man of
-humble condition, originally a pedlar, by name Henry Prentice.
-He was an eccentric person, as many have been who stepped out
-of the common walk to do things afterwards discovered to be great.
-A story is told that while the potatoes were growing in certain
-little fields which he leased near our city, Lord Minto came
-from time to time to inquire about the crop. Prentice at length
-told his lordship that the experiment was entirely successful, and
-all he wanted was a horse and cart to drive his potatoes to
-Edinburgh that they might be sold. ‘I’ll give you a horse and
-cart,’ said his lordship. Prentice then took his crop to market,
-cart by cart, till it was all sold, after which he disposed of <em>the
-horse and cart</em>, which he affected to believe Lord Minto had
-given him as a present.</p>
-
-<p>Having towards the close of his days realised a small sum
-of money, he sunk £140 in the hands of the Canongate magistrates,
-as managers of the poorhouse of that parish, receiving in
-return seven shillings a week, upon which he lived for several
-years. Occasionally he made little donations to the charity.
-During his last years he was an object of no small curiosity in
-Edinburgh, partly on account of his connection with potato
-culture and partly by reason of his oddities. It was said of
-him that he would never shake hands with any human being
-above two years of age. In his bargain with the Canongate
-dignitaries, it was agreed that he should have a <em>good grave</em> in
-their churchyard, and one was selected according to his own
-choice. Over this, thinking it as well, perhaps, that he should
-enjoy a little quasi-posthumous notoriety during his life, he
-caused a monument to be erected, bearing this inscription:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Be not anxious to know how I lived,</div>
-<div class="verse">But rather how you yourself should die.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>He also had a coffin prepared at the price of two guineas, taking
-the undertaker bound to screw it down gratis with his own
-hands. In addition to all this, his friends the magistrates were
-under covenant to bury him with a hearse and four coaches.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">{326}</a></span>
-But even the designs of mortals respecting the grave itself are
-liable to disappointment. Owing to the mischief done by the
-boys to the premature monument, Prentice saw fit to have it
-removed to a quieter cemetery, that of Restalrig, where, at his
-death in 1788, he was accordingly interred.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the originator of that extensive culture of the potato
-which has since borne so conspicuous a place in the economics
-of our country, for good and for evil.</p>
-
-<p>It is curious that this plant, although the sole support of
-millions of our population, should now again (1846) have fallen
-under suspicion. At its first introduction, and for several ages
-thereafter, it was regarded as a vegetable of by no means good
-character, though for a totally different reason from any which
-affect its reputation in our day. Its supposed tendency to inflame
-some of the sensual feelings of human nature is frequently
-adverted to by Shakespeare and his contemporaries; and this long
-remained a popular impression in the north.<a name="FNanchor_254" id="FNanchor_254"></a><a href="#Footnote_254" class="fnanchor">[254]</a></p>
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">{327}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="THE_DUCHESS_OF_BUCCLEUCH_AND_MONMOUTH" id="THE_DUCHESS_OF_BUCCLEUCH_AND_MONMOUTH">THE DUCHESS OF BUCCLEUCH AND MONMOUTH.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>It is rather curious that one of my informants in this article
-should have dined with a lady who had dined with a peeress
-married in the year 1662.</p>
-
-<p>This peeress was Anne, Duchess of Buccleuch and Monmouth,
-the wife of the unfortunate son of Charles II. As is well known,
-she was early deserted by her husband, who represented, not
-without justice, that a marriage into which he had been tempted
-for reasons of policy by his relations, when he was only thirteen
-years of age, could hardly be binding.</p>
-
-<p>The young duchess, naturally plain in features, was so unfortunate
-in early womanhood as to become lame in consequence
-of some feats in dancing. For her want of personal graces there
-is negative evidence in a dedication of Dryden, where he speaks
-abundantly of her wit, but not a word of beauty, which shows
-that the case must have been desperate. [This, by the way,
-was the remark made to me on the subject by Sir Walter Scott,
-who, in the <cite>Lay of the Last Minstrel</cite>, has done what Dryden could
-not do&mdash;flattered the duchess:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="wideverse indent6">‘She had known adversity,</div>
-<div class="wideverse">Though born in such a high degree;</div>
-<div class="wideverse">In pride of power and <em>beauty’s bloom</em>,</div>
-<div class="wideverse">Had wept o’er Monmouth’s bloody tomb.’]</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Were any further proof wanting, it might be found in the regard
-in which she was held by James II., who, as is well known, had
-such a tendency to plain women as induced a suspicion in his
-witty brother that they were prescribed to him by his confessor
-by way of penance. This friendship, in which there was nothing
-improper, was the means of saving her grace’s estates at the
-tragical close of her husband’s life.</p>
-
-<p>It is curious to learn that the duchess, notwithstanding the
-terms on which she had been with her husband, and the sad
-stamp put upon his pretensions to legitimacy, acted throughout
-the remainder of her somewhat protracted life as if she had been
-the widow of a true prince of the blood-royal. In her state-rooms
-she had a canopy erected, beneath which was the only seat
-in the apartment, everybody standing besides herself. When<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">{328}</a></span>
-Lady Margaret Montgomery, one of the beautiful Countess of
-Eglintoune’s daughters, was at a boarding-school near London&mdash;previous
-to the year <em>Thirty</em>&mdash;she was frequently invited by the
-duchess to her house; and because her great-grandmother, Lady
-Mary Leslie, was sister to her grace’s mother, <em>she</em> was allowed
-a chair; but this was an extraordinary mark of grace. The
-duchess was the last person of quality in Scotland who kept
-<em>pages</em>, in the proper acceptation of the term&mdash;that is, young
-gentlemen of good birth, who acquired manners and knowledge
-of the world in attending upon persons of exalted rank. The
-last of her grace’s pages rose to be a general. When a letter
-was brought for the duchess, the domestic gave it to the page,
-the page to the waiting-gentlewoman (always a person of birth
-also), and she at length to her grace. The duchess kept a
-tight hand over her clan and tenants, but was upon the whole
-beloved.</p>
-
-<p>She was buried (1732) on the same day with the too-much-celebrated
-Colonel Charteris. At the funeral of Henry, Duke
-of Buccleuch, in the year 1812, in the aisle of the church at
-Dalkeith, my informant (Sir Walter Scott) was shown an old
-man who had been at the funeral of both her grace and Colonel
-Charteris. He said that the day was dreadfully stormy, which
-all the world agreed was owing to the devil carrying off Charteris.
-The mob broke in upon the mourners who followed this personage
-to the grave, and threw cats, dogs, and a pack of cards upon the
-coffin; whereupon the gentlemen drew their swords, and cut away
-among the rioters. In the confusion one little old man was
-pushed into the grave; and the sextons, somewhat prompt in the
-discharge of their duty, began to shovel in the earth upon the
-quick and the dead. The grandfather of my informant (Dr
-Rutherford), who was one of the mourners, was much hurt in
-the affray; and my informant has heard his mother describe the
-terror of the family on his coming home with his clothes bloody
-and his sword broken.</p>
-
-<p>As to pages&mdash;a custom existed among old ladies till a later
-day of keeping such attendants, rather superior to the little
-polybuttoned personages who are now so universal. It was not,
-however, to be expected that a pranksome youth would behave
-with consistent respect to an aged female of the stiff manners
-then prevalent. Accordingly, ridiculous circumstances took place.
-An old lady of the name of Plenderleith, of very stately aspect
-and grave carriage, used to walk to Leith by the Easter Road<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">{329}</a></span>
-with her little foot-page behind her. For the whole way, the
-young rogue would be seen projecting burs at her dress, laughing
-immoderately, but silently, when one stuck. An old lady and
-her sequel of a page was very much like a tragedy followed by a
-farce. The keeping of the rascals in order at home used also to
-be a sad problem to a quiet old lady. The only expedient which
-Miss &mdash;&mdash; could hit upon to preserve her page from the corruption
-of the streets was, in her own phrase, to <em>lock up his breeks</em>,
-which she did almost every evening. The youth, being then only
-presentable at a window, had to content himself with such chat
-as he could indulge in with his companions and such mischief as
-he could execute from that loophole of retreat. So much for the
-parade of keeping pages.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">{330}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="CLAUDERO" id="CLAUDERO">CLAUDERO.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>Edinburgh, which now smiles complacently upon the gravities
-of her reviews and the flippancies of her magazines, formerly
-laughed outright at the coarse lampoons of her favourite poet
-and pamphleteer, Claudero. The distinct publications of this
-witty and eccentric personage (whose real name was James Wilson)
-are well known to collectors; and his occasional pieces must be
-fresh in the remembrance of those who, forty or fifty years ago
-(1824), were in the habit of perusing the <cite>Scots Magazine</cite>, amidst
-the general gravity of which they appeared, like the bright and
-giddy eyes of a satyr, staring through the sere leaves of a sober
-forest scene.</p>
-
-<p>Claudero was a native of Cumbernauld, in Dumbartonshire,
-and at an early period of his life showed such marks of a mischief-loving
-disposition as procured him general odium. The occasion
-of his lameness was a pebble thrown from a tree at the minister,
-who, having been previously exasperated by his tricks, chased him
-to the end of a closed lane, and with his cane inflicted such
-personal chastisement as rendered him a cripple, and a hater of
-the clergy, for the rest of his life.</p>
-
-<p>In Edinburgh, where he lived for upwards of thirty years
-previous to his death in 1789, his livelihood was at first ostensibly
-gained by keeping a little school, latterly by celebrating
-what were called <em>half-mark marriages</em>&mdash;a business resembling that
-of the Gretna blacksmith. It is said that he, who made himself
-the terror of so many by his wit, was in his turn held in fear by
-his wife, who was as complete a shrew as ever fell to the lot of
-poet or philosopher.</p>
-
-<p>He was a satirist by profession; and when any person wished
-to have a squib played off upon his neighbours, he had nothing
-to do but call upon Claudero, who, for half a crown, would
-produce the desired effusion, composed, and copied off in a fair
-hand, in a given time. He liked this species of employment
-better than writing upon speculation, the profit being more
-certain and immediate. When in want of money, it was his
-custom to write a sly satire on some opulent public personage,
-upon whom he called with it, desiring to have his opinion of the
-work, and his countenance in favour of a subscription for its<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">{331}</a></span>
-publication. The object of his ridicule, conscious-struck by his
-own portrait, would wince and be civil, advise him to give up
-thoughts of publishing so hasty a production, and conclude by
-offering a guinea or two to keep the poet alive till better times
-should come round. At that time there lived in Edinburgh a
-number of rich old men who had made fortunes in questionable
-ways abroad, and whose characters, labouring under strange
-suspicions, were wonderfully susceptible of Claudero’s satire.
-These the wag used to bleed profusely and frequently by working
-upon their fears of public notice.</p>
-
-<p>In 1766 appeared <cite>Miscellanies in Prose and Verse, by Claudero,
-Son of Nimrod the Mighty Hunter, &amp;c., &amp;c.</cite>, opening with this
-preface: ‘Christian Reader&mdash;The following miscellany is published
-at the desire of many gentlemen, who have all been my
-very good friends; if there be anything in it amusing or entertaining,
-I shall be very glad I have contributed to your diversion,
-and will laugh as heartily at your money as you do at my works.
-Several of my pieces may need explanation; but I am too
-cunning for that: what is not understood, like Presbyterian
-preaching, will at least be admired. I am regardless of critics;
-perhaps some of my lines want a foot; but then, if the critic
-look sharp out, he will find that loss sufficiently supplied in other
-places, where they have a foot too much: and besides, men’s
-works generally resemble themselves; if the poems are lame, so
-is the author&mdash;<span class="smcap">Claudero</span>.’</p>
-
-<p>The most remarkable poems in this volume are: ‘The Echo
-of the Royal Porch of the Palace of Holyrood House, which
-fell under Military Execution, anno 1753;’ ‘The Last Speech
-and Dying Words of the Cross, which was Hanged, Drawn, and
-Quartered on Monday the 15th of March 1756, for the horrid
-crime of being an Incumbrance to the Street;’ ‘Scotland in
-Tears for the horrid Treatment of the Kings’ Sepulchres;’ ‘An
-Elegy on the much-lamented Death of Quaker Erskine;’<a name="FNanchor_255" id="FNanchor_255"></a><a href="#Footnote_255" class="fnanchor">[255]</a> ‘A
-Sermon on the Condemnation of the Netherbow;’ ‘Humphry
-Colquhoun’s Last Farewell,’ &amp;c. Claudero seems to have been
-the only man of his time who remonstrated against the destruction
-of the venerable edifices then removed from the streets which they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">{332}</a></span>
-ornamented, to the disappointment and indignation of all future
-antiquaries. There is much wit in his sermon upon the destruction
-of the Netherbow. ‘What was too hard,’ he says, ‘for the great
-ones of the earth, yea, even queens, to effect, is now accomplished.
-No patriot duke opposeth the scheme, as did the great Argyll in
-the grand senate of our nation; therefore the project shall go into
-execution, and down shall Edina’s lofty porches be hurled with a
-vengeance. Streets shall be extended to the east, regular and
-beautiful, as far as the Frigate Whins; and Portobello<a name="FNanchor_256" id="FNanchor_256"></a><a href="#Footnote_256" class="fnanchor">[256]</a> shall
-be a lodge for the captors of tea and brandy. The city shall be
-joined to Leith on the north, and a procession of wise masons
-shall there lay the foundations of a spacious harbour. Pequin or
-Nanquin shall not be able to compare with Edinburgh for magnificence.
-Our city shall be the greatest wonder of the world, and
-the fame of its glory shall reach the distant ends of the earth.<a name="FNanchor_257" id="FNanchor_257"></a><a href="#Footnote_257" class="fnanchor">[257]</a>
-But lament, O thou descendant of the royal Dane, and chief of
-the tribe of Wilson; for thy shop, contiguous to the porch, shall
-be dashed to pieces, and its place will know thee no more! No
-more shall the melodious voice of the loyalist Grant<a name="FNanchor_258" id="FNanchor_258"></a><a href="#Footnote_258" class="fnanchor">[258]</a> be heard
-in the morning, nor shall he any more shake the bending wand
-towards the triumphal arch. Let all who angle in deep waters
-lament, for Tom had not his equal. The Netherbow Coffee-house
-of the loyal Smeiton can now no longer enjoy its ancient name<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">{333}</a></span>
-with propriety; and from henceforth <em>The Revolution Coffee-house</em>
-shall its name be called. Our gates must be extended wide for
-accommodating the gilded chariots, which, from the luxury of
-the age, are become numerous. With an impetuous career, they
-jostle against one another in our streets, and the unwary foot-passenger
-is in danger of being crushed to pieces. The loaded
-cart itself cannot withstand their fury, and the hideous yells of
-<em>Coal Johnie</em> resound through the vaulted sky. The sour-milk
-barrels are
-overturned,
-and deluges of
-Corstorphin
-cream run
-down our
-strands, while
-the poor unhappy
-milkmaid
-wrings
-her hands
-with sorrow.’
-To the sermon
-are appended
-the ‘Last
-Speech and
-Dying Words
-of the Netherbow,’
-in which
-the following
-laughable declaration
-occurs:
-‘May
-my clock be
-struck dumb
-in the other
-world, if I lie in this! and may <span class="smcap">Mack</span>, the reformer of Edina’s
-lofty spires, never bestride my weathercock on high, if I deviate
-from truth in these my last words! Though my fabric shall be
-levelled with the dust of the earth, yet I fall in hope that my
-weathercock shall be exalted on some more modern dome, where it
-shall shine like the burnished gold, reflecting the rays of the sun
-to the eye of ages unborn. The daring Mack shall yet look down
-from my cock, high in the airy region, to the brandy-shops below,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">{334}</a></span>
-where large graybeards shall appear to him no bigger than
-mutchkin-bottles, and mutchkin-bottles shall be in his sight like
-the spark of a diamond.’ One of Claudero’s versified compositions,
-‘Humphry Colquhoun’s Farewell,’ is remarkable as a kind of
-coarse prototype of the beautiful lyric entitled ‘Mary,’ sung in
-<cite>The Pirate</cite> by Claud Halcro. One wonders to find the genius of
-Scott refining upon such materials:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Farewell to Auld Reekie,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Farewell to lewd Kate,</div>
-<div class="verse">Farewell to each &mdash;&mdash;,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">And farewell to cursed debt;</div>
-<div class="verse">With light heart and thin breeches,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Humph crosses the main;</div>
-<div class="verse">All worn out to stitches,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">He’ll ne’er come again.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Farewell to old Dido,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Who sold him good ale;</div>
-<div class="verse">Her charms, like her drink,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">For poor Humph were too stale;</div>
-<div class="verse">Though closely she urged him</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">To marry and stay,</div>
-<div class="verse">Her Trojan, quite cloyed,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">From her sailed away.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Farewell to James Campbell,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Who played many tricks;</div>
-<div class="verse">Humph’s ghost and Lochmoidart’s<a name="FNanchor_259" id="FNanchor_259"></a><a href="#Footnote_259" class="fnanchor">[259]</a></div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Will chase him to Styx;</div>
-<div class="verse">Where in Charon’s wherry</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">He’ll be ferried o’er</div>
-<div class="verse">To Pluto’s dominions,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">’Mongst rascals great store.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Farewell, pot-companions,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Farewell, all good fellows;</div>
-<div class="verse">Farewell to my anvil,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Files, pliers, and bellows;</div>
-<div class="verse">Sails, fly to Jamaica,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Where I mean long to dwell,</div>
-<div class="verse">Change manners with climate&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Dear Drummond, farewell.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<div class="figcenter w450">
-<img src="images/illus_p_333.jpg" width="450" height="509" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Netherbow.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>It is not unworthy of notice that the publication of Dr Blair’s
-<cite>Lectures on Rhetoric and the Belles-lettres</cite> was hastened by Claudero,
-who, having procured notes taken by some of the students,
-avowed an intention of giving these to the world. The reverend
-author states in his preface that he was induced to publish the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">{335}</a></span>
-lectures in consequence of some surreptitious and incorrect copies
-finding their way to the public; but it has not hitherto been told
-that this doggerel-monger was the person chiefly concerned in
-bringing about that result.</p>
-
-<p>Claudero occasionally dealt in whitewash as well as blackball,
-and sometimes wrote regular panegyrics. An address of this
-kind to a <em>writer</em> named Walter Fergusson, who built St James’s
-Square, concludes with a strange association of ideas:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘May Pentland Hills pour forth their springs,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">To water all thy square!</div>
-<div class="verse">May Fergussons still bless the place,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Both gay and debonnair!’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>When the said square was in progress, however, the water seemed
-in no hurry to obey the bard’s invocation; and an attempt was
-made to procure this useful element by sinking wells for it,
-despite the elevation of the ground. Mr Walter Scott, W.S.,
-happened one day to pass when Captain Fergusson of the Royal
-Navy&mdash;a good officer, but a sort of Commodore Trunnion in his
-manners&mdash;was sinking a well of vast depth. Upon Mr Scott
-expressing a doubt if water could be got there, ‘I will get it,’
-quoth the captain, ‘though I sink to hell for it!’ ‘A bad place
-for water,’ was the dry remark of the doubter.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">{336}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="QUEENSBERRY_HOUSE" id="QUEENSBERRY_HOUSE">QUEENSBERRY HOUSE.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>In the Canongate, on the south side, is a large, gloomy building,
-enclosed in a court, and now used as a refuge for destitute
-persons. This was formerly the town mansion of the Dukes of
-Queensberry, and a scene, of course, of stately life and high
-political affairs. It was built by the first duke, the willing
-minister of the last two Stuarts&mdash;he who also built Drumlanrig
-Castle in Dumfriesshire, which he never slept in but one night,
-and with regard to which it is told that he left the accounts for
-the building tied up with this inscription: ‘The deil pyke out
-his een that looks herein!’ Duke William was a noted money-maker
-and land-acquirer. No little laird of his neighbourhood
-had any chance with him for the retention of his family property.
-He was something still worse in the eyes of the common people&mdash;a
-<em>persecutor</em>; that is, one siding against the Presbyterian
-cause. There is a story in one of their favourite books of his
-having died of the <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">morbus pediculosus</i>, by way of a judgment
-upon him for his wickedness. In reality, he died of some ordinary
-fever. It is also stated, from the same authority, that about the
-time when his grace died, a Scotch skipper, being in Sicily, saw
-one day a coach-and-six driving to Mount Etna, while a diabolic
-voice exclaimed: ‘Open to the Duke of Drumlanrig!’&mdash;‘which
-proves, by the way,’ says Mr Sharpe, ‘that the devil’s porter is
-no herald. In fact,’ adds this acute critic, ‘the legend is borrowed
-from the story of Antonio the Rich, in George Sandys’s <cite>Travels</cite>.’<a name="FNanchor_260" id="FNanchor_260"></a><a href="#Footnote_260" class="fnanchor">[260]</a></p>
-
-<p>It appears, from family letters, that the first duchess often
-resided in the Canongate mansion, while her husband occupied
-Sanquhar Castle. The lady was unfortunately given to drink,
-and there is a letter of hers in which she pathetically describes
-her situation to a country friend, left alone in Queensberry House
-with only a few bottles of wine, one of which, having been drawn,
-had turned out sour. Sour wine being prejudicial to her health,
-it was fearful to think of what might prove the quality of the
-remaining bottles.</p>
-
-<p>The son of this couple, James, second duke, must ever be
-memorable as the main instrument in carrying through the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">{337}</a></span>
-Union. His character has been variously depicted. By Defoe,
-in his <cite>History of the Union</cite>, it is liberally panegyrised. ‘I think
-I have,’ says he, ‘given demonstrations to the world that I will
-flatter no man.’ Yet he could not refrain from extolling the
-‘prudence, calmness, and temper’ which the duke showed during
-that difficult crisis. Unfortunately the author of <cite>Robinson
-Crusoe</cite>, though not a flatterer, could not insure himself against
-the usual prepossessions of a partisan. Boldness the duke must
-certainly have possessed, for during the ferments attending the
-parliamentary proceedings on that occasion, he continued daily
-to drive between his lodgings in Holyrood and the Parliament
-House, notwithstanding several intimations that his life was
-threatened. His grace’s eldest son, James, was an idiot of the
-most unhappy sort&mdash;rabid and gluttonous, and early grew to an
-immense height, which is testified by his coffin in the family
-vault at Durisdeer, still to be seen, of great length and unornamented
-with the heraldic follies which bedizen the violated remains
-of his relatives. A tale of mystery and horror is preserved by
-tradition respecting this monstrous being. While the family
-resided in Edinburgh, he was always kept confined in a ground
-apartment, in the western wing of the house, upon the windows
-of which, till within these few years, the boards still remained
-by which the dreadful receptacle was darkened to prevent the
-idiot from looking out or being seen. On the day the Union
-was passed, all Edinburgh crowded to the Parliament Close to
-await the issue of the debate, and to mob the chief promoters
-of the detested measure on their leaving the House. The whole
-household of the commissioner went <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">en masse</i>, with perhaps a
-somewhat different object, and among the rest was the man whose
-duty it was to watch and attend Lord Drumlanrig. Two members
-of the family alone were left behind&mdash;the madman himself, and a
-little kitchen-boy who turned the spit. The insane being, hearing
-everything unusually still around, the house being deserted, and
-the Canongate like a city of the dead, and observing his keeper
-to be absent, broke loose from his confinement, and roamed wildly
-through the house. It is supposed that the savoury odour of the
-preparations for dinner led him to the kitchen, where he found
-the little turnspit quietly seated by the fire. He seized the boy,
-killed him, took the meat from the fire, and spitted the body of
-his victim, which he half-roasted, and was found devouring when
-the duke, with his domestics, returned from his triumph. The
-idiot survived his father many years, though he did not succeed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">{338}</a></span>
-him upon his death in 1711, when the titles devolved upon
-Charles, the younger brother. He is known to have died in
-England. This horrid act of his child was, according to the
-common sort of people, the judgment of God upon him for his
-wicked concern in the Union&mdash;the greatest blessing, as it has
-happened, that ever was conferred upon Scotland by any statesman.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w275">
-<img src="images/illus_p_338.jpg" width="275" height="324" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Allan Ramsay’s Shop, High Street.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Charles, third Duke of Queensberry, who was born in Queensberry
-House, resided occasionally in it when he visited Scotland;
-but as he was much engaged in attending the court during the
-earlier part of his life, his stay here was seldom of long continuance.
-After his grace and the duchess embroiled themselves
-with the court (1729), on account of the support which they gave
-to the poet Gay, they came to Scotland, and resided for some time
-here. The author of the <cite>Beggar’s Opera</cite> accompanied them, and
-remained about a month, part of which was given to Dumfriesshire.
-Tradition in Edinburgh
-used to point out
-an attic in an old house
-opposite to Queensberry
-House, where, as an appropriate
-abode for a poet, his
-patrons are said to have
-stowed him. It was said he
-wrote the <cite>Beggar’s Opera</cite>
-there&mdash;an entirely gratuitous
-assumption. In the progress
-of the history of his writings,
-nothing of consequence occurs
-at this time. He had
-finished the second part of
-the opera a short while
-before. After his return to
-the south, he is found engaged
-in ‘new writing a
-damned play, which he wrote
-several years before, called
-<cite>The Wife of Bath</cite>; a task
-which he accomplished while
-living with the Duke of
-Queensberry in Oxfordshire, during the ensuing months of August,
-September, and October.’<a name="FNanchor_261" id="FNanchor_261"></a><a href="#Footnote_261" class="fnanchor">[261]</a> It is known, however, that while in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">{339}</a></span>
-Edinburgh, he haunted the shop of Allan Ramsay, in the Luckenbooths&mdash;the
-flat above that well-remembered and classical shop so
-long kept by Mr Creech,
-from which issued the
-<cite>Mirror</cite>, <cite>Lounger</cite>, and
-other works of name, and
-where for a long course
-of years all the <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">literati</i> of
-Edinburgh used to assemble
-every day, like
-merchants at an Exchange.
-Here Ramsay
-amused Gay by pointing
-out to him the chief
-public characters of the
-city as they met in the
-forenoon at the Cross.
-Here, too, Gay read the
-<cite>Gentle Shepherd</cite>, and
-studied the Scottish language,
-so that upon his
-return to England he was
-enabled to make Pope
-appreciate the beauties of that delightful pastoral. He is said
-also to have spent some of his time with the sons of mirth and
-humour in an alehouse opposite to Queensberry House, kept by
-one Janet Hall. <em>Jenny Ha’s</em>, as the place was called, was a noted
-house for drinking claret from the butt within the recollection of
-old gentlemen living in my time.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w375">
-<img src="images/illus_p_339.jpg" width="375" height="369" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Jenny Ha’s Ale-House.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>While Gay was at Drumlanrig, he employed himself in picking
-out a great number of the best books from the library, which were
-sent to England, whether for his own use or the duke’s is not
-known.</p>
-
-<p>Duchess Catherine was a most extraordinary lady, eccentric to
-a degree undoubtedly bordering on madness. Her beauty has
-been celebrated by Pope not in very elegant terms:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Since Queensberry to strip there’s no compelling,</div>
-<div class="verse">’Tis from a handmaid we must take a Helen.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Prior had, at an early period of her life, depainted her irrepressible
-temper:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">{340}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Thus Kitty, beautiful and young,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">And wild as colt untamed,</div>
-<div class="verse">Bespoke the fair from whom she sprang,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">By little rage inflamed;</div>
-<div class="verse">Inflamed with rage at sad restraint,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Which wise mamma ordained;</div>
-<div class="verse">And sorely vexed to play the saint,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Whilst wit and beauty reigned.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">“Shall I thumb holy books, confined</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">With Abigails forsaken?</div>
-<div class="verse">Kitty’s for other things designed,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Or I am much mistaken.</div>
-<div class="verse">Must Lady Jenny frisk about,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">And visit with her cousins?</div>
-<div class="verse">At balls must she make all the rout,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">And bring home hearts by dozens?</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">What has she better, pray, than I?</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">What hidden charms to boast,</div>
-<div class="verse">That all mankind for her should die,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Whilst I am scarce a toast?</div>
-<div class="verse">Dearest mamma, for once let me,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Unchained, my fortune try;</div>
-<div class="verse">I’ll have my earl as well as she,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Or know the reason why.</div>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">I’ll soon with Jenny’s pride quit score,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Make all her lovers fall;</div>
-<div class="verse">They’ll grieve I was not loosed before,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">She, I was loosed at all.”</div>
-<div class="verse">Fondness prevailed, mamma gave way;</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">Kitty, at heart’s desire,</div>
-<div class="verse">Obtained the chariot for a day,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">And set the world on fire!’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>It is an undoubted fact that, before her marriage, she had been
-confined in a <em>strait-jacket</em> on account of mental derangement; and
-her conduct in married life was frequently such as to entitle her
-to a repetition of the same treatment. She was, in reality, at
-all times to a certain extent insane, though the politeness of
-fashionable society and the flattery of her poetical friends seem
-to have succeeded in passing off her extravagances as owing to an
-agreeable freedom of carriage and vivacity of mind. Her brother
-was as clever and as mad as herself, and used to amuse himself by
-hiding a book in his library, and hunting for it after he had forgot
-where it was deposited.</p>
-
-<p>Her grace was no admirer of Scottish manners. One of their
-habits she particularly detested&mdash;the custom of eating off the end
-of a knife. When people dined with her at Drumlanrig, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">{341}</a></span>
-began to lift their food in this manner, she used to scream out
-and beseech them not to cut their throats; and then she would
-confound the offending persons by sending them a silver spoon or
-fork upon a salver.<a name="FNanchor_262" id="FNanchor_262"></a><a href="#Footnote_262" class="fnanchor">[262]</a></p>
-
-<p>When in Scotland her grace always dressed herself in the garb
-of a peasant-girl. Her object seems to have been to ridicule and
-put out of countenance the stately dresses and demeanour of the
-Scottish gentlewomen who visited her. One evening some country
-ladies paid her a visit, dressed in their best brocades, as for some
-state occasion. Her grace proposed a walk, and they were of
-course under the necessity of trooping off, to the utter discomfiture
-of their starched-up frills and flounces. Her grace at last pretended
-to be tired, sat down upon the dirtiest dunghill she could
-find, at the end of a farmhouse, and saying, ‘Pray, ladies, be
-seated,’ invited her poor draggled companions to plant themselves
-round about her. They stood so much in awe of her that they
-durst not refuse; and of course her grace had the satisfaction of
-afterwards laughing at the destruction of their silks.</p>
-
-<p>When she went out to an evening entertainment, and found a
-tea-equipage paraded which she thought too fine for the rank of
-the owner, she would contrive to overset the table and break the
-china. The forced politeness of her hosts on such occasions, and
-the assurances which they made her grace that no harm was done,
-&amp;c., delighted her exceedingly.</p>
-
-<p>Her custom of dressing like a <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">paysanne</i> once occasioned her
-grace a disagreeable adventure at a review. On her attempting
-to approach the duke, the guard, not knowing her rank or relation
-to him, pushed her rudely back. This threw her into such a
-passion that she could not be appeased till his grace assured her
-that the men had all been soundly flogged for their insolence.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">{342}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>An anecdote scarcely less laughable is told of her grace as
-occurring at court, where she carried to the same extreme her
-attachment to plain-dealing and plain-dressing. An edict had
-been issued forbidding the ladies to appear at the drawing-room
-in aprons. This was disregarded by the duchess, whose rustic
-costume would not have been complete without that piece of dress.
-On approaching the door she was stopped by the lord in waiting,
-who told her that he could not possibly give her grace admission
-in that guise, when she, without a moment’s hesitation, stripped
-off her apron, threw it in his lordship’s face, and walked on, in her
-brown gown and petticoat, into the brilliant circle!</p>
-
-<p>Her caprices were endless. At one time when a ball had been
-announced at Drumlanrig, after the company were all assembled
-her grace took a headache, declared that she could bear no noise,
-and sat in a chair in the dancing-room, uttering a thousand peevish
-complaints. Lord Drumlanrig, who understood her humour, said:
-‘Madam, I know how to cure you;’ and taking hold of her
-immense elbow-chair, which moved on castors, rolled her several
-times backwards and forwards across the saloon, till she began
-to laugh heartily&mdash;after which the festivities were allowed to
-commence.</p>
-
-<p>The duchess certainly, both in her conversation and letters,
-displayed a great degree of wit and quickness of mind. Yet
-nobody perhaps, saving Gay, ever loved her. She seems to have
-been one of those beings who are too much feared, admired, or
-envied, to be loved.</p>
-
-<p>The duke, on the contrary, who was a man of ordinary mind,
-had the affection and esteem of all. His temper and dispositions
-were sweet and amiable in the extreme. His benevolence, extending
-beyond his fellow-creatures, was exercised even upon his old
-horses, none of which he would ever permit to be killed or sold.
-He allowed the veterans of his stud free range in some parks near
-Drumlanrig, where, retired from active life, they got leave to die
-decent and natural deaths. Upon his grace’s decease, however,
-in 1778, these luckless pensioners were all put up to sale by his
-heartless successor; and it was a painful sight to see the feeble
-and pampered animals forced by their new masters to drag carts,
-&amp;c., till they broke down and died on the roads and in the ditches.</p>
-
-<p>Duke Charles’s eldest son, Lord Drumlanrig, was altogether
-mad. He had contracted himself to one lady when he married
-another. The lady who became his wife was a daughter of the
-Earl of Hopetoun, and a most amiable woman. He loved her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">{343}</a></span>
-tenderly, as she deserved; but owing to the unfortunate contract
-which he had engaged in, they were never happy. They were
-often observed in the beautiful pleasure-grounds at Drumlanrig
-weeping bitterly together. These hapless circumstances had such
-a fatal effect upon him that during a journey to London in 1754
-he rode on before the coach in which the duchess travelled, and
-shot himself with one of his own pistols. It was given out that
-the pistol had gone off by chance.</p>
-
-<p>There is just one other tradition of Drumlanrig to be noticed.
-The castle, being a very large and roomy mansion, had of course
-a ghost, said to be the spirit of a Lady Anne Douglas. This
-unhappy phantom used to walk about the house, terrifying everybody,
-with her head in one hand and her fan in the other&mdash;are
-we to suppose, fanning her face?</p>
-
-<p>On the death of the Good Duke, as he was called, in 1778, the
-title and estates devolved on his cousin, the Earl of March, so
-well remembered as a sporting character and debauchee of the old
-school by the name of <em>Old Q.</em> In his time Queensberry House
-was occupied by other persons, for he had little inclination to
-spend his time in Scotland. And this brings to mind an anecdote
-highly illustrative of the wretchedness of such a life as his. When
-professing, towards the close of his days, to be eaten up with
-ennui, and incapable of any longer taking an interest in anything,
-it was suggested that he might go down to his Scotch estates and
-live among his tenantry. ‘I’ve tried that,’ said the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">blasé</i> aristocrat;
-‘it is not amusing.’ In 1801 he caused Queensberry House
-to be stripped of its ornaments and sold. With fifty-eight fire-rooms,
-and a gallery seventy feet long, besides a garden, it was
-offered at the surprisingly low upset price of £900. The Government
-purchased it for a barrack. Thus has passed away the [home
-of the] Douglas of Queensberry from its old place in Edinburgh,
-where doubtless the money-making duke thought it would stand
-for ever.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">{344}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="TENNIS_COURT" id="TENNIS_COURT">TENNIS COURT.</a></h2>
-
-<p class="chapter_summary"><strong>Early Theatricals&mdash;The Canongate Theatre&mdash;Digges and Mrs
-Bellamy&mdash;A Theatrical Riot.</strong></p>
-
-
-<p>‘Just without the Water-gate,’ says Maitland, ‘on the eastern
-side of the street, was the Royal Tennis Court, anciently
-called the Catchpel [from Cache, a game since called <em>Fives</em>, and a
-favourite amusement in Scotland so early as the reign of James
-IV.].’ The house&mdash;a long, narrow building with a court&mdash;was
-burned down in modern times, and rebuilt for workshops. Yet
-the place continues to possess some interest as connected with the
-early and obscure history of the stage in Scotland, not to speak
-of the tennis itself, which was a fashionable amusement in Scotland
-in the seventeenth century, and here played by the Duke of York,
-Law the financial schemer, and other remarkable persons.</p>
-
-<p>The first known appearance of the post-reformation theatre in
-Edinburgh was in the reign of King James VI., when several
-companies came from London, chiefly for the amusement of the
-Court, including one to which Shakespeare is known to have
-belonged, though his personal attendance cannot be substantiated.
-There was no such thing, probably, as a play acted in Edinburgh
-from the departure of James in 1603 till the arrival of his grandson,
-the Duke of York, in 1680.</p>
-
-<p>Threatened by the Whig party in the House of Commons with
-an exclusion from the throne of England on account of his adherence
-to popery, this prince made use of his exile in Scotland
-to conciliate the nobles, and attach them to his person. His
-beautiful young wife, Mary of Modena, and his second daughter,
-the <em>Lady Anne</em>, assisted by giving parties at the palace&mdash;where,
-by the bye, tea was now first introduced into Scotland. Easy and
-obliging in their manners, these ladies revived the entertainment
-of the masque, and took parts themselves in the performance. At
-length, for his own amusement and that of his friends, James had
-some of his own company of players brought down to Holyrood
-and established in a little theatre, which was fitted up in the
-Tennis Court. On this occasion the remainder of the company
-playing at Oxford apologised for the diminution of their strength
-in the following lines written by Dryden:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">{345}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Discord and plots, which have undone our age,</div>
-<div class="verse">With the same ruin have o’erwhelmed the stage.</div>
-<div class="verse">Our house has suffered in the common woe;</div>
-<div class="verse">We have been troubled with Scots rebels too.</div>
-<div class="verse">Our brethren have from Thames to Tweed departed,</div>
-<div class="verse">And of our sisters, all the kinder-hearted</div>
-<div class="verse">To Edinburgh gone, or coached or carted.</div>
-<div class="verse">With bonny <em>Blew cap</em> there they act all night,</div>
-<div class="verse">For Scotch half-crowns&mdash;in English threepence hight.</div>
-<div class="verse">One nymph to whom fat Sir John Falstaff’s lean,</div>
-<div class="verse">There, with her single person, fills the scene.</div>
-<div class="verse">Another, with long use and age decayed,</div>
-<div class="verse">Died here old woman, and there rose a maid.</div>
-<div class="verse">Our trusty door-keeper, of former time,</div>
-<div class="verse">There struts and swaggers in heroic rhyme.</div>
-<div class="verse">Tack but a copper lace to drugget suit,</div>
-<div class="verse">And there’s a hero made without dispute;</div>
-<div class="verse">And that which was a capon’s tail before,</div>
-<div class="verse">Becomes a plume for Indian emperor.</div>
-<div class="verse">But all his subjects, to express the care</div>
-<div class="verse">Of imitation, go like Indians bare.</div>
-<div class="verse">Laced linen there would be a dangerous thing,</div>
-<div class="verse">It might perhaps a new rebellion bring;</div>
-<div class="verse">The Scot who wore it would be chosen king.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>We learn from Fountainhall’s <cite>Diary</cite> that on the celebration of
-the king’s birthday, 1681, the duke honoured the magistrates of
-the city with his presence in the theatre&mdash;namely, this theatre in
-the Tennis Court.</p>
-
-<p>No further glimpse of our city’s theatrical history is obtained till
-1705, when we find a Mr Abel announcing a concert in the Tennis
-Court, under the patronage of the Duke of Argyll, then acting as
-the queen’s commissioner to the Parliament. It is probable that
-the concert was only a cloak to some theatrical representation.
-This is the more likely from a tradition already mentioned of
-some old members of the Spendthrift Club who once frequented
-the tavern of a Mrs Hamilton, whose husband recollected having
-attended the theatre in the Tennis Court at Holyrood House,
-when the play was <cite>The Spanish Friar</cite>, and many members of the
-Union Parliament were present in the house.</p>
-
-<p>Theatrical amusements appear to have been continued at the
-Tennis Court in the year 1710, if we are to place any reliance
-upon the following anecdote: When Mrs Siddons came to Edinburgh
-in 1784, the late Mr Alexander Campbell, author of the
-<cite>History of Scottish Poetry</cite>, asked Miss Pitcairn, daughter of Dr
-Pitcairn, to accompany him to one of the representations. The
-old lady refused, saying with coquettish vivacity: ‘Laddie, wad
-ye ha’e an auld lass like me to be running after the play-actors&mdash;me<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">{346}</a></span>
-that hasna been at a theatre since I gaed wi’ papa to the
-Canongate in the year <em>ten</em>?’ The theatre was in those days
-encouraged chiefly by such Jacobites as Dr Pitcairn. It was
-denounced by the clergy as a hotbed of vice and profanity.</p>
-
-<p>After this we hear no more of the theatre in the Tennis Court.
-The next place where the drama set up its head was in a house in
-Carrubber’s Close, under the management of an Italian lady styled
-Signora Violante, who paid two visits to Edinburgh. After her
-came, in 1726, one Tony Alston, who set up his scenes in the same
-house, and whose first prologue was written by Ramsay: it may
-be found in the works of that poet. In 1727 the Society of High
-Constables, of which Ramsay was then a member, endeavoured to
-‘suppress the abominable stage-plays lately set up by Anthony
-Alston.’<a name="FNanchor_263" id="FNanchor_263"></a><a href="#Footnote_263" class="fnanchor">[263]</a> Mr Alston played for a season or two, under the
-fulminations of the clergy and a prosecution on their part in the
-Court of Session.</p>
-
-
-<h3>CANONGATE THEATRE.</h3>
-
-<p>From a period subsequent to 1727 till after the year 1753,
-the Tailors’ Hall in the Cowgate<a name="FNanchor_264" id="FNanchor_264"></a><a href="#Footnote_264" class="fnanchor">[264]</a> was used as a theatre by
-itinerating companies, who met with some success notwithstanding
-the incessant hostility of the clergy.<a name="FNanchor_265" id="FNanchor_265"></a><a href="#Footnote_265" class="fnanchor">[265]</a> It was a house which in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">{347}</a></span>
-theatrical phrase, could hold from £40 to £45. A split in the
-company here concerned led to the erection, in 1746-7, of a
-theatre at the bottom of a close in the Canongate, nearly opposite
-to the head of New Street. This house, capable of holding about
-£70&mdash;the boxes being half-a-crown and pit one and sixpence&mdash;was
-for several years the scene of good acting under Lee, Digges,
-Mrs Bellamy, and Mrs Ward. We learn from Henry Mackenzie
-that the tragedy of
-<cite>Douglas</cite>, which first
-appeared here in
-1756, was most respectably
-acted&mdash;the
-two ladies above
-mentioned playing
-respectively Young
-Norval and Lady
-Randolph.<a name="FNanchor_266" id="FNanchor_266"></a><a href="#Footnote_266" class="fnanchor">[266]</a> The
-personal elegance of
-Digges&mdash;understood
-to be the natural
-son of a man of rank&mdash;and
-the beauty of
-Mrs Bellamy were
-a theme of interest
-amongst old people
-fifty years ago; but
-their scandalous life<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">{348}</a></span>
-was of course regarded with horror by the mass of respectable
-society. They lived in a small country-house at Bonnington,
-between Edinburgh and Leith. It is remembered that Mrs Bellamy
-was extremely fond of singing-birds, and kept many about her.
-When emigrating to Glasgow, she had her feathered favourites
-carried by a porter all the way that they might not suffer from
-the jolting of a carriage. Scotch people wondered to hear of ten
-guineas being expended on this occasion. Persons under the social
-ban for their irregular lives often win the love of individuals by
-their benevolence and sweetness of disposition&mdash;qualities, it is
-remarked, not unlikely to have been partly concerned in their first
-trespasses. This was the case with Mrs Bellamy. Her waiting-maid,
-Annie Waterstone, who is mentioned in her <cite>Memoirs</cite>, lived
-many years after in Edinburgh, and continued to the last to adore
-the memory of her mistress. Nay, she was, from this cause, a
-zealous friend of all kinds of players, and never would allow a
-slighting remark upon them to pass unreproved. It was curious
-to find in a poor old Scotchwoman of the humbler class such a
-sympathy with the follies and eccentricities of the children of
-Thespis.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w375">
-<img src="images/illus_p_347.jpg" width="375" height="587" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Tailors’ Hall, Cowgate.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>While under the temporary management of two Edinburgh
-citizens extremely ill-qualified for the charge&mdash;one of them, by the
-bye, a Mr David Beatt, who had read the rebel proclamations from
-the Cross in 1745&mdash;a sad accident befell the Canongate playhouse.
-Dissensions of a dire kind had broken out in the company. The
-public, as usual, was divided between them. Two classes of persons&mdash;the
-gentlemen of the bar and the students of the university<a name="FNanchor_267" id="FNanchor_267"></a><a href="#Footnote_267" class="fnanchor">[267]</a>&mdash;were
-especially zealous as partisans. Things were at that pass
-when a trivial incident will precipitate them to the most fearful
-conclusion. One night, when <cite>Hamlet</cite> was the play, a riot took
-place of so desperate a description that at length the house was
-set on fire. It being now necessary for the authorities to interfere,
-the Town-guard was called forth, and marched to the scene of
-disturbance; but though many of that veteran corps had faced the
-worst at Blenheim and Dettingen, they felt it as a totally different
-thing to be brought to action in a place which they regarded as a
-peculiar domain of the Father of Evil. When ordered, therefore,
-by their commander to advance into the house and across the stage,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">{349}</a></span>
-the poor fellows fairly stopped short amidst the scenes, the glaring
-colours of which at once surprised and terrified them. Indignant
-at their pusillanimity, the bold captain seized a musket, and
-placing himself in an attitude equal to anything that had
-ever appeared on those boards, exclaimed: ‘Now, my lads,
-follow <em>me</em>!’ But just at the moment that he was going to
-rush on and charge the rioters, a trap-door on which he
-trod gave way, and in an instant the
-heroic leader had sunk out of sight, as
-if by magic. This was too much for
-the excited nerves of the guard; they
-immediately vacated the house, leaving
-the devil to make his own of it; and
-accordingly it was completely destroyed.
-It is added that when the captain by-and-by
-reappeared, they received him
-in the quality of a gentleman from the
-other world; nor could they all at
-once be undeceived, even when he
-cursed them in vigorous Gaelic for a
-pack of cowardly scoundrels.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w175">
-<img src="images/illus_p_349.jpg" width="175" height="450" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Old Playhouse Close.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Canongate theatre revived for
-a short time, and had the honour to
-be the first house in our city in which
-the drama was acted with a license.
-It was opened with this privilege by
-Mr Ross on the 9th December 1767,
-when the play was <cite>The Earl of Essex</cite>,
-and a general prologue was spoken,
-the composition of James Boswell.
-Soon after, being deserted for the
-present building in the New Town,<a name="FNanchor_268" id="FNanchor_268"></a><a href="#Footnote_268" class="fnanchor">[268]</a> it
-fell into ruin; in which state it formed
-the subject of a mock elegy to the
-muse of Robert Fergusson. The
-reader will perhaps be amused with the following extract from that
-poem:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Can I contemplate on those dreary scenes</div>
-<div class="verse">Of mouldering desolation, and forbid</div>
-<div class="verse">The voice elegiac, and the falling tear!</div>
-<div class="verse">No more from box to box the basket, piled</div><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">{350}</a></span>
-<div class="verse">With oranges as radiant as the spheres,</div>
-<div class="verse">Shall with their luscious virtues charm the sense</div>
-<div class="verse">Of taste or smell. No more the gaudy beau,</div>
-<div class="verse">With handkerchief in lavender well drenched,</div>
-<div class="verse">Or bergamot, or [in] rose-waters pure,</div>
-<div class="verse">With flavoriferous sweets shall chase away</div>
-<div class="verse">The pestilential fumes of vulgar cits,</div>
-<div class="verse">Who, in impatience for the curtain’s rise,</div>
-<div class="verse">Amused the lingering moments, and applied</div>
-<div class="verse">Thirst-quenching porter to their parched lips.</div>
-<div class="verse">Alas! how sadly altered is the scene!</div>
-<div class="verse">For lo! those sacred walls, that late were brushed</div>
-<div class="verse">By rustling silks and waving capuchines,</div>
-<div class="verse">Are now become the sport of wrinkled Time!</div>
-<div class="verse">Those walls that late have echoed to the voice</div>
-<div class="verse">Of stern King Richard, to the seat transformed</div>
-<div class="verse">Of crawling spiders and detested moths,</div>
-<div class="verse">Who in the lonely crevices reside,</div>
-<div class="verse">Or gender in the beams, that have upheld</div>
-<div class="verse">Gods, demigods, and all the joyous crew</div>
-<div class="verse">Of thunderers in the galleries above.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">{351}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="MARIONVILLE_STORY_OF_CAPTAIN_MACRAE" id="MARIONVILLE_STORY_OF_CAPTAIN_MACRAE">MARIONVILLE&mdash;STORY OF CAPTAIN MACRAE.</a></h2>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter w375">
-<img src="images/illus_p_351.jpg" width="375" height="239" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">Marionville.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Between the eastern suburbs of Edinburgh and the village
-of Restalrig stands a solitary house named Marionville,
-enclosed in a shrubbery of no great extent, surrounded by high
-walls. Whether it be that the place has become dismal in consequence
-of the rise of a noxious fen in its neighbourhood,
-or that the tale connected with it acts upon the
-imagination, I cannot pretend
-to decide, but unquestionably
-there is about the house an
-air of depression and melancholy
-such as could scarcely
-fail to strike the most unobservant
-passenger. Yet, in
-1790, this mansion was the
-abode of a gay and fashionable
-family, who, amongst
-other amusements, indulged in
-that of private theatricals, and
-in this line were so highly successful that admission to the Marionville
-theatre became a privilege for which the highest in the land
-would contend. Mr Macrae, the head of this family, was a man
-of good fortune, being the proprietor of an estate in Dumfriesshire,
-and also of good connections&mdash;the Earl of Glencairn, whom Burns
-has so much celebrated, being his cousin, while by his mother he
-was nearly related to Viscount Fermoy and the celebrated Sir
-Boyle Roche. He had been for some years retired from the Irish
-Carabiniers, and being still in the prime of life, he was thinking of
-again entering the army, when the incident which I am about to
-relate took place. He was a man of gentlemanlike accomplishments
-and manners, of a generous and friendly disposition, but marked
-by a keen and imperious sense of the deference due to a gentleman,
-and a heat of temper which was apt to make him commit actions
-of which he afterwards bitterly repented. After the unfortunate
-affair which ended his career in Scotland, the public, who never
-make nice distinctions as to the character of individuals, adopted
-the idea that he was as inhumane as rash, and he was reported to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">{352}</a></span>
-be an experienced duellist. But here he was greatly misrepresented.
-Mr Macrae would have shrunk from a deliberate act of cruelty;
-and the only connection he had ever had with single combat was
-in the way of endeavouring to reconcile friends who had quarrelled&mdash;an
-object in which he was successful on several memorable
-occasions. But the same man&mdash;whom all that really knew him
-allowed to be a delightful companion and kind-hearted man&mdash;was
-liable to be transported beyond the bounds of reason by casual and
-trivial occurrences. A messenger of the law having arrested the
-Rev. Mr Cunningham, brother of the Earl of Glencairn, for debt,
-as he was passing with a party from the drawing-room to the
-dining-room at Drumsheugh House, Mr Macrae threw the man
-over the stair. He was prompted to this act by indignation at the
-affront which he conceived his cousin, as a gentleman, had received
-from a common man. But soon after, when it was represented to
-him that every other means of inducing Mr Cunningham to settle
-his debt had failed, and when he learned that the messenger had
-suffered severe injury, he went to him, made him a hearty apology,
-and agreed to pay three hundred guineas by way of compensation.
-He had himself allowed a debt due to a tailor to remain too long
-unpaid, and the consequence was that he received a summons for
-it before the sheriff-court. With this document in his hand, he
-called, in a state of great excitement, upon his law-agent, to whom
-he began to read: ‘Archibald Cockburn of Cockpen, sheriff-depute,’
-&amp;c., till he came to a passage which declared that ‘he, the said
-James Macrae, had been oft and diverse times desired and required,’
-&amp;c. ‘The greatest lie ever uttered!’ he exclaimed. ‘He had
-never heard a word of it before; he would instantly go to the
-sheriff and horsewhip him.’ The agent had at the time letters of
-<em>horning</em> against a very worthy baronet lying upon his table&mdash;that
-is to say, a document in which the baronet was denounced as a
-rebel to the king, according to a form of the law of Scotland, for
-failing to pay his debt. The agent took up this, and coolly began
-to read: ‘George III. by the grace of God,’ &amp;c. Macrae at once
-saw the application, and fell a-laughing at his own folly, saying he
-would go directly and give the sheriff tickets for the play at
-Marionville, which he and his family requested. It will be seen
-that the fault of this unfortunate gentleman was heat of temper,
-not a savage disposition; but what fault can be more fatal than
-heat of temper?</p>
-
-<p>Mr Macrae was married to an accomplished lady, Maria Cecilia
-le Maitre, daughter of the Baroness Nolken, wife of the Swedish<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">{353}</a></span>
-ambassador. They occasionally resided in Paris, with Mrs Macrae’s
-relations, particularly with her cousin, Madame de la Briche, whose
-private theatricals in her elegant house at the Marais were the
-models of those afterwards instituted at Marionville. It may not
-be unworthy of notice that amongst their fellow-performers at
-Madame de la Briche’s was the celebrated Abbé Sieyès. When
-Mr Macrae and his lady set up their theatre at Marionville, they
-both took characters, he appearing to advantage in such parts as
-that of Dionysius in the <cite>Grecian Daughter</cite>, and she in the first line
-of female parts in genteel comedy. Sir David Kinloch and a Mr
-Justice were their best male associates; and the chief female
-performer, after Mrs Macrae herself, was Mrs Carruthers of Dormont,
-a daughter of the celebrated artist Paul Sandby. When all due
-deduction is made for the effects of complaisance, there seems to
-remain undoubted testimony that these performances involved no
-small amount of talent.</p>
-
-<p>In Mr and Mrs Macrae’s circle of visiting acquaintance, and
-frequent spectators of the Marionville theatricals, were Sir George
-Ramsay of Bamff and his lady. Sir George had recently returned,
-with an addition to his fortune, from India, and was now settling
-himself down for the remainder of life in his native country. I
-have seen original letters between the two families, showing that
-they lived on the most friendly terms and entertained the highest
-esteem for each other. One written by Lady Ramsay to Mrs
-Macrae, from Sir George’s country-seat in Perthshire, commences
-thus: ‘My dear friend, I have just time to write you a few lines
-to say how much I long to hear from you, and to assure you how
-sincerely I love you.’ Her ladyship adds: ‘I am now enjoying
-rural retirement with Sir George, who is really so good and
-indulgent, that I am as happy as the gayest scenes could make me.
-He joins me in kind compliments to you and Mr Macrae,’ &amp;c.
-How deplorable that social affections, which contribute so much
-to make life pass agreeably, should be liable to a wild upbreak
-from perhaps some trivial cause, not in itself worthy of a moment’s
-regard, and only rendered of consequence by the sensitiveness of
-pride and a deference to false and worldly maxims!</p>
-
-<p>The source of the quarrel between Mr Macrae and Sir George
-was of a kind almost too mean and ridiculous to be spoken of.
-On the evening of the 7th April 1790, the former gentleman
-handed a lady out of the Edinburgh theatre, and endeavoured to
-get a chair for her, in which she might be conveyed home. Seeing
-two men approaching through the crowd with one, he called to ask<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">{354}</a></span>
-if it was disengaged, to which the men replied with a distinct
-affirmative. As Mr Macrae handed the lady forward to put her
-into it, a footman, in a violent manner, seized hold of one of the
-poles, and insisted that it was engaged for his mistress. The man
-seemed disordered by liquor, and it was afterwards distinctly made
-manifest that he was acting without the guidance of reason. His
-lady had gone home some time before, while he was out of the way.
-He was not aware of this, and, under a confused sense of duty, he
-was now eager to obtain a chair for her, but in reality had not
-bespoken that upon which he laid hold. Mr Macrae, annoyed at
-the man’s pertinacity at such a moment, rapped him over the
-knuckles with a short cane to make him give way; on which the
-servant called him a scoundrel, and gave him a push on the breast.
-Incensed overmuch by this conduct, Mr Macrae struck him smartly
-over the head with his cane, on which the man cried out worse than
-before, and moved off. Mr Macrae, following him, repeated his
-blows two or three times, but only with that degree of force which
-he thought needful for a chastisement. In the meantime the lady
-whom Mr Macrae had handed out got into a different chair, and
-was carried off. Some of the bystanders, seeing a gentleman beating
-a servant, cried shame, and showed a disposition to take part with
-the latter; but there were individuals present who had observed
-all the circumstances, and who felt differently. One gentleman
-afterwards gave evidence that he had been insulted by the servant,
-at an earlier period of the evening, in precisely the same manner
-as Mr Macrae, and that the man’s conduct had throughout been
-rude and insolent, a consequence apparently of drunkenness.</p>
-
-<p>Learning that the servant was in the employment of Lady
-Ramsay, Mr Macrae came into town next day, full of anxiety
-to obviate any unpleasant impression which the incident might
-have made upon her mind. Meeting Sir George in the street, he
-expressed to him his concern on the subject, when Sir George said
-lightly that the man being his lady’s footman, he did not feel any
-concern in the matter. Mr Macrae then went to apologise to Lady
-Ramsay, whom he found sitting for her portrait in the lodgings of
-the young artist Raeburn, afterwards so highly distinguished. It
-has been said that he fell on his knees before the lady to entreat
-her pardon for what he had done to her servant. Certainly he left
-her with the impression that he had no reason to expect a quarrel
-between himself and Sir George on account of what had taken
-place.</p>
-
-<p>James Merry&mdash;this was the servant’s name&mdash;had been wounded<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">{355}</a></span>
-in the head, but not severely. The injuries which he had sustained&mdash;though
-nothing can justify the violence which inflicted
-them&mdash;were only of such a nature as a few days of confinement
-would have healed. Such, indeed, was the express testimony
-given by his medical attendant, Mr Benjamin Bell. There was,
-however, a strong feeling amongst his class against Macrae, who
-was informed, in an anonymous letter, that a hundred and seven
-men-servants had agreed to have some revenge upon him. Merry
-himself had determined to institute legal proceedings against Mr
-Macrae for the recovery of damages. A process was commenced
-by the issue of a summons, which Mr Macrae received on the 12th.
-Wounded to the quick by this procedure, and smarting under the
-insolence of the anonymous letter, Mr Macrae wrote next day a
-note to Sir George Ramsay, in which, addressing him without any
-term of friendly regard, he demanded that either Merry should
-drop the prosecution or that his master should turn him off. Sir
-George temperately replied ‘that he had only now heard of the
-prosecution for the first time; that the man met with no encouragement
-from him; and that he hoped that Mr Macrae, on further
-consideration, would not think it incumbent on him to interfere,
-especially as the man was at present far from being well.’</p>
-
-<p>On the same evening Mr Amory, a military friend of Mr
-Macrae, called upon Sir George with a second note from that
-gentleman, once more insisting on the man being turned off, and
-stating that in the event of his refusal Mr Amory was empowered
-to communicate his opinion of his conduct. Sir George did
-refuse, on the plea that he had yet seen no good reason for his
-discharging the servant; and Mr Amory then said it was his duty
-to convey Mr Macrae’s opinion, which was ‘that Sir George’s
-conduct had not been that of a gentleman.’ Sir George then
-said that further conversation was unnecessary; all that remained
-was to agree upon a place of meeting. They met again that
-evening at a tavern, where Mr Amory informed Sir George that
-it was Mr Macrae’s wish that they should meet, properly attended,
-next day at twelve o’clock at Ward’s Inn, on the borders of
-Musselburgh Links.</p>
-
-<p>The parties met there accordingly, Mr Macrae being attended
-by Captain Amory, and Sir George Ramsay by Sir William
-Maxwell; Mr Benjamin Bell, the surgeon, being also of the party.
-Mr Macrae had brought an additional friend, a Captain Haig, to
-favour them with his advice, but not to act formally as a second.
-The two parties being in different rooms, Sir William Maxwell<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">{356}</a></span>
-came into that occupied by Mr Macrae, and proposed that if Mr
-Macrae would apologise for the intemperate style of his letters
-demanding the discharge of the servant, Sir George would grant
-his request, and the affair would end. Mr Macrae answered that
-he would be most happy to comply with this proposal if his
-friends thought it proper; but he must abide by their decision.
-The question being put to Captain Haig, he answered, in a
-deliberate manner: ‘It is altogether impossible; Sir George must,
-in the first place, turn off his servant, and Mr Macrae will then
-apologise.’ Hearing this speech, equally marked by wrong
-judgment and wrong feeling, Macrae, according to the testimony
-of Mr Bell, shed tears of anguish. The parties then walked to
-the beach, and took their places in the usual manner. On the
-word being given, Sir George took deliberate aim at Macrae, the
-neck of whose coat was grazed by his bullet. Macrae had, if his
-own solemn asseveration is to be believed, intended to fire in the
-air; but when he found Sir George aiming thus at his life, he
-altered his resolution, and brought his antagonist to the ground
-with a mortal wound in the body.</p>
-
-<p>There was the usual consternation and unspeakable distress.
-Mr Macrae went up to Sir George and ‘told him that he was
-sincerely afflicted at seeing him in that situation.’<a name="FNanchor_269" id="FNanchor_269"></a><a href="#Footnote_269" class="fnanchor">[269]</a> It was with
-difficulty, and only at the urgent request of Sir William Maxwell,
-that he could be induced to quit the field. Sir George lingered
-for two days. The event occasioned a great sensation in the
-public mind, and a very unfavourable view was generally taken of
-Mr Macrae’s conduct. It was given out that during a considerable
-interval, while in expectation of the duel taking place, he
-had practised pistol-shooting in his garden at a barber’s block;
-and he was also said to have been provided with a pair of pistols
-of a singularly apt and deadly character; the truth being that
-the interval was a brief one, his hand totally unskilled in shooting,
-and the pistols a bad brass-mounted pair, hastily furnished by
-Amory. We have Amory’s testimony that as they were pursuing
-their journey to another country, he was constantly bewailing the
-fate of Sir George Ramsay, remarking how unfortunate it was
-that he took so obstinate a view about the servant’s case. The
-demand, he said, was one which he would have thought it
-necessary to comply with. He had asked Sir George nothing but
-what he would have done had it been his own case. This is so
-consonant with what appears otherwise respecting his character<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">{357}</a></span>
-that we cannot doubt it. It is only to be lamented that he should
-not have made the demand in terms more calculated to lead to
-compliance.</p>
-
-<p>The death of an amiable man under such deplorable circumstances
-roused the most zealous vigilance on the part of the law
-authorities; but Mr Macrae and his second succeeded in reaching
-France. A summons was issued for his trial, but he was advised
-not to appear, and accordingly sentence of outlawry was passed
-against him. The servant’s prosecution meanwhile went on, and
-was ultimately decided against Mr Macrae, although, on a cool
-perusal of the evidence on both sides, there appears to me the
-clearest proof of Merry having been the first aggressor. Mr
-Macrae lived in France till the progress of the Revolution forced
-him to go to Altona. When time seemed to have a little softened
-matters against him, he took steps to ascertain if he could safely
-return to his native country. It was decided by counsel that he
-could not. They held that his case entirely wanted the extenuating
-circumstance which was necessary&mdash;his having to contemplate
-degradation if he did not challenge. He was under no such
-danger; so that, from his letters to Sir George Ramsay, he
-appeared to have forced on the duel purely for revenge. He came
-to see the case in this light himself, and was obliged to make up
-his mind to perpetual self-banishment. He survived thirty years.
-A gentleman of my acquaintance, who had known him in early life in
-Scotland, was surprised to meet him one day in a Parisian coffee-house
-after the peace of 1814&mdash;the wreck or ghost of the handsome,
-sprightly man he had once been. The comfort of his home,
-his country, and friends, the use of his talents to all these, had
-been lost, and himself obliged to lead the life of a condemned
-Cain, all through the one fault of a fiery temper.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">{358}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="ALISON_SQUARE" id="ALISON_SQUARE">ALISON SQUARE.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>This is a large mass of building between Nicolson Square and
-the Potterrow, in the south side of the town. It was built
-about the middle of the eighteenth century, upon venture, by one
-Colin Alison, a joiner, who in after-life was much reduced in his
-circumstances, not improbably in consequence of this large speculation.
-In his last days he spent some of his few remaining
-shillings in the erection of two boards, at different parts of his
-buildings, whereon was represented a globe in the act of falling,
-with this inscription:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘If Fortune smile, be not puffed up,</div>
-<div class="verse">And if it frown, be not dismayed;</div>
-<div class="verse">For Providence governeth all,</div>
-<div class="verse">Although the world’s turned upside down.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>Alison Square<a name="FNanchor_270" id="FNanchor_270"></a><a href="#Footnote_270" class="fnanchor">[270]</a> has enjoyed some little connection with the
-Scottish muses. It was in the house of a Miss Nimmo in this
-place that Burns met Clarinda. It would amuse the reader of
-the ardent letters which passed between these two kindred souls
-to visit the plain, small, dusky house in which the lady lived at
-that time, and where she received several visits of the poet. It is
-situated in the adjacent humble street called the Potterrow, the
-first floor over the passage into General’s Entry, accessible by a
-narrow spiral stair from the court. A little parlour, a bedroom,
-and a kitchen constituted the accommodations of Mrs M’Lehose;
-now the residence of two, if not three, families in the extreme of
-humble life. Here she lived with a couple of infant children, a
-young and beautiful woman, blighted in her prospects in consequence
-of an unhappy marriage (her husband having deserted her,
-after using her barbarously), yet cheerful and buoyant, through
-constitutional good spirits and a rational piety. To understand
-her friendship with Burns and the meaning of their correspondence,
-it was almost necessary to have known the woman. Seeing
-her and hearing her converse, even in advanced life, one could
-penetrate the whole mystery very readily, in appreciating a spirit<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">{359}</a></span>
-unusually gay, frank, and emotional. The perfect innocence of the
-woman’s nature was evident at once; and by her friends it was
-never doubted.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w500">
-<a id="illus_c_028"></a>
-<img src="images/illus_c_028.jpg" width="500" height="645" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">ALISON SQUARE.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap"><a href="#Page_358">Page 358.</a></span>
-</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In Alison Square Thomas Campbell lived while composing his
-<cite>Pleasures of Hope</cite>. The place where any deathless composition
-took its shape from the author’s brain is worthy of a place in the
-chart. A lady, the early friend of Campbell and his family,
-indicates their residence at that time as being the second door in
-the stair, entered from the east side, on the north side of the arch,
-the windows looking partly into Nicolson Square and partly to the
-Potterrow. The same authority states that much of the poem was
-written in the middle of the night, and from a sad cause. The
-poet’s mother, it seems, was of a temper so extremely irritable
-that her family had no rest till she retired for the night. It was
-only at that season that the young poet could command repose of
-mind for his task.</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360">{360}</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w450">
-<img src="images/illus_p_360.jpg" width="450" height="213" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-
-<h2><a name="LEITH_WALK" id="LEITH_WALK">LEITH WALK.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>Up to the period of the building of the North Bridge, which
-connects the Old with the New Town of Edinburgh, the
-Easter Road was the principal passage to Leith. The origin of
-Leith Walk was accidental. At the approach of Cromwell to
-Edinburgh, immediately before the battle of Dunbar, Leslie, the
-Covenanting general, arranged the Scottish troops in a line, the
-right wing of which rested upon the Calton Hill, and the left
-upon Leith, being designed for the defence of these towns. A
-battery was erected at each extremity, and the line was itself
-defended by a trench and a mound, the latter composed of the
-earth dug from the former. Leslie himself took up his head-quarters
-at Broughton, whence some of his despatches are dated.
-When the war was shifted to another quarter, this mound became
-a footway between the two towns. It is thus described in a book
-published in 1748: ‘A very handsome gravel walk, twenty feet
-broad, which is kept in good repair at the public charge, and no
-horses suffered to come upon it.’ When Provost Drummond built
-the North Bridge in 1769, he contemplated that it should become
-an access to Leith as well as to the projected New Town.
-Indeed, he seems to have been obliged to make it pass altogether
-under that semblance in order to conciliate the people; for upon
-the plate sunk under the foundations of the bridge it is solely
-described as the opening of a road to Leith. At that time the
-idea of a New Town seemed so chimerical that he scarcely dared<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_361" id="Page_361">{361}</a></span>
-to avow his patriotic intentions. After the opening of the bridge,
-the <em>Walk</em> seems to have become used by carriages, but without
-any regard being paid to its condition or any system established
-for keeping it in repair. It consequently fell into a state of
-disorder, from which it was not rescued till after the commencement
-of the present century, when a splendid causeway was formed
-at a great expense by the city of Edinburgh, and a toll erected for
-its payment.</p>
-
-<p>One terrible peculiarity attended Leith Walk in its former
-condition. It was overhung by a gibbet, from which were suspended
-all culprits whose bodies at condemnation were sentenced
-to be hung in chains. The place where this gibbet stood, called
-the Gallow Lee, is now a good deal altered in appearance. It was
-a slight rising ground immediately above the site of the toll<a name="FNanchor_271" id="FNanchor_271"></a><a href="#Footnote_271" class="fnanchor">[271]</a> and
-on the west side of the road, being now partly enclosed by the
-precincts of a villa, where the beautiful Duchess of Gordon once
-lived. The greater part of the Gallow Lee now exists in the
-shape of mortar in the walls of the houses of the New Town. At
-the time when that elegant city was built, the proprietor of this
-redoubtable piece of ground, finding it composed of excellent sand,
-sold it all away to the builders, to be converted into mortar, so
-that it soon, from a rising ground, became a deep hollow. An
-amusing anecdote is told in connection with this fact. The
-honest man, it seems, was himself fully as much of a sand-bed
-as his property. He was a big, voluminous man, one of those
-persons upon whom drink never seems to have any effect. It is
-related that every day, while the carts were taking away his sand,
-he stood regularly at the place receiving the money in return, and
-every little sum he got was immediately converted into liquor and
-applied to the comfort of his inner man. A public-house was at
-length erected at the spot for his particular behoof; and, assuredly,
-as long as the Gallow Lee lasted this house did not want custom.
-Perhaps, familiar as the reader may be with stories of sots who
-have drunk away their last acre, he never before heard of the thing
-being done in so literal a manner.</p>
-
-<p>If my reader be an inhabitant of Edinburgh of any standing,
-he must have many delightful associations of Leith Walk in
-connection with his childhood. Of all the streets in Edinburgh
-or Leith, the <em>Walk</em> in former times was certainly the street for
-boys and girls. From top to bottom, it was a scene of wonders<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362">{362}</a></span>
-and enjoyments peculiarly devoted to children. Besides the
-panoramas and caravan-shows, which were comparatively transient
-spectacles, there were several shows upon Leith Walk, which
-might be considered as regular fixtures and part of the <em>country-cousin
-sights</em> of Edinburgh. Who can forget the waxworks of
-‘Mrs Sands, widow of the late G. Sands,’ which occupied a <em>laigh</em>
-shop opposite to the present Haddington Place, and at the door
-of which, besides various parrots and sundry birds of Paradise, sat
-the wax figure of a little man in the dress of a French courtier of
-the <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">ancien régime</i>, reading one eternal copy of the <cite>Edinburgh
-Advertiser</cite>? The very outsides of these wonder-shops was an
-immense treat; all along the Walk it was one delicious scene of
-squirrels hung out at doors, and monkeys dressed like soldiers and
-sailors, with holes behind where their tails came through. Even
-the half-penniless boy might here get his appetite for wonders to
-some extent gratified.</p>
-
-<p>Besides being of old the chosen place for shows, Leith Walk
-was the Rialto of <em>objects</em>. This word requires explanation. It is
-applied by the people of Scotland to persons who have been born
-with or overtaken by some miserable personal evil. From one
-end to the other, Leith Walk was garrisoned by poor creatures
-under these circumstances, who, from handbarrows, wheelbarrows,
-or iron legs, if peradventure they possessed such adjuncts, entreated
-the passengers for charity&mdash;some by voices of song, some by
-speech, some by driddling, as Burns calls it, on fiddles or grinding
-on hand-organs&mdash;indeed, a complete continuous ambuscade against
-the pocket. Shows and <em>objects</em> have now alike vanished from
-Leith Walk. It is now a plain street, composed of little shops of
-the usual suburban appearance, and characterised by nothing
-peculiar, except perhaps a certain air of pretension, which is
-in some cases abundantly ludicrous. A great number, be it
-observed, are mere tiled cottages, which contrive, by means of
-lofty fictitious fronts, plastered and painted in a showy manner, to
-make up a good appearance towards the street. If there be a
-school in one of those receptacles, it is entitled an <em>academy</em>; if
-an artisan’s workshop, however humble, it is a <em>manufactory</em>.
-Everything about it is still showy and unsubstantial; it is still, in
-some measure, the type of what it formerly was.</p>
-
-<p>Near the bottom of Leith Walk is a row of somewhat old-fashioned
-houses bearing the name of Springfield. A large one,
-the second from the top, was, ninety years ago, the residence of
-Mr M’Culloch of Ardwell, a commissioner of customs, and noted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_363" id="Page_363">{363}</a></span>
-as a man of pleasantry and wit. Here, in some of the last years
-of his life, did Samuel Foote occasionally appear as Mr M’Culloch’s
-guest&mdash;<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Arcades ambo et respondere parati</i>. But the history of
-their intimacy is worthy of being particularly told; so I transcribe
-it from the recollection of a gentleman whose advanced age and
-family connections could alone have made us faithfully acquainted
-with circumstances so remote from our time.</p>
-
-<p>In the winter of 1775-6 [more probably that of 1774-5], Mr
-M’Culloch visited his country mansion in the stewartry of Kirkcudbright,
-in company of a friend named Mouat, in order to be
-present at an election. Mr M’Culloch was a man of joyous
-temperament and a good deal of wit, and used to amuse his
-friends by spouting half-random verses. He and his friend spent
-a week or two very pleasantly in the country, and then set out
-on their return to Leith; Mr M’Culloch carrying with him his
-infant son David, familiarly called <em>Wee Davie</em>, for the purpose
-of commencing his education in Edinburgh. To pursue the
-narrative of my correspondent: ‘The two travellers got on pretty
-well as far as Dumfries; but it was with difficulty, occasioned by
-a snowstorm, that they reached Moffat, where they tarried for
-the night.</p>
-
-<p>‘Early on a January morning, the snow having fallen heavily
-during the preceding night, they set off in a post-chaise and four
-horses to proceed on their perilous journey. Two gentlemen in
-their own carriage left the <em>King’s Arms Inn</em> (then kept by James
-Little) at the same time. With difficulty the first pair of travellers
-reached the top of Erickstane, but farther they could not go.
-The parties came out of their carriages, and, aided by their
-postillions, they held a consultation as to the prudence of attempting
-to proceed down the vale of Tweed. This was considered as
-a vain and dangerous attempt, and it was therefore determined
-on to return to Moffat. The turning of the carriages having
-become a dangerous undertaking, Wee Davie had to be taken out
-of the chaise and laid on the snow, wrapped in a blanket, until
-the business was accomplished. The parties then went back to
-Moffat, arriving there between nine and ten in the morning. Mr
-M’Culloch and his friend then learned that, of the two strangers
-who had left the inn at the same time, and had since returned,
-one was the celebrated Foote, and the other either Ross or Souter,
-but which of the two favourite sons of Thalia I cannot remember
-at this distant period of time. Let it be kept in mind that
-Foote had lost a leg, and walked with difficulty.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364">{364}</a></span></p>
-
-<p>‘Immediately on returning Foote had entered the inn, not in
-good-humour, to order breakfast. His carriage stood opposite
-the inn door, in order to get the luggage taken off. While this
-was going on a paper was placarded on one of the panels. The
-wit came out to see how all matters were going on, when, observing
-the paper, he in wrath exclaimed: “What rascal has been
-placarding his ribaldry on my carriage?” He had patience,
-however, to pause and read the following lines:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">“While Boreas his flaky storm did guide,</div>
-<div class="verse">Deep covering every hill, o’er Tweed and Clyde,</div>
-<div class="verse">The north-wind god spied travellers seeking way;</div>
-<div class="verse">Sternly he cried: ‘Retrace your steps, I say;</div>
-<div class="verse">Let not <em>one foot</em>, ’tis my behest, profane</div>
-<div class="verse">The sacred snows which lie on Erickstane.’”</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>The countenance of our wit now brightened, as he called out,
-with an exclamation of surprise: “I should like to know the
-fellow who wrote that; for, be he who he may, he’s no mean
-hand at an epigram.” Mrs Little, the good but eccentric landlady,
-now stepped forward and spoke thus: “Trouth, Maister
-Fut, it’s mair than likely that it was our <em>frien’</em> Maister M’Culloch
-of Ardwell that did it; it’s weel kent that he’s a poyet; he’s a
-guid eneugh sort o’ man, but he never comes here without poyet-teasing
-mysel’ or the guidman, or some are or other about the
-house. It wud be weel dune if ye wud speak to him.” Ardwell
-now came forward, muttering some sort of apology, which Foote
-instantly stopped by saying: “My dear sir, an apology is not
-necessary; I am fair game for every one, for I take any one for
-game when it suits me. You and I must become acquainted,
-for I find that we are brother-poets, and that we were this
-morning companions in misfortune on ‘the sacred snows of Erickstane.’”
-Thus began an intimacy which the sequel will show
-turned out to be a lasting one. The two parties now joined at
-the breakfast-table, as they did at every other meal for the next
-twenty days.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter w550">
-<a id="illus_c_029"></a>
-<img src="images/illus_c_029.jpg" width="550" height="679" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p class="center">DYERS’ CLOSE.
-<br />Old houses being demolished to make room for extension of
-Heriot Watt College.</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap"><a href="#Page_364">Page 364.</a></span>
-</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>‘Foote remained quiet for a few hours after breakfast, until he
-had beat about for game, as he termed it, and he first fixed on
-worthy Mrs Little, his hostess. By some occult means he had
-managed to get hold of some of the old lady’s habiliments,
-particularly a favourite night-cap&mdash;provincially, a <em>mutch</em>. After
-attiring himself <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">à la</i> Mrs Little, he went into the kitchen and
-through the house, mimicking the garrulous landlady so very
-exactly in giving orders, scolding, &amp;c. that no servant doubted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_365" id="Page_365">{365}</a></span>
-as to its being the mistress <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">in propriâ personâ</i>. This kind of
-amusement went on for several days for the benefit of the people
-in Moffat. By-and-by the snow allowed the united parties to
-advance as far as the Crook, upon Tweed, and here they were
-again storm-stayed for ten days. Nevertheless, Foote and his
-companion, who was well qualified to support him, never for a
-moment flagged in creating merriment or affording the party
-amusement of some sort. The snow-cleared away at last, so as
-to enable the travellers to reach Edinburgh, and there to end
-their journey. The intimacy of Foote and Ardwell did not end
-here, but continued until the death of Foote.</p>
-
-<p>‘After this period Foote several times visited Scotland: he
-always in his writings showed himself partial to Scotland and to
-the Scotch. On every visit which he afterwards made to the
-northern metropolis, he set apart a night or two for a social
-meeting with his friend Ardwell, whose family lived in the second
-house from the head of that pretty row of houses more than half-way
-down Leith Walk, still called Springfield. In the parlour,
-on the right-hand side in entering that house, the largest of the
-row, Foote, the celebrated wit of the day, has frequently been
-associated with many of the Edinburgh and Leith worthies, when
-and where he was wont to keep the table in a roar.</p>
-
-<p>‘The biography of Foote is well known. However, I may
-add that Mr Mouat and Mr M’Culloch died much lamented in
-the year 1793. David M’Culloch (Wee Davie) died in the year
-1824, at Cheltenham, much regretted. For many years he had
-resided in India. In consequence of family connection, he became
-a familiar visitor at Abbotsford, and a favourite acquaintance of
-Sir Walter Scott.<a name="FNanchor_272" id="FNanchor_272"></a><a href="#Footnote_272" class="fnanchor">[272]</a> Mr Lockhart tells us that, next to Tom
-Moore, Sir Walter thought him the finest warbler he had ever
-heard. He was certainly an exquisitely fine singer of Scotch
-songs. Sir Walter Scott never heard him sing until he was far
-advanced in life, or until his voice had given way to a long
-residence in India. Mr Lockhart also tells us that David
-M’Culloch in his youth was an intimate and favourite companion
-of Burns, and that the poet hardly ventured to publish many of
-his songs until he heard them sung by his friend. I will only
-add that the writer of this has more than once heard Burns say
-that he never fully knew the beauty of his songs until he heard
-them sung by David M’Culloch.’</p>
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366">{366}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="GABRIELS_ROAD" id="GABRIELS_ROAD">[GABRIEL’S ROAD.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>Previous to 1767 the eye of a person perched in a favourable
-situation in the Old Town surveyed the whole ground on
-which the New Town was afterwards built. Immediately beyond
-the North Loch was a range of grass fields called Bearford’s Parks,
-from the name of the proprietor, Hepburn of Bearford in East
-Lothian. Bounding these on the north, in the line of the subsequent
-Princes Street, was a road enclosed by two dry-stone walls,
-thence called the Lang Dykes; it was the line by which the
-Viscount Dundee rode with his small troop of adherents when
-he had ascertained that the Convention was determined to settle
-the crown upon the Prince of Orange, and he saw that the only
-duty that remained for him was to raise the Highland clans for
-King James.<a name="FNanchor_273" id="FNanchor_273"></a><a href="#Footnote_273" class="fnanchor">[273]</a> The main mass of ground, originally rough with
-whins and broom, but latterly forming what was called Wood’s
-Farm, was crossed obliquely by a road extending between Silvermills,
-a rural hamlet on the mill-course of the Leith, and the
-passage into the Old Town obtained by the dam of the North
-Loch at the bottom of Halkerston’s Wynd. There are still some
-traces of this road. You see it leave Silvermills behind West
-Cumberland Street. Behind Duke Street, on the west side, the
-boundary-wall of the Queen Street Garden is oblique in consequence
-of its having passed that way. Finally it terminates in a
-short, oblique passage behind the Register House, wherein stood
-till lately a tall building containing a famous house of resort,
-Ambrose’s Tavern. This short passage bore the name of Gabriel’s
-Road, and it was supposed to do so in connection with a remarkable
-murder, of which it was the scene.</p>
-
-<p>The murderer in the case was in truth a man named Robert
-Irvine. He was tutor to two boys, sons of Mr Gordon of Ellon.
-In consequence of the children having reported some liberties
-they saw him take with their mother’s maid, he conceived the
-horrible design of murdering them, and did so one day as he
-was leading them for a walk along the rough ground where the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_367" id="Page_367">{367}</a></span>
-New Town is now situated. The frightful transaction was beheld
-from the Castle-hill; he was pursued, taken, and next day but one
-hanged by the baron of Broughton, after having his hands hacked
-off by the knife with which he had committed the deed. The date
-of this off-hand execution was 30th April 1717. Both the date
-and the murderer’s name have several times been misstated.<a name="FNanchor_274" id="FNanchor_274"></a><a href="#Footnote_274" class="fnanchor">[274]</a></p>
-
-<p>Adjacent to this road, about the spot now occupied by the
-Royal Bank, stood a small group of houses called Mutrie’s Hill,
-some of which professed to furnish curds and cream and fruits in
-their seasons, and were on these accounts resorted to by citizens
-and their families on summer evenings. One in particular bore
-the name of ‘Peace and Plenty.’</p>
-
-<p>The village of Silvermills, for the sake of which, as an access
-to the city, Gabriel’s Road existed, still maintains its place amidst
-the streets and crescents of the New Town. It contains a few
-houses of a superior cast; but it is a place sadly in want of the
-<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">sacer vates</i>. No notice has ever been taken of it in any of the
-books regarding Edinburgh, nor has any attempt ever been made
-to account for its somewhat piquant name. I shall endeavour
-to do so.</p>
-
-<p>In 1607 silver was found in considerable abundance at Hilderstone,
-in Linlithgowshire, on the property of the gentleman who
-figures in another part of this volume as Tam o’ the Cowgate.
-Thirty-eight barrels of ore were sent to the Mint in the Tower
-of London to be tried, and were found to give about twenty-four
-ounces of silver for every hundredweight. Expert persons were
-placed upon the mine, and mills were erected on the Water of
-Leith for the melting and fining of the ore. The sagacious owner
-gave the mine the name of <em>God’s Blessing</em>. By-and-by the king
-heard of it, and thinking it improper that any such fountain of
-wealth should belong to a private person, purchased God’s Blessing
-for £5000, that it might be worked upon a larger scale for the
-benefit of the public. But somehow, from the time it left the
-hands of the original owner, God’s Blessing ceased to be anything
-like so fertile as it had been, and in time the king withdrew from
-the enterprise a great loser. The Silvermills I conceive to have
-been a part of the abandoned plant.<a name="FNanchor_275" id="FNanchor_275"></a><a href="#Footnote_275" class="fnanchor">[275]</a>]</p>
-<hr class="chap" /></div><div class="chapter">
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_368" id="Page_368"></a><a name="Page_369" id="Page_369">{369}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="INDEX" id="INDEX">INDEX.</a></h2>
-
-
-<ul class="index"><li class="ifrst">Abbey Chapel, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Abbey Hill, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Abbey Zett (Yett, Gate), <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Abbotsford, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Aberuchil, Lord, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Acheson House, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Acheson, Sir Archibald, of Abercairny, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Actors, Canongate Theatre, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Adam Street, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><cite>Advertiser, Edinburgh</cite>, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Advocates’ Library, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ainslie, Sir Philip, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Airth, Laird of, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Aitchinsoune, Thomas (Cunyie House), <a href="#Page_260">260</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Aldridge, Robert, dancing-master, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Alesse, Alexander, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Alison Square, <a href="#Page_358">358</a>, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Aloetic medicine, an, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Alston, Tony, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Alva, Lord Justice-clerk, <a href="#Page_204">204-208</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ambrose’s Tavern, <a href="#Page_366">366</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Amory, Captain, <a href="#Page_355">355</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Anchor Close, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Anderson, Samuel, anecdote of, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Anderson’s pills, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Angus, Earl of, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Antemanum Club, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Arbuthnot, Lord, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ardwell, residence of M’Culloch of, <a href="#Page_362">362</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Argyll, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>, <a href="#Page_345">345</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Arnot, Hugo, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Arran, Earl of, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Arrot, Dr, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Assemblies, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Assembly Close, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Assembly Rooms, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><cite>Assembly, The</cite>, a play by Dr Pitcairn, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Auchans House, Dr Johnson at, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Auld Reekie, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><cite>Auld Robin Gray</cite>, author of, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Aytoun of Inchdairnie, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Back Stairs, the, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Baijen-hole, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Baillie, Alexander, of Dochfour, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Baird, Mr, of Newbyth, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Baird’s Close, Castlehill, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Baird, Sir David, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Balcarres, Countess of, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Balfour, James, accountant (‘Singing Jamie’), <a href="#Page_141">141-143</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Balfour, Sir James (Lord Lyon), <a href="#Page_315">315</a>, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ballantyne, printer, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bank Close, Old, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bank of Scotland, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bankton House, oratory at, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bannatyne Club, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bannatyne, Sir William Macleod, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Banquet at Mint House to Danish lords, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Barnard, Mr, violinist, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bassentyne’s house, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bearford’s Parks, <a href="#Page_366">366</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Beatoun, Archbishop, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Begbie’s murder, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Beith’s or Bess Wynd, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bellamy, Mrs, <a href="#Page_347">347-350</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bell, Benjamin, surgeon, <a href="#Page_355">355</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bell’s Wynd, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bethune, Archbishop, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bethune, Cardinal, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bickers (street fights of boys), <a href="#Page_189">189</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Birrel, the chronicler, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bishop’s Land, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Black, Alexander, of Balbirney, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blackbird, a Jacobite, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blackfriars’ Monastery, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blackfriars Wynd, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Black, Joseph, Professor, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Black Wigs Club, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blair, Dr, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>, <a href="#Page_334">334</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blair, Hugh, merchant, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blair, Rev. Robert, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blair’s Close, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blue Blanket, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blue-gowns&mdash;their annual assembly, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bluidy Mackenzie, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blyth’s Close, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boar Club, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boarding-schools of last century, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bonnet Lairds’ Club, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bonnington, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Booths, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boroughmoor, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boswell, James, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boswell, James, advocate, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boswell, Sir Alexander, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <em><a href="#Footnote_103">n.</a></em>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bothwell, Adam, Bishop of Orkney, Commendator of Holyrood, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bothwell, Anne, her <cite>Lines</cite>, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bothwell Bridge, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bothwell, Earl of, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bow, angle of, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">‘Bowed Joseph,’ a general of mobs, <a href="#Page_184">184-188</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bowfoot, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bowhead, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bowhead Saints, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bowling-greens, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bow, the West, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boyd, James, White Horse Inn, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_370" id="Page_370">{370}</a></span></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boyd, Lord, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Breadalbane, Earl of, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bridge, North, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bridges, the, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">British Linen Company’s Bank, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brodie, Deacon, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brodie’s Close, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Broomfield, Andrew, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brougham, Lord, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Broughton, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Broughton, Baron of, <a href="#Page_367">367</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brownhill, James, joiner, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brown, James, builder, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brown, Mrs, of Coalstoun, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brownonian System Club, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brown’s Close, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brown Square, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bruce, Dame Magdalen, of Kinross, <a href="#Page_19">19</a> <em><a href="#Footnote_11">n.</a></em></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bruce of Kennet, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bruce of Kinnaird, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bruntsfield Links, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bryce, his small shop, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Buccleuch, Duchess of, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Buccleuch, Duke of, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Buchanan, George, <a href="#Page_288">288</a> <em><a href="#Footnote_230">n.</a></em></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Buchan, Earl of, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burke, Edward (Ned&mdash;a chairman engaged in the escape of Prince Charles), <a href="#Page_177">177</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burleigh, Lord, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burnett, Miss, of Monboddo, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burning, strange tale of a, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burns, Robert, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_351">351</a>, <a href="#Page_358">358</a>, <a href="#Page_362">362</a>, <a href="#Page_365">365</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burton, Mrs, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burt’s Letters, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Busks, enormous size of, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bute, Lord, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Byres of Coates, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Byres’s Close, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Caddies (street messengers), <a href="#Page_175">175</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cairnie, Lady, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Caithness, Earls of, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Caledonian Club, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><cite>Caledonian Mercury</cite>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Calton, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Calton Hill, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_297">297</a>, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cambuskenneth, Abbot of, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Campbell, Alexander, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_345">345</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Campbell, Lady Eleanor, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Campbell, Mrs, of Monzie, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Campbell, Mungo, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Campbell of Laguine, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Campbell, Sir James, of Aberuchil, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Campbell, Thomas, poet, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_359">359</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Canal, Forth and Clyde, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Canongate, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_295">295-301</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Canongate Council House, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Canongate Theatre, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Canongate Tolbooth, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Canonmills, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cant’s Close, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cape Club, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cardross, Lord, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Carrubber’s Close, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Carters of Gilmerton, the, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Castle-hill, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Castle Street, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cathcart, Robert, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cat Nick on Salisbury Crags, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cats, a lover of, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cayley, Squire, or Captain, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chairmen, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chalmers, Miss (Mrs Pringle), <a href="#Page_251">251</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chalmers, Miss, of Pittencrief, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chalmers’s Entry, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Changes of the last hundred years, <a href="#Page_1">1</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chapman, Walter, printer, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Charles I., <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Charles II., <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Charles X., <a href="#Page_228">228</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Charles, Prince, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Charlotte Square, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Charteris, Colonel, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chessels’s Court, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chiesly of Dairy, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Circulating Library, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Citadel of Leith, inhabitants in 1745, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">City Guard, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Clarinda, <a href="#Page_358">358</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Clarke, Stephen, musician, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Clattering of tinsmiths in West Bow, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Claudero, pamphleteer, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Claverhouse, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cleanse the Causeway, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cleghorn, Miss, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Clerihugh’s Tavern, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Clerks, drucken, of Sir William Forbes, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Clerk, Sir John, of Penicuik, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Clubs, convivial, <a href="#Page_149">149-157</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Coalstoun, Lord, and his wig, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Coates, Sir John Byres of, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cockburn, Mrs, author of <cite>Flowers of the Forest</cite>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cock-fights, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Coffee-house, John’s, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Coffee-house, Netherbow, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Coffin, the, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Coinage, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Coke, William, bookseller, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">College of King James, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">College Street, North, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">College, the, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">College Wynd, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Colquhoun, Sir James, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Commendator Bothwell’s house, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Commercial Bank, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Concerts, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Constable, Archibald, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Convivial clubs, <a href="#Page_149">149-157</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Convivialia, <a href="#Page_138">138-157</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Corelli, musician, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Corri, Signor and Signora Domenico, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><cite>Court of Session Garland</cite>, a burlesque poem, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Court, the Dirt, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Covington, Lockhart of, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Covington, Lord, fate of his gown, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cowgate, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cowgate Port, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Craigie, Lord President, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Craig, James, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Crawford, Earl of, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Crawfuird, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Creech, Provost, bookseller, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Crighton Street, Potterrow, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><cite>Criminal Trials</cite>, by Hugo Arnot, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Crochallan, a convivial society, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cromarty, Earl of, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_371" id="Page_371">{371}</a></span></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cromwell, Oliver, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Crosbie, advocate, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cross, the, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">taken down, <a href="#Page_178">178</a> <em><a href="#Footnote_154">n.</a></em></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cullen, Dr, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cullen, Lord, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cullen, Robert, mimic, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Culloden, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cumming of Lyon Office, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cunliffe, Sir Foster, of Acton, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cunningham, Rev. Mr, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cunyie House (Mint), <a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Dalrymple, Miss, New Hailes, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dalrymple, President, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dalrymple, Sir David (Lord Hailes), <a href="#Page_126">126</a> <em><a href="#Footnote_108">n.</a></em>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dancing in Edinburgh, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Allan Ramsay on, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Goldsmith on, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Danish lords entertained, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Darien Expedition, the, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Darnley, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">David I., <a href="#Page_295">295</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Davidson’s Close, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Defensive Band, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Defoe, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">‘Deid-chack,’ the, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">De la Cour, artist, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">De Witt’s map, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dhu, Sergeant John, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dick, Lady Anne, of Corstorphine, her eccentricities and verses, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dick, Sir William, &amp;c., <a href="#Page_78">78</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dicks of Prestonfield, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dickson, Andrew, golf-club maker, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dickson, Rev. David, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dickson’s Close, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dirt Court, the, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dirty Club, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><cite>Diurnal</cite>, the, of a Scottish judge, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Doctors of Faculty Club, the, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Doctor, the Tinklarian, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Donacha Bhan, a Highland poet, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Donaldson, Alexander, bookseller, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Donaldson, James, bookseller, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Douglas, Archibald, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Douglas, Duke of, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Douglas, Gavin, poet, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Douglas, Jeanie, Adam Smith’s cousin, <a href="#Page_319">319</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Douglas, Lady Anne, ghost of, <a href="#Page_343">343</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Douglas, Lady Jane, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Douglas’s Tavern, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><cite>Douglas</cite>, tragedy of, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Doune, Lord, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dowie, Johnnie, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dowie’s Tavern, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Drem, Barony of, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dresses, ladies’, of last century, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Drinking customs, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Drumlanrig, <a href="#Page_336">336</a>, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>, <a href="#Page_340">340</a>, <a href="#Page_343">343</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Drummond, Bishop Abernethy, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Drummond, Pious Club poet, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Drummond, Provost, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Drummore, Lord, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Drumsheugh, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dryden, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Duff, Miss (Countess of Dumfries and Stair), <a href="#Page_230">230</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dunbar’s Close, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dunbar, Willie, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dundas, Robert, of Arniston, Lord President, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dundee, Lord, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_366">366</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dundonald, Earl of, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dunglass Castle, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dunkeld, Bishop of, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dun, Lady, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Durie, Abbot of Dunfermline, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Easter Road, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Edward or Udward, Nicol, Provost, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Eglintoune, Countess of, <a href="#Page_192">192-198</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Eglintoune, Earl of, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Eglintoune, Miss (Lady Wallace), <a href="#Page_276">276</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Elcho, Lord, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Elibank, Lord, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Elliot, Jeanie, of Minto, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Elliot, Lady, of Minto, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Elliot, Sir Gilbert, of Minto, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Elphingston, Lady Betty, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Elphinstone, James, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Errol, Earl of (Constable), <a href="#Page_103">103</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Erskine, Alexander, the Hon., <a href="#Page_98">98</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Erskine, Harry, epigram by, on Hugo Arnot, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Erskine, James, of Cambo, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Erskine, James, of Grange, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Euphame, Mrs (Effie Sinclair), <a href="#Page_230">230</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Excise Office, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Executioners of Edinburgh, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Faculty of Doctors’ Club, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Falconer, William, author of <cite>The Shipwreck</cite>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Female dresses of last century, <a href="#Page_199">199-203</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ferguson, Dr, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fergusson, Governor, his house in the Luckenbooths, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fergusson, Robert, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a> <em><a href="#Footnote_85">n.</a></em>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>, <a href="#Page_349">349</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fergusson, Robert, the Plotter, took refuge in Old Tolbooth, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fergusson, Walter, writer, digs for water in James’s Square, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fife’s Close, Bailie, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Findlater, Earl of, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fishmarket Close, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fives, the game of, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Flockhart’s, Lucky, Tavern in Potterrow, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><cite>Flowers of the Forest</cite>, the author of, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Foliot, John and Bartoulme, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Foote, Samuel, anecdotes of, <a href="#Page_363">363-365</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Forbes, Lord President, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Forbes, Rev. Robert, Bishop of Orkney, <a href="#Page_19">19</a> <em><a href="#Footnote_11">n.</a></em></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Forbes, Sir William, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fore-stairs, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Forrest, David, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Forrester, Sir Andrew, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Forrester’s Wynd, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Forster of Corsebonny, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Forth and Clyde Canal, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fortune’s Tavern, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Foulis, William, of Woodhall, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_372" id="Page_372">{372}</a></span></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fountainhall, Lord, anecdote of, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fyvie, Lord, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Gabriel’s Road, <a href="#Page_366">366</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Galloway, Earl of, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gallow Lee, the, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>, <a href="#Page_361">361</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gallows Stone in Grassmarket, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gardenstone, Lord, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gardiner, Colonel, his oratory, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gask family, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gay, John, poet, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_338">338</a>, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Geddes, Jenny, and her stool, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ged, Dougal, of Town-guard, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ged, Misses, their boarding-school, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">General’s Entry, the residence of Burns’s ‘Clarinda,’ <a href="#Page_358">358</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">George II., <a href="#Page_279">279</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">George III., <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">George IV., <a href="#Page_269">269</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">George IV. Bridge, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">George Square, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">George Street, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gibson of Durie, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gilmerton, carters of, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gilmour, Lord President, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gilmour, Mr Little, of the Inch, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gilson, Mr, singer, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Giornovicki, violinist, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Glencairn, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_352">352</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Glenlee, Lord, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Glenorchy, Lady, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Goldsmith, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Goldsmith, account of a dancing assembly in Edinburgh, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Goldsmiths in Parliament Square, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Golfers’ Land, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Golf, the game of, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Charles I. plays on Leith Links, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Goolister, Henry, Captain, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gordon, Captain, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gordon, Duchess of, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>, <a href="#Page_361">361</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gordon family, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gordon, Mr, of Ellon, <a href="#Page_366">366</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gourlay, Robert, house of, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grace, Countess, of Aboyne and Murray, <a href="#Page_66">66</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grange, Lady, story of, <a href="#Page_211">211-221</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grange, Lord, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grassmarket, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gray, Sir William, of Pittendrum, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Green Breeks, a noted fighter, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gregory, Dr John, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Greping-office Tavern, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Greville, Lord, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Greyfriars, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Guard, City or Town, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>, <a href="#Page_348">348</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Guard-house, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Guise, Mary of, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Guthrie, Bishop Henry, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Guthrie, Rev. James, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Haddington, Earl of, <a href="#Page_99">99</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hailes, Lord (Sir D. Dalrymple), <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Haining, Lord, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Halkerston’s Wynd, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_366">366</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Halket, Miss, of Pitferran, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Halyburton, James, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hamilton, ‘Dear Sandie,’ <a href="#Page_247">247</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hamilton, Duke of, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hamilton, Marie, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hamiltons of Pencaitland, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hamilton’s Tavern, Mrs, <a href="#Page_345">345</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hamiltons, the, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hamilton, Thomas (Tam o’ the Cowgate), Lord President, first Earl of Haddington, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hammermen of Canongate, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hangman’s Craig, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hangmen of Edinburgh, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ha’s, Jenny, Ale-house, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Harcarse, Lord, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Haunted houses, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hawley, General, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hay, advocate, Lord Newton, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hay, a young criminal, singular escape, <a href="#Page_92">92</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hay, Miss, of Hayston, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Heart of Midlothian, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Heckler, the, a lunatic litigant, <a href="#Page_135">135</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hell-fire Club, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Henderland, Lord, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Henderson, Alexander, tombstone of, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hepburn of Bearford, <a href="#Page_366">366</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Herd, David, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Heriot, George, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113-116</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">stock with which he commenced business, <a href="#Page_112">112</a> <em><a href="#Footnote_84">n.</a></em>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">a costly fire, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Heriot’s Hospital, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">‘He that tholes overcomes,’ <a href="#Page_47">47</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">High Constables, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">High School, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">High School Wynd, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">High Street, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hilderstone, <a href="#Page_367">367</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><cite>History of Edinburgh</cite>, by Hugo Arnot, <a href="#Page_12">12</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><cite>History of England</cite>, by Hume, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hogg’s, Daniel, Tavern, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Holderness, Lord, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Holstein, Duke of, entertained, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Holyrood, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Holyrood, Chapel of, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Holyroodhouse, Lord, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Home, Countess of, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Home-Drummond of Blairdrummond, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Home, Earl of, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Home, Miss Betsy, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hoop, the, as worn by ladies, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hope of Rankeillor, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_218">218</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hope’s Close, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hope, Sir Thomas, K.C., <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hope, Sir Thomas, of Kerse, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hopetoun, Earl of, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>, <a href="#Page_342">342</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">‘Horn Order,’ the, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Horse Wynd, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Howard, Lady Elizabeth, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hume, David, <a href="#Page_55">55-59</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hume, Misses, of Linthill, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Humphrey, Duke, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hunter, John, Professor, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Huntly, Marquis of, <a href="#Page_19">19</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hyndford’s Close, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Inchdairnie, Aytouns of, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Inch, the, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_373" id="Page_373">{373}</a></span></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Industrious Company Club, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Infirmary Street, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Innes, Gilbert, of Stow, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Innes, Mrs Gilbert, of Stow, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Inn, White Hart, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Inn, White Horse, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irvine, Robert, <a href="#Page_366">366</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irving, General, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irving, Mrs, her recollections of the ’45, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Jack’s Land, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jacobite blackbird, a, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jail, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">James I., <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">James II., <a href="#Page_321">321</a>, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">James III., <a href="#Page_183">183</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">James IV., <a href="#Page_272">272</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">James V., <a href="#Page_229">229</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">James VI., <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_183">183</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">James’s Court, <a href="#Page_55">55-62</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">James’s Square, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jameson, George, painter, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jardine, Miss, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jeddart staff possessed by each citizen, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jeffrey, Francis, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">‘Jock o’ Sklates’ (Earl of Mar), <a href="#Page_246">246</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">John’s Coffee-house, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Johnson, Dr Samuel, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Johnston, James, of Westerhall, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Johnston, Miss Lucy, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Justice in bygone times, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Kames, Lord, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">scene at the death of, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his house, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kay’s portraits, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Keith, Bishop, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Keith, Mrs, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Keith, Sir Alexander, of Ravelston, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Keith, Sir Robert, ambassador, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kelly, Earl of, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kennedy, Sir Archibald, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kennedy, Susanna, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kerr &amp; Dempster, goldsmiths, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kerr, goldsmith, Parliament Square, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ketten’s, Michael, shoe-shop, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kincaid, Mr (a great dandy), king’s printer, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">King’s Bridge, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">King’s Park, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">King’s Stables, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kinloch, Miss, of Gilmerton, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kinloch, Sir Francis and Mrs, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kinnaird, Miss, having second sight, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kirkcudbright, Lord, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kirk o’ Field, situation of, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Knockers, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Knowles, Admiral, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Knox, John, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Krames, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Ladies and the drinking customs, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ladies of Traquair, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lady’s Steps, the, payments made at, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Laigh shops, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lally-Tollendal, Count, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lament, a, by Anne Bothwell, <a href="#Page_97">97</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lang Gait, or Lang Dykes, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_366">366</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lauderdale, Duchess of, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lauderdale, Duke of, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lauder, Sir Andrew, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lauder, Sir Thomas Dick, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lauder, Thomas, Canon of Aberdeen, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lawnmarket, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lawnmarket Club, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Leith Links, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Leith Street, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Leith Walk, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Leith Wynd, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lennox, Earl of, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Leslie, General, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Leslie, Lady Mary, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Leven, Lord, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>, <a href="#Page_311">311</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Liberton’s Wynd, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lind, Mr, of the ‘Pious Club,’ <a href="#Page_150">150</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lindsay, Sir Alexander, of Evelick, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Linlithgow road, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">List of Notables who lived in Canongate, <a href="#Page_296">296</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Little, William, of Liberton, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lockhart of Carnwath, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lockhart of Covington, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lockhart, President, murder of, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lockhart’s Court, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lodge, Canongate Kilwinning, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Logan, Rev. George, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Long Way, the, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lord’s Day, walking on the, condemned, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lorimer, the, a deceased trade, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lorne, Lord, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lothian, Earl of, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lothian Hut, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lothian, Marchioness, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Loudon, Earl of, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Loudoun, Chancellor, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Loughborough, Chancellor, his house in the Mint Close, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><cite>Lounger</cite>, the, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lovat, Lady, <a href="#Page_234">234-239</a>, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lovat, Lord, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Luckenbooths, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95-104</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lucky Fykie’s Tavern, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lucky Middleman’s Tavern, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a> <em><a href="#Footnote_134">n.</a></em></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lyon Close, Old, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Macalpine’s, Saunders, sedan-chair, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">M’Crie, Dr, <a href="#Page_273">273</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">M’Culloch, David (Wee Davie), <a href="#Page_363">363</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">M’Culloch of Ardwell, residence of, <a href="#Page_362">362</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Macdonald, Sir Alexander, of Sleat, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Macdowalls of Logan, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Macduff of Ballenloan and his two law pleas, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Macfarlane, John and Mrs, <a href="#Page_291">291</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Macfarlane, William, judge, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Macgill of Rankeillour, <a href="#Page_244">244</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Macintyre, Duncan (Donacha Bhan), poet, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mackenzie, Henry, attorney, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mackenzie, Henry (<em>Man of Feeling</em>), <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mackenzie, Hon. Stuart, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mackenzie, Sir George, <a href="#Page_93">93</a>, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><cite>Mackoull, James, Life and Trial of</cite> (supposed Murderer of Begbie), <a href="#Page_282">282</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_374" id="Page_374">{374}</a></span></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maclaurin, John, advocate, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">M’Lehose, Mrs, house of (Clarinda of Burns), <a href="#Page_358">358</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maclellans of Galloway, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maclennan, Rev. Roderick, St Kilda, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Macleod, Alexander, of Muiravonside, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Macleod, John, of Muiravonside, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Macmoran, Bailie, killed, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">banquets held in house of, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Macrae, Mr, Marionville, tragical story of, <a href="#Page_351">351</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Magdalen Chapel, Cowgate, <a href="#Page_248">248</a> <em><a href="#Footnote_211">n.</a></em></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mahogany Land, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">‘Maiden,’ the, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maitland, <cite>History of Edinburgh</cite>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><cite>Mally Lee</cite>, a ballad, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mansfield, Earl of, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">March, Lady, <a href="#Page_103">103</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mar, Countess of, <a href="#Page_74">74</a>, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mar, Earl of, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_98">98</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_246">246</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Marionville, villa of, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">theatricals at, <a href="#Page_351">351</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Martin’s Wynd, story of, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mary King’s Close, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mary of Guise, her house in Edinburgh, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">her resistance to the Reformation, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">erection of Free Church Hall on the site of her house, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mary, Queen, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mary, Regent, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maugaret, Braid Ransome, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maule, William, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maxwell, Lady, of Monreith, her house, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maxwell, Sir William, <a href="#Page_355">355</a>, <a href="#Page_356">356</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Meadows, the, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Meldrum, George, of Dumbreck, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Melrose, Abbot of, his ‘lodging’ in Edinburgh, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Melville, Lord, <a href="#Page_127">127</a> <em><a href="#Footnote_117">n.</a></em>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Merchant Street, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">‘Meridian,’ a, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Meuse Lane, St Andrew Street, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mickle, William Julius, on Parliament Close, <a href="#Page_116">116</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Miller, Sir William, of Glenlee, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Milliners, a story of two, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mint Close, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Minto, Lord, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mint, the, <a href="#Page_257">257-259</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mirror, magic, story of a, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><cite>Mirror</cite>, the, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mitchell, William, pamphleteer, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mobs of Edinburgh, <a href="#Page_183">183-188</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Modena, Mary of, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Monastery, the Blackfriars’, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Monboddo, Lord, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Monk, Peter, admiral of Denmark, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Monmouth, Duchess of, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Montagu, Lady Mary Wortley, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Montgomery, Lady Margaret, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Montrose, Marquis of, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Moray, Bonny Earl of, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Moray, Countess of, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Moray House, Canongate, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Moray, Lord, <a href="#Page_66">66</a> <em><a href="#Footnote_48">n.</a></em></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Morocco’s Land, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Morton, Regent, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Motte, De la, French ambassador, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mound, the, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Moyses’s memoirs, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Murder, extraordinary, <a href="#Page_366">366</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mure, Baron, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Murkle, Lord, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Murray, Hon. Miss Nicky, ball directress, <a href="#Page_265">265-268</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Murray, Miss, of Lintrose (‘Flower of Strathmore’), <a href="#Page_251">251</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Murray, Mr, of Henderland, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Murray, Mrs, of Broughton, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Murray, Mrs, of Henderland, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Murray, Regent, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Murray, Sir John A. (Lord), erects a statue to Allan Ramsay, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Murray, Sir Peter, of Balmanno, <a href="#Page_226">226</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Music Hall, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Musselburgh Links, <a href="#Page_355">355</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mutrie’s Hill, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_367">367</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mylne, Robert, architect, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mylnes, family of, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mylne Square, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Nairne, Katherine, her tale of guilt and escape from justice, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nairn’s Close, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Neale, John (built first house in Princes Street), <a href="#Page_7">7</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Negligée, the, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Negro servants, <a href="#Page_69">69</a> <em><a href="#Footnote_51">n.</a></em></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Netherbow Port (fortified gate), <a href="#Page_1">1</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a>, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>, <a href="#Page_331">331</a>, <a href="#Page_332">332</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Newberry, Mr J., his books for the young, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Newhall, Lord, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Newhaven, fishwomen of, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">New Street, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Newton, Lord, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_139">139</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">New Town, first house in, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Hume’s house in, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nichol, Andrew, diarist, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nichol, Andrew (‘Muck Andrew’), claimant-at-law of a midden-stead, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nicolson Square, <a href="#Page_358">358</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Niddry Street, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Niddry’s Wynd, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nimmo, Miss, in whose house Burns met Clarinda, <a href="#Page_358">358</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">North Back of Canongate, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">North Bridge, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>, <a href="#Page_360">360</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">North, Christopher, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Northesk, Earl of, <a href="#Page_204">204</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">North Loch, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_366">366</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Norton, Baron, <a href="#Page_316">316</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Odd Fellows Club, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ogilvie, Hon. Mrs, her boarding-school, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Old Bank Close, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Oliphant, Miss, of Gask, house of, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Oliver &amp; Boyd, publishers, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Oratories, a feature in houses of a certain era, <a href="#Page_29">29</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">‘Order of the Horn,’ the, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ormistounes, Laird of, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Oswald, Mr, of Auchincruive, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Oyster cellars, <a href="#Page_145">145</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_375" id="Page_375">{375}</a></span></li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Paganini, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pages, keeping of, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>, <a href="#Page_329">329</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Palmerston, Lord, a pupil of Dugald Stewart in Edinburgh, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Panmure, Earl of, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Panmure House, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Paoli, General, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Parliament Close, <a href="#Page_109">109-116</a>, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_337">337</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Parliament Council, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Parliament House, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Parliament House worthies, <a href="#Page_134">134-137</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Parliament Square, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Paterson, John, a golfing shoemaker, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Paterson, Lady Jane, <a href="#Page_212">212</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Paterson’s Court, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Paton, George, antiquary, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Patullo, William, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Peat or Pate, a, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Peebles, Peter, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Peebles Wynd, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pettigrew, Rev. Mr, of Govan, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Picardy Place, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pigs, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pinners, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pious Club, the, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pitcairn, Dr, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>, <a href="#Page_345">345</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pitcairn, Miss, <a href="#Page_345">345</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pitfour, Lord, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pitilloch, Mr, advocate, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Playfair, architect, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pleasance, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Poker Club, the, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Poole, Miss, singer, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Population returns, the first in Scotland, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Porteous, Captain (Porteous Riot), <a href="#Page_42">42</a>, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Portobello, origin of village of, <a href="#Page_332">332</a> <em><a href="#Footnote_256">n.</a></em></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Post-office Close, <a href="#Page_129">129</a> <em><a href="#Footnote_127">n.</a></em></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Post-office, old arrangement of, <a href="#Page_129">129</a> <em><a href="#Footnote_127">n.</a></em></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Potatoes, earliest trace of, in Scotland, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Potterrow, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_247">247</a>, <a href="#Page_358">358</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Prebendaries’ Chamber, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Prentice, Henry, introducer of the field-culture of potatoes, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Press, printing, used in the rebel army, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Prestonfield, <a href="#Page_78">78</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Primrose, Lady Dorothy, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Primrose, Lord, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Primrose, Viscount, a profligate, <a href="#Page_64">64</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Princes Street, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_366">366</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Princes Street Gardens, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Princes Street one hundred years ago, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Princes Street, the naming of, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pringle, Dr and Miss, Newhall, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pringle, Mr, of Haining, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Puppo, Signor, violinist, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Queen Mary, <a href="#Page_71">71</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>, <a href="#Page_257">257-259</a>, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Queensberry, Catherine, Duchess of, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Queensberry House, <a href="#Page_142">142</a>, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>, <a href="#Page_336">336</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Queensberry, second Duke of, strange story of, <a href="#Page_336">336</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Queensberry, third Duke of, and poet Gay, <a href="#Page_338">338</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Queen’s garden, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Queen Street, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Raeburn, Sir Henry, portrait-painter, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><cite>Rambler</cite>, the, reproduced in Edinburgh, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ramsay, Allan, the painter, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ramsay, Allan, the poet, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14-18</a>, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ramsay, Christian, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ramsay Gardens, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ramsay, General John, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ramsay, Lady, of Bamff, <a href="#Page_353">353</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ramsay, Miss, anecdote of, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ramsay’s Inn or Tavern, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ramsay, Sir Andrew, Provost, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ramsay, Sir George, of Bamff, killed in a duel, <a href="#Page_353">353-356</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rats, pets of Lady Eglintoune, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rats, town, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rattray, Clerk, Sheriff, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Register House, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_366">366</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Reinagle, Joseph, ’cellist, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Renton, Eleonora, of Lamerton, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Restalrig, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>, <a href="#Page_351">351</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Riddel’s Close, Lawnmarket, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Risps or tirlin’-pins on doors, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rivane, Generall, <a href="#Page_40">40</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Robertson, Principal, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rochester, Earl of, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rockville, Lord, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rollo, Lord, <a href="#Page_270">270</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Romieu, Paul, a noted watchmaker, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rope for hanging Porteous bought, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rose Court, George Street, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rose, Dr Alexander, Bishop of Edinburgh, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rosehaugh’s Close (Strichen’s), <a href="#Page_224">224</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ross House, George Square, <a href="#Page_209">209</a> <em><a href="#Footnote_177">n.</a></em></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rosslyn, Earl of, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rothes, the Duke of, his rough remark, <a href="#Page_51">51</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Roxburgh Street, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Royal Bank, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_367">367</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Royal Bank Close, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ruddiman, Thomas, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rumple-knot, the, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Runciman, painter, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rutherford, Dr Daniel (Professor), <a href="#Page_264">264</a>, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rutherford, Miss, Sir Walter Scott’s mother, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ruthven, Mr, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rye-House Plot, <a href="#Page_88">88</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">St Andrews, Bishop of, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">St Andrew Square, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">St Cecilia’s Hall, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">St Clair, Lord, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">St David Street, a joke about name of, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">St Giles’s, booths around, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">St Giles’s, characteristics of the High Kirk, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">St Giles’s Church, endowment to chaplain of, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">St Giles’s Churchyard, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">St Giles’s Clock, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">St Giles’s, memoranda of Old Kirk of, <a href="#Page_105">105-108</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">St Giles’s, Old Kirk described, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">St Giles’s, position of, relative to Heart of Midlothian, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">St Giles’s Street, suggested name for Princes Street, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">St Giles, statue of, thrown into North Loch, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_376" id="Page_376">{376}</a></span></li>
-
-<li class="indx">St Giles’s, Tolbooth Church described, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">St James’s Square, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">St John’s Cross, <a href="#Page_301">301</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">St John’s Street, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>, <a href="#Page_302">302</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">St Mary-in-the-Fields (Kirk o’ Fields), situation of, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">St Mary’s Wynd, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Saints, Bowhead, the, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Salisbury Crags, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sanctuary, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">‘Saving the ladies,’ <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Schetky, J. G. H., musician, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Scott, Sir Walter, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_24">24</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31</a>, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>, <a href="#Page_242">242</a>, <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>, <a href="#Page_365">365</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Scott, Walter, W.S., <a href="#Page_335">335</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Scott, William, Lord Stowell, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Scoundrels’ Walk, the, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Seafield, Earl of, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Selkirk, Earl of, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sellar, Mrs, milliner, anecdote of, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shakspeare Square, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sharpe, Charles Kirkpatrick, antiquary, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ship Tavern, Leith, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shows in Leith Walk, <a href="#Page_362">362</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shut-up houses in Old Town, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Siddons, Mrs, <a href="#Page_345">345</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Silvermills, village of, <a href="#Page_367">367</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sinclair, Effie (Mrs Euphame), her boarding-school, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sinclair, Sir Robert, of Longformacus, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sinclair, Sir William, of Mey, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Singing Jamie Balfour, <a href="#Page_141">141</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sinkum the Cawdy, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Skull, the, of George Buchanan, <a href="#Page_288">288</a> <em><a href="#Footnote_230">n.</a></em></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Smeaton, Mr, singer, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Smellie, William, printer of Burns’s Poems, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Smith, Adam, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Smith, David, of Methven, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Smith, ‘General’ Joe, leader of Edinburgh mobs, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Smollett, a sister of, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Smollett, Tobias, <a href="#Page_56">56</a>, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Snuff-taking, prevalence of, <a href="#Page_200">200</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Somerville, Braid Hugh, a street fight in 1640, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Somerville family, arms of, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Somerville, Lord, and his method of litigation, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Somerville, Major, his combat with Captain Crawford, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Somerville of Cambusnethan, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Somerville, Peter and Bartholomew, <a href="#Page_43">43</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx"><cite>Somervilles, Memorie of the</cite>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sommers, Thomas, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">South Back of Canongate, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">South Bridge, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Speaking House, the, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Spendthrift Club, the, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>, <a href="#Page_345">345</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Spottiswoode, John, of Spottiswoode, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Springfield, <a href="#Page_362">362</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stabilini, musician, <a href="#Page_254">254</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stair, Countess of, <a href="#Page_63">63-69</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stair, Earl of, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>, <a href="#Page_67">67</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stamp-office Close, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Star and Garter Tavern, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stays, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Steell, Sir John, sculptor, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Steil, John, musician, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stewart, Archibald, Provost, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stewart, Dugald, Professor, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stewart, General, of Garth, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stewart, James, <a href="#Page_25">25</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stewart, Robert (Rob Uncle), <a href="#Page_72">72</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stewart, Sir William, killed in Blackfriars Wynd, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stewarts of Bonskeid, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stinking Close, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stipends of Scotch Church, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stomacher, the, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Strachan, Lord, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Straiton, Colonel Charles, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Strichen, Lord, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Strichen’s Close, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sutherland, Countess of, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sutherland, Earl of, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sweating Club, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Swift, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>, <a href="#Page_315">315</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Swine roaming in the streets, <a href="#Page_100">100</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Swinton, Margaret, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Syme, Mrs, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Syme, Robert, W.S., <a href="#Page_61">61</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Tailors’ Hall, Cowgate, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tam o’ the Cowgate (first Earl of Haddington), <a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <a href="#Page_367">367</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tappit-hen, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Taverns of old times, <a href="#Page_158">158-173</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Taylor, the Water-Poet, <a href="#Page_138">138</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tea-parties, fashionable hour for, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Telfer, Mrs, Smollett’s sister, <a href="#Page_303">303</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Templars’ Lands in Grassmarket, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tenducci, singer, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tennis Court, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>, <a href="#Page_345">345</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Theatre in Canongate, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Theatre in Carrubber’s Close, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Theatre Royal, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Theatres, early, in Edinburgh, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Theophilus, Nicholaus, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thomson, George, his account of music in Edinburgh in last century, <a href="#Page_249">249-254</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thomson, poet, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thomson’s, Mrs, lodgings, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thomson, William, dagger-maker, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thrale, Mrs, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Threipland, Sir Stuart, of Fingask, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tinklarian Doctor (William Mitchell), a prating fanatic, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tinwald, Lord Justice-Clerk, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tirlin’-pins, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Toddrick’s Wynd, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tod’s Close, <a href="#Page_22">22</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tolbooth, Canongate, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>, <a href="#Page_319">319</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tolbooth Church, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tolbooth, Old, <a href="#Page_82">82-94</a>, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tolbooth or ‘Towbuith’ Whigs, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Topham, Major, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Town-guard, the, <a href="#Page_4">4</a>, <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_84">84</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_179">179-182</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Town Rats, the, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>, <a href="#Page_186">186</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Town-wall, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tradesman, habits of an old Edinburgh, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Traquair, ladies of, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tron Church, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tulzies (street fights), <a href="#Page_37">37</a>.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_377" id="Page_377">{377}</a></span></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tweeddale Court, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tweeddale, Marquis of, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tytler, Alexander, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tytler of Woodhouselee, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Udward’s house in Niddry’s Wynd, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Union Club, the, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Union, the, legends of, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">University, the, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Urbani, Mr, singer, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Veronica, Miss, <a href="#Page_60">60</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Violante, Signora, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Wallace, Lady, <a href="#Page_276">276</a>, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wall, town, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ward’s Inn, <a href="#Page_355">355</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Warriston, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Water-gate, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Water of Leith, <a href="#Page_367">367</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Waterstone, John, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Watson, George, <a href="#Page_50">50</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Webster, Dr Alexander, of convivial memory, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Webster’s Close, <a href="#Page_20">20</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Weigh-house, the, <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_39">39</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Weir, Grizel, <a href="#Page_32">32</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Weir, Major, wizard, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_31">31-37</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wemyss, Earl of, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_305">305</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wemyss, Laird of, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">West Bow, <a href="#Page_26">26-54</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">West Port, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Whey Club, the, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Whigs, Tolbooth, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Whitefield, George, in Edinburgh, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Whiteford House, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">White Hart Inn, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">White Horse Inn, <a href="#Page_2">2</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_172">172</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">White Horse Stables, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Whitesmiths of the Bow, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>, <a href="#Page_42">42</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wig Club, the, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wig, the, of Lord Coalstoun, <a href="#Page_96">96</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Williamson of Cardrona, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Williamson, Peter, <a href="#Page_114">114</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wilson, Daniel (<cite>Memorials of Edinburgh</cite>), <a href="#Page_222">222</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wilson, James (Claudero), <a href="#Page_330">330</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wilson the smuggler, <a href="#Page_52">52</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wodrow, historian, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wooden-fronted houses, account of, <a href="#Page_271">271</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Woodhead, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Woodhouselee, Lord, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wood, Lang Sandy, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wood’s Farm, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_366">366</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Woods, Mr, actor, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Worthies, the, of Parliament House, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Writers’ Court, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>.</li>
-
-
-<li class="ifrst">Young, Alexander, W.S., <a href="#Page_59">59</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Young Bibles, <a href="#Page_277">277</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Young, John, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">York, Duke of, <a href="#Page_80">80</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_248">248</a>, <a href="#Page_344">344</a>.</li></ul>
-
-
-
-<p class="center">THE END.</p></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_378" id="Page_378">{378}</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<p class="center">
-Edinburgh:<br />
-Printed by W. &amp; R. Chambers, Limited.<br />
-</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="footnotes">
-<p class="ph3">FOOTNOTES</p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1" id="Footnote_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> Mr W. B. Blaikie (<cite>The Book of the Old Edinburgh Club</cite>, vol. ii.) gives a
-list of the occupants of a first-class tenement some years subsequent to the
-’45 Rebellion: ‘First-floor, Mrs Stirling, fishmonger; second, Mrs Urquhart,
-lodging-house keeper; third-floor, the Countess Dowager of Balcarres; fourth,
-Mrs Buchan of Kelloe; fifth, the Misses Elliot, milliners and mantua-makers;
-garrets, a variety of tailors and other tradesmen.’</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_2" id="Footnote_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> Pamphlet <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">circa</i> 1700, Wodrow Collection, Adv. Lib.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_3" id="Footnote_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> Brown Square finally disappeared with the making of Chambers Street.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_4" id="Footnote_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> Mr William Cowan, in vol. i. of <cite>The Book of the Old Edinburgh Club</cite>, says
-this exemption applied to the three eastmost tenements in Princes Street.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_5" id="Footnote_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> The late Bruce J. Home drew up in 1908 ‘A Provisional List of Old Houses
-Remaining in High Street and Canongate,’ which was printed, with accompanying
-map, in the first volume of <cite>The Old Edinburgh Club Book</cite>. The statement
-is therein made ‘that since 1860 two-thirds of the ancient buildings in the Old
-Town of Edinburgh have been demolished.’ The map showed, coloured in red,
-the remaining buildings of the Old Town which had survived until the beginning
-of the twentieth century.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_6" id="Footnote_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> This jest was doubtless based on Swift’s famous poem on Vanbrugh’s house
-(1704). The peculiar architectural features of Allan’s ‘goose pie’ have been
-almost entirely obliterated by recent alterations. Only the two circular upper
-stories remain in their original form.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_7" id="Footnote_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> ‘My mother was told by those who had enjoyed his plays, that he
-had a child’s puppet stage and a set of dressed dolls for actors, which
-were in great favour with old and young.’&mdash;C. K. Sharpe’s note in Wilson’s
-<cite>Reminiscences</cite>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_8" id="Footnote_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> King’s Bridge crosses King’s Stables
-Road, and the access from it is Johnston
-Terrace.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_9" id="Footnote_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> When Mrs Cockburn, author of ‘Flowers of the Forest,’ entered on occupation
-of the house in 1756, it was described in the Baird titles as ‘my lodging in
-the castle-hill of Edinburgh, formerly possessed by the Duchess of Gordon.’</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_10" id="Footnote_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> A Board-school now occupies the site of the mansion. The doorway referred
-to is rebuilt into the school-house.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_11" id="Footnote_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> George, sixth Earl of Huntly, took his last illness, June 1636, in ‘his house
-in the Canongate.’ George, the first duke, who had held out the Castle at the
-Revolution, died December 1716, at his house in the Citadel of Leith, where he
-appears to have occasionally resided for some years. I should suppose the
-house on the Castle-hill to have been inhabited by the family in the interval.
-</p>
-<p>
-The Citadel seems to have been a little nest of aristocracy, of the Cavalier
-party. In 1745 one of its inhabitants was Dame Magdalen Bruce of Kinross,
-widow of the baronet who had assisted in the Restoration. Here lived with
-her the Rev. Robert Forbes, Episcopal minister of Leith [afterwards Bishop of
-Orkney], from whose collections regarding Charles Edward and his adventures
-a volume of extracts was published by me in 1834. [The <cite>Lyon in Mourning</cite> is
-here referred to, from which Dr Chambers published a number of the narratives
-in his <cite>Jacobite Memoirs</cite> (1834), and from which he also utilised some information
-of the Rebellion of 1745 in the preparation of his <cite>History of the Rebellion</cite>.
-At his death he bequeathed the work to the Advocates’ Library, Edinburgh,
-where it now remains. It consists of eight small octavo volumes of manuscript
-of about two hundred pages, each bound in black leather, with blackened
-edges, and around the title-page of each volume a deep black border. The
-collection was the work of the Rev. Robert Forbes, a clergyman of the
-Episcopal Church of Scotland, who became in 1762 Bishop of Ross and Caithness.
-It was treasured by his widow for thirty years, and then bought by Sir
-Henry Stewart of Allanton in 1806. Dr Robert Chambers unearthed it for
-historical purposes, and later purchased it from Sir Henry Stewart. Some relics
-which Forbes succeeded in obtaining from his correspondents&mdash;such as a piece
-of the Prince’s garter, a piece of the gown he wore as Betty Burke, and of the
-string of the apron he then had on, a fragment of a waistcoat worn by the
-Prince, and other things&mdash;were preserved on the inside of some of the boards
-of the volumes. The <cite>Lyon in Mourning</cite> was edited by Mr Henry Paton
-from the manuscript in the Advocates’ Library, and published in three volumes
-by the Scottish History Society (1895).] Throughout those troublous days, a
-little Episcopal congregation was kept together in Leith; their place of worship
-being the <em>first floor</em> of an old, dull-looking house in Queen Street (dated 1615),
-the lower floor of which was, in my recollection, a police-office.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_12" id="Footnote_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> Webster’s Close became Brown’s Close when the property changed hands,
-and two brothers of that name occupied the house. To Brown’s Close the
-recently formed Society of Antiquaries of Scotland removed in 1794 from
-Gosford’s Close, because the latter was too narrow to admit of the members
-being carried to the place of meeting in sedan-chairs.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_13" id="Footnote_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> Before the Government bounty had supplemented the poor stipends of the
-Scotch Church up to £150, many of them were so small that the widow’s
-allowance from this fund nearly equalled them. Such was the case of Cranshaws,
-a pastoral parish among the Lammermoor Hills. A former minister of
-Cranshaws having wooed a lass of humble rank, the father of the lady, when
-consulted on the subject, said, ‘Tak’ him, Jenny; he’s as gude deid as living!’
-meaning, of course, that she would be as well off as a widow as in the quality
-of a wife.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_14" id="Footnote_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> ‘The monograms of the name of our blessed lady are formed of the letters
-M. A., M. R., and A. M., and these stand respectively for Maria, Maria Regina,
-and Ave Maria. The letter M. was often used by itself to express the name of
-the Blessed Virgin, and became a vehicle for the most beautiful ornament and
-design; the letter itself being entirely composed of emblems, with some
-passage from the life of our lady in the void spaces.’&mdash;<cite>Pugin’s Glossary of
-Ecclesiastical Ornament and Costume</cite>, 1844.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_15" id="Footnote_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> Keith’s History.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_16" id="Footnote_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> The New College and Assembly Hall of the (United) Free Church.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_17" id="Footnote_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> Fellows.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_18" id="Footnote_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a> Busy.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_19" id="Footnote_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> Not improbably this was done in a spirit of literal obedience to the injunction
-(Matthew vi. 6): ‘Thou, when thou prayest, enter into thy closet.’ Commentators
-on this passage mention that every Jewish house had a place of
-secret devotion built over the porch.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_20" id="Footnote_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20"><span class="label">[20]</span></a> When Colonel Gardiner occupied it the house was known as Olive Bank.
-It was later changed to Bankton House by Andrew Macdowall, who, when
-raised to the Bench in 1755, took the title of Lord Bankton.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_21" id="Footnote_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21"><span class="label">[21]</span></a> Bankton House has been burned down and rebuilt since this was written.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_22" id="Footnote_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22"><span class="label">[22]</span></a> <cite>History of Edinburgh</cite>, p. 205, note.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_23" id="Footnote_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23"><span class="label">[23]</span></a> Before Major Weir took up house in the West Bow he is said to have
-lodged in the Cowgate, where he had as a fellow-lodger the fanatic Mitchell
-(Ravaillac <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">redivivus</i>), who attempted to shoot Archbishop Sharpe.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_24" id="Footnote_24"></a><a href="#FNanchor_24"><span class="label">[24]</span></a> Sir Andrew Ramsay was provost of the city, first from 1654 till 1657, and
-then continuously for eleven years, 1662-73. It was he who obtained from
-the king the title of Lord Provost for the chief magistrate, and secured precedence
-for him next to the Lord Mayor of London.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_25" id="Footnote_25"></a><a href="#FNanchor_25"><span class="label">[25]</span></a> The Rev. Mr Frazer, minister of Wardlaw, in his <cite>Divine Providences</cite> (MS.
-Adv. Lib.), dated 1670.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_26" id="Footnote_26"></a><a href="#FNanchor_26"><span class="label">[26]</span></a> <cite>Satan’s Invisible World Discovered.</cite></p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_27" id="Footnote_27"></a><a href="#FNanchor_27"><span class="label">[27]</span></a> The causeway. A skirmish fought between the Hamiltons and Douglases,
-upon the High Street of Edinburgh, in the year 1515, was popularly termed
-<em>Cleanse the Causeway</em>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_28" id="Footnote_28"></a><a href="#FNanchor_28"><span class="label">[28]</span></a> Cane.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_29" id="Footnote_29"></a><a href="#FNanchor_29"><span class="label">[29]</span></a> Hamstringed.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_30" id="Footnote_30"></a><a href="#FNanchor_30"><span class="label">[30]</span></a> <cite>Memorie of the Somervilles</cite>, vol. ii. p. 271.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_31" id="Footnote_31"></a><a href="#FNanchor_31"><span class="label">[31]</span></a> This house was demolished in 1836.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_32" id="Footnote_32"></a><a href="#FNanchor_32"><span class="label">[32]</span></a> Jackson’s <cite>History of the Stage</cite>, p. 418.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_33" id="Footnote_33"></a><a href="#FNanchor_33"><span class="label">[33]</span></a> See <cite>Notes from the Records of the Assembly Rooms of Edinburgh</cite>.
-Edinburgh: 1842. In the eighteenth century a lady’s ‘night-gown’ was a
-special kind of evening-dress, often of silk brocade, &amp;c., other than full dress;
-and a gentleman’s night-gown was a dressing-gown, not a bed-garment.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_34" id="Footnote_34"></a><a href="#FNanchor_34"><span class="label">[34]</span></a> It was a ball in the room of the Old Assembly Close building which
-Goldsmith describes in the letter quoted, and in which public assemblies were
-revived in 1746. The new rooms in Bell’s Wynd were opened in 1756.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_35" id="Footnote_35"></a><a href="#FNanchor_35"><span class="label">[35]</span></a> Called the ‘Ovir Bow Port.’ It stood about the line of the present Victoria
-Terrace.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_36" id="Footnote_36"></a><a href="#FNanchor_36"><span class="label">[36]</span></a> This house was demolished in 1835, to make way for a passage towards
-George IV. Bridge.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_37" id="Footnote_37"></a><a href="#FNanchor_37"><span class="label">[37]</span></a> Taken down in 1839.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_38" id="Footnote_38"></a><a href="#FNanchor_38"><span class="label">[38]</span></a> Demolished in 1833.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_39" id="Footnote_39"></a><a href="#FNanchor_39"><span class="label">[39]</span></a> The narrow, crooked West Bow, descending very steeply from the Lawnmarket
-to the Grassmarket, has been almost wholly obliterated by Victoria
-Street, a comparatively wide and gradually sloping street which crosses the
-line of the old West Bow from George IV. Bridge. Victoria Street was built
-in 1835-40; and only a few houses on one side of the head of the Bow still
-stand, and these have been rebuilt.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_40" id="Footnote_40"></a><a href="#FNanchor_40"><span class="label">[40]</span></a> From whom it got its name&mdash;James’s Court.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_41" id="Footnote_41"></a><a href="#FNanchor_41"><span class="label">[41]</span></a> A ‘land’ still standing (1912) as it was when Hume lived there. It was
-also the residence of the Countess of Eglinton when she left the Stamp Office
-Close in the High Street. See <a href="#Page_192">p. 192</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_42" id="Footnote_42"></a><a href="#FNanchor_42"><span class="label">[42]</span></a> Burton’s <cite>Life of Hume</cite>, ii. 173.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_43" id="Footnote_43"></a><a href="#FNanchor_43"><span class="label">[43]</span></a> Formerly called Blair’s Close (<a href="#Page_19">p. 19</a>). The name was altered to Baird’s
-Close when the Gordon property passed into the possession of Baird of
-Newbyth.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_44" id="Footnote_44"></a><a href="#FNanchor_44"><span class="label">[44]</span></a> Mrs Cockburn, writing to Miss Cumming at Balcarres, describes ‘a ball’
-she gave in this house. ‘On Wednesday I gave a ball. How do ye think I
-contrived to stretch out this house to hold twenty-two people, and had nine
-couples always dancing? Yet this is true; it is also true that we had a table
-covered with divers eatables all the time, and that everybody ate when they
-were hungry and drank when they were dry, but nobody ever sat down....
-Our fiddler sat where the cupboard is, and they danced in both rooms. The
-table was stuffed into the window and we had plenty of room. It made the
-bairns all very happy.’&mdash;<cite>Mrs Cockburn’s Letters</cite>, edited by T. Craig Brown.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_45" id="Footnote_45"></a><a href="#FNanchor_45"><span class="label">[45]</span></a> His lordship died September 20, 1722 (Brunton and Haig’s <cite>Historical
-Account of the Senators of the College of Justice</cite>).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_46" id="Footnote_46"></a><a href="#FNanchor_46"><span class="label">[46]</span></a> A stuff brought, I believe, from Spain, and which was at one time much in
-fashion in Scotland.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_47" id="Footnote_47"></a><a href="#FNanchor_47"><span class="label">[47]</span></a> Lady Stair’s Close was originally a <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">cul de sac</i>. When the Mound was begun
-a thoroughfare was cut through the garden, making the close the principal
-communication between the Lawnmarket and Hanover Street, then the western
-extremity of the New Town. The name it first bore was ‘Lady Gray’s Close,’
-after the wife of the builder of the house, and that of Lady Stair’s Close was
-given to it (<cite>The Book of the Old Edinburgh Club</cite>, vol. iii.) early in the eighteenth
-century, when the house passed into the possession of the first Lady Stair, a
-granddaughter of Sir William Gray of Pittendrum. Lord Rosebery, who represents
-a branch of the Primroses (other than that to which the second viscount,
-mentioned below, belonged), restored the house and presented it to the city in 1907.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_48" id="Footnote_48"></a><a href="#FNanchor_48"><span class="label">[48]</span></a> ‘Grace, Countess of Aboyne and Moray, in her early youth, had the weakness
-to consult a celebrated fortune-teller, inhabiting an obscure close in Edinburgh.
-The sibyl predicted that she would become the wife of two earls, and
-how many children she was to bear; but withal assured her that when she
-should see a new coach of a certain colour driven up to her door as belonging
-to herself, her hearse must speedily follow. Many years afterwards, Lord
-Moray, who was not aware of this prediction, resolved to surprise his wife with
-the present of a new equipage; but when Lady Moray beheld from a window a
-carriage of the ominous colour arrive at the door of Darnaway, and heard that
-it was to be her own property, she sank down, exclaiming that she was a dead
-woman, and actually expired in a short time after, November 17, 1738.’&mdash;<cite>Notes
-to Law’s Memorials</cite>, p. xcii.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_49" id="Footnote_49"></a><a href="#FNanchor_49"><span class="label">[49]</span></a> Lady Primrose’s story forms the groundwork of one of Sir Walter Scott’s
-best short stories, <cite>My Aunt Margaret’s Mirror</cite>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_50" id="Footnote_50"></a><a href="#FNanchor_50"><span class="label">[50]</span></a> This story loses its point by the discovery made in St Peter’s upon Cornhill,
-London, of the marriage register of the second Earl of Stair with Lady
-Primrose, 27th March 1708. Thus they were married persons several years
-before the presumed date of this story. Miss Rosaline Masson announced the
-discovery in an article in <cite>Chambers’s Journal</cite> for 1912, entitled, ‘The Secret
-Marriage of Lady Primrose and John, Second Earl of Stair.’ She makes this
-comment: ‘The testimony of John Waugh, Parson, has lain buried for over
-two hundred years in the old Register in the city; but the tale, whispered one
-day, some time about the year 1714, in the High Street of Edinburgh, first
-among the strutting gallants and loungers at the Cross at noon, and later on,
-over the delicate tea-cups, in the gossipy gatherings of the fair sex&mdash;that tale
-was nowise buried. It has never died. Did not Kirkpatrick Sharpe repeat it,
-sixty years after Lady Stair’s death, to young Robert Chambers, at that time
-collecting material for his inimitable book, <cite>Traditions of Edinburgh</cite>?’ The
-article further tries to answer the question why the Earl of Stair and the young
-widow made this clandestine marriage, which gave opportunity for the story.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_51" id="Footnote_51"></a><a href="#FNanchor_51"><span class="label">[51]</span></a> Negroes in a servile capacity had been long before known in Scotland.
-Dunbar has a droll poem on a female black, whom he calls ‘My lady with the
-muckle lips.’ In <cite>Lady Marie Stuart’s Household Book</cite>, referring to the early
-part of the seventeenth century, there is mention of ‘ane inventorie of the
-gudes and geir whilk pertenit to Dame Lilias Ruthven, Lady Drummond,’
-which includes as an item, ‘the black boy and the papingoe [peacock];’ in so
-humble an association was it then thought proper to place a human being who
-chanced to possess a dark skin.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_52" id="Footnote_52"></a><a href="#FNanchor_52"><span class="label">[52]</span></a> Raised to the Bench with the title of Lord Kerse.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_53" id="Footnote_53"></a><a href="#FNanchor_53"><span class="label">[53]</span></a> The lintel bearing this legend is preserved in a doorway at the top of the
-staircase of the Free Library, George IV. Bridge. The Cowgate portion of
-the Library building (1887-89) occupies the site of Sir Thomas Hope’s house.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_54" id="Footnote_54"></a><a href="#FNanchor_54"><span class="label">[54]</span></a> While King’s Advocate, Sir Thomas Hope had the unique experience of
-pleading at the Bar before two of his sons who were judges&mdash;Lord Craighall
-and Lord Kerse. There is a tradition that when addressing the Court he
-remained covered, and that from this circumstance the Lord Advocates still
-have this privilege, although they do not exercise it. Probably the custom
-introduced by Sir Thomas Hope originated in his being an officer of state,
-which entitled him to sit in parliament wearing his hat, and he claimed the
-same privilege when appearing before the judges.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_55" id="Footnote_55"></a><a href="#FNanchor_55"><span class="label">[55]</span></a> See a Memoir by Sir Archibald Steuart Denham in the publications of the
-Maitland Club.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_56" id="Footnote_56"></a><a href="#FNanchor_56"><span class="label">[56]</span></a> The site of Chiesly’s house is that occupied by the Episcopal Church
-Training College in Orwell Place.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_57" id="Footnote_57"></a><a href="#FNanchor_57"><span class="label">[57]</span></a> In <cite>The Domestic Annals of Scotland</cite> the place of his execution is given as
-Drumsheugh, and Sir Walter Scott says he was hanged near his own house
-of Dalry.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_58" id="Footnote_58"></a><a href="#FNanchor_58"><span class="label">[58]</span></a> This was the first High School, built in 1578 in the grounds of the Blackfriars’
-Monastery, of which David Malloch, or Mallet, was janitor in 1717. The
-building faced the Canongate. In 1777 it was replaced by the building now
-facing Infirmary Street and used in connection with the university. It is
-this later building that is associated with Sir Walter Scott, Lord Brougham,
-Lord Jeffrey, Lord Cockburn, and other eminent men of the last quarter of the
-eighteenth and first quarter of the nineteenth century.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_59" id="Footnote_59"></a><a href="#FNanchor_59"><span class="label">[59]</span></a> The Mechanics’ Library was discontinued when the Free Library was
-opened. Bailie Macmoran’s house is now used as a university settlement.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_60" id="Footnote_60"></a><a href="#FNanchor_60"><span class="label">[60]</span></a> After being the residence for a time of Sir John Clerk of Penicuik and other
-notable citizens, it was latterly occupied by the widow (the seventh wife) of
-the Rev. David Williamson&mdash;‘Dainty Davie’&mdash;minister of St Cuthbert’s Church
-at the time of the Revolution.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_61" id="Footnote_61"></a><a href="#FNanchor_61"><span class="label">[61]</span></a> The house is marked No. 21. Its back windows enjoy a fine view of the
-Firth of Forth and the Fife hills. The registration of his lordship’s birth
-appears as follows: ‘Wednesday, 30th September 1778, Henry Brougham, Esq.,
-parish of St Gilles (<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">sic</i>), and Eleonora Syme, his spouse, a son born the 19th
-current, named Henry Peter. Witnesses, Mr Archibald Hope, Royal Bank,
-and Principal Robertson.’ The parts of the New Town then built belonged to
-St Giles’s parish.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_62" id="Footnote_62"></a><a href="#FNanchor_62"><span class="label">[62]</span></a> These verses are to be found in a curious volume, which appeared in
-London in 1618, under the title of <cite>Essayes and Characters of a Prison and
-Prisoners</cite>, by Geffray Mynshul, of Grayes Inn, Gent. Reprinted, 1821, by
-W. &amp; C. Tait, Edinburgh. The lines were applied specially to the King’s
-Bench Prison.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_63" id="Footnote_63"></a><a href="#FNanchor_63"><span class="label">[63]</span></a> A large white house near the Castle, on the north side of the street, and
-now (1868) no more.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_64" id="Footnote_64"></a><a href="#FNanchor_64"><span class="label">[64]</span></a> Katherine Nairne was the niece of Sir William Nairne, later a judge under
-the title of Lord Dunsinnane, and it was currently reported that her escape
-from the Tolbooth was effected through his connivance. Sir William’s clerk
-accompanied the lady to Dover, and had great difficulty in preventing her
-recognition and arrest through her levity on the journey.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_65" id="Footnote_65"></a><a href="#FNanchor_65"><span class="label">[65]</span></a> Up to the year 1830, when George IV. Bridge gave easy access to Parliament
-House, this quaint custom was followed by Lord Glenlee, who walked from his
-house in Brown Square, down Crombie’s Close, across the Cowgate, and up the
-Back Stairs.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_66" id="Footnote_66"></a><a href="#FNanchor_66"><span class="label">[66]</span></a> Napier of Merchiston.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_67" id="Footnote_67"></a><a href="#FNanchor_67"><span class="label">[67]</span></a> This projection is still a notable architectural
-feature in the open space at the
-back of the tenement referred to. The
-original windows have been built up. One of the lettered stones bearing the
-words, ‘Blessit be God for all his giftis’&mdash;a favourite motto with old Edinburgh
-builders&mdash;was removed to Easter Coates house, where it may still be seen in
-that now old building adjoining St Mary’s Cathedral.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_68" id="Footnote_68"></a><a href="#FNanchor_68"><span class="label">[68]</span></a> From this tradition it was known as ‘The Cromwell Bartizan.’ Dunbar’s
-Close did not get its name from its supposed association with Cromwell’s
-soldiers, but from a family that lived in it. At an earlier period it was known
-as Ireland’s Close.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_69" id="Footnote_69"></a><a href="#FNanchor_69"><span class="label">[69]</span></a> Edinburgh was not in this respect worse than other European cities. Paris,
-at least, was equally disgusting. Rigord, who wrote in the twelfth century,
-tells us that the king, standing one day at the window of his palace near the
-Seine, and observing that the dirt thrown up by the carriages produced a most
-offensive stench, resolved to remedy this intolerable nuisance by causing the
-streets to be paved. For a long time swine were permitted to wallow in them;
-till the young Philip being killed by a fall from his horse, from a sow running
-between its legs, an order was issued that no swine should in future run about
-the street. The monks of the Abbey of St Anthony remonstrated fiercely
-against this order, alleging that the prevention of the saint’s swine from
-enjoying the liberty of going where they pleased was a want of respect to
-their patron. It was therefore found necessary to grant them the privilege of
-wallowing in the dirt without molestation, requiring the monks only to turn
-them out with bells about their necks.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_70" id="Footnote_70"></a><a href="#FNanchor_70"><span class="label">[70]</span></a>
-</p>
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘To recreat hir hie renoun,</div>
-<div class="verse">Of curious things thair wes all sort,</div>
-<div class="verse">The stairs and houses of the toun</div>
-<div class="verse">With tapestries were spread athort:</div>
-<div class="verse">Quhair histories men micht behould,</div>
-<div class="verse">With images and anticks auld.</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">The description of the qveen’s maiesties<br />
-maist honorable entry into the town of<br />
-edinbvrgh, vpon the 19. day of maii, 1590.<br />
-By john bvrel.</span>’&mdash;<cite>Watson’s Collection of Scots<br />
-Poems</cite> (1709).</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_71" id="Footnote_71"></a><a href="#FNanchor_71"><span class="label">[71]</span></a> In the early times these privileged beggars were called ‘Bedesmen,’ from
-telling their beads as they walked from Holyrood to St Giles’. From the
-erection of the Canongate Church in 1690 the ceremony took place there, until
-it was discontinued in the first years of Queen Victoria’s reign. A well-known
-worthy of this community was reputed in 1837 to possess property which
-yielded an annual income of £120.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_72" id="Footnote_72"></a><a href="#FNanchor_72"><span class="label">[72]</span></a> We learn from Crawford’s <cite>History of the University</cite> (MS. Adv. Lib.) that
-the service was read that day in the Old Kirk on account of the more dignified
-place of worship towards the east being then under the process of alteration
-for the erection of the altar, ‘and other pendicles of that idolatrous worship.’</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_73" id="Footnote_73"></a><a href="#FNanchor_73"><span class="label">[73]</span></a> <cite>Notes upon the Phœnix edition of the Pastoral Letter</cite>, by S. Johnson, 1694.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_74" id="Footnote_74"></a><a href="#FNanchor_74"><span class="label">[74]</span></a> Wodrow, in his <cite>Diary</cite>, makes a statement apparently at issue with that in
-the text, both in respect of locality and person:
-</p>
-<p>
-‘It is the constantly believed tradition that it was Mrs Mean, wife to John
-Mean, merchant in Edinburgh, who threw the first stool when the service-book
-was read in the New Kirk, Edinburgh, 1637, and that many of the lasses that
-carried on the fray were preachers in disguise, for they threw stools to a great
-length.’</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_75" id="Footnote_75"></a><a href="#FNanchor_75"><span class="label">[75]</span></a> A newspaper commenced after the Restoration, and continued through
-eleven numbers.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_76" id="Footnote_76"></a><a href="#FNanchor_76"><span class="label">[76]</span></a> Small stools.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_77" id="Footnote_77"></a><a href="#FNanchor_77"><span class="label">[77]</span></a> See <cite>St Giles’, Edinburgh: Church, College, and Cathedral</cite>, by the Rev. Sir
-J. Cameron Lees, D.D.; also <cite>Historical Sketch of St Giles’ Cathedral</cite>, by
-William Chambers, by whom the cathedral was restored in 1872-83. Regarding
-the reinterment of Montrose, there is a narrative, with some fresh light on
-the subject, in the paper, ‘The Embalming of Montrose,’ in the first volume of
-<cite>The Book of the Old Edinburgh Club</cite>. The monuments to Knox, the Earl of
-Murray, and the Marquises of Argyll and Montrose are quite modern.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_78" id="Footnote_78"></a><a href="#FNanchor_78"><span class="label">[78]</span></a> St Giles’ churchyard was divided into two terraces by the old city wall
-(1450), which was built half-way down the sloping ground on the south side of
-the High Street. A part of this wall was exposed in 1832 when excavations
-were made for additional buildings at the Advocates’ Library.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_79" id="Footnote_79"></a><a href="#FNanchor_79"><span class="label">[79]</span></a> Previous to 1681 the inhabitants of Edinburgh were supplied with water
-from pump-wells in the south side of the Cowgate.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_80" id="Footnote_80"></a><a href="#FNanchor_80"><span class="label">[80]</span></a> Which also were destroyed in the fires of 1824.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_81" id="Footnote_81"></a><a href="#FNanchor_81"><span class="label">[81]</span></a> The Wemysses’ footman was one of the few arrested on suspicion of being
-a ringleader in the Porteous riot.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_82" id="Footnote_82"></a><a href="#FNanchor_82"><span class="label">[82]</span></a> John’s Coffee-house was then situated in the north-east corner of
-Parliament Close.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_83" id="Footnote_83"></a><a href="#FNanchor_83"><span class="label">[83]</span></a> Baijen-hole, see <a href="#Footnote_140">note</a>, <a href="#Page_155">p. 155</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_84" id="Footnote_84"></a><a href="#FNanchor_84"><span class="label">[84]</span></a> In the early times above referred to, £100 was accounted a sufficient capital
-for a young goldsmith&mdash;being just so much as purchased his furnace, tools, &amp;c.,
-served to fit up his shop, and enabled him to enter the Incorporation, which
-alone required £40 out of the £100. The stock with which George Heriot
-commenced business at a much earlier period (1580)&mdash;said to have been about
-£200&mdash;must therefore be considered a proof of the wealth of that celebrated
-person’s family.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_85" id="Footnote_85"></a><a href="#FNanchor_85"><span class="label">[85]</span></a> Peter had, in early life, been kidnapped and sold to the plantations. After
-spending some time among the North American Indians, he came back to
-Scotland, and began business in Edinburgh as a vintner. Robert Fergusson,
-in his poem entitled <cite>The Rising of the Session</cite>, thus alludes to a little tavern he
-kept within the Parliament House:
-</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="wideverse">‘This vacance is a heavy doom</div>
-<div class="wideverse">On Indian Peter’s coffee-room,</div>
-<div class="wideverse">For a’ his china pigs are toom;</div>
-<div class="wideverse indent6">Nor do we see</div>
-<div class="wideverse">In wine the soukar biskets soom</div>
-<div class="wideverse indent6">As light’s a flee.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>
-Peter afterwards established a penny-post in Edinburgh, which became so
-profitable in his hands that the General Post-office gave him a handsome
-compensation for it. He was also the first to print a street directory in
-Edinburgh. He died January 19, 1799.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_86" id="Footnote_86"></a><a href="#FNanchor_86"><span class="label">[86]</span></a> Provost Creech was the first who had the good taste to abandon the
-practice.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_87" id="Footnote_87"></a><a href="#FNanchor_87"><span class="label">[87]</span></a> See <cite>Collection of Original Poems by Scotch Gentlemen</cite>, vol. ii. 137 (1762).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_88" id="Footnote_88"></a><a href="#FNanchor_88"><span class="label">[88]</span></a> An Edinburgh term applied to a class of rogues. Probably a corrupt pronunciation
-of the English word <em>cully</em>&mdash;to fool, to cheat.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_89" id="Footnote_89"></a><a href="#FNanchor_89"><span class="label">[89]</span></a> Where the North Bridge now stands.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_90" id="Footnote_90"></a><a href="#FNanchor_90"><span class="label">[90]</span></a> A full description of the old Parliament Hall, with a plan showing the
-divisions and the arrangements of the ‘booths,’ is given in <cite>Reekiana</cite>; <cite>or, Minor
-Antiquities of Edinburgh</cite>. It is not now called the Outer House.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_91" id="Footnote_91"></a><a href="#FNanchor_91"><span class="label">[91]</span></a> Several of the illustrations in the present section are immediately derived
-from a curious volume, full of entertainment for a denizen of the Parliament
-House&mdash;<cite>The Court of Session Garland</cite>. Edinburgh: Thomas Stevenson. 1839.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_92" id="Footnote_92"></a><a href="#FNanchor_92"><span class="label">[92]</span></a> <cite>A Moral Discourse on the Power of Interest.</cite> By David Abercromby, M.D.
-London, 1691. P. 60.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_93" id="Footnote_93"></a><a href="#FNanchor_93"><span class="label">[93]</span></a> John Sinclair of Murkle, appointed a Lord of Session in 1733.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_94" id="Footnote_94"></a><a href="#FNanchor_94"><span class="label">[94]</span></a> Alexander Leslie, advocate, succeeded his nephew as fifth Earl of Leven,
-and fourth Earl of Melville, in 1729. He was named a Lord of Session, and
-took his seat on the bench on the 11th of July 1734. He died 2nd February
-1754.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_95" id="Footnote_95"></a><a href="#FNanchor_95"><span class="label">[95]</span></a> Sir Walter Pringle of Newhall, raised to the bench in 1718.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_96" id="Footnote_96"></a><a href="#FNanchor_96"><span class="label">[96]</span></a> Andrew Fletcher of Milton was appointed, on the resignation of James
-Erskine of Grange, Lord Justice-clerk, and took his seat on the bench 21st June
-1735.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_97" id="Footnote_97"></a><a href="#FNanchor_97"><span class="label">[97]</span></a> Probably Gibson of Pentland.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_98" id="Footnote_98"></a><a href="#FNanchor_98"><span class="label">[98]</span></a> Hew Dalrymple of Drummore, appointed a Lord of Session in 1726.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_99" id="Footnote_99"></a><a href="#FNanchor_99"><span class="label">[99]</span></a> Afterwards Lord Dreghorn.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_100" id="Footnote_100"></a><a href="#FNanchor_100"><span class="label">[100]</span></a> Author of a Treatise on Election Laws, and Solicitor-general during the
-Coalition Ministry in 1783.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_101" id="Footnote_101"></a><a href="#FNanchor_101"><span class="label">[101]</span></a> Afterwards Lord Polkemmet.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_102" id="Footnote_102"></a><a href="#FNanchor_102"><span class="label">[102]</span></a> Afterwards Lord Eskgrove and Lord Justice-clerk.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_103" id="Footnote_103"></a><a href="#FNanchor_103"><span class="label">[103]</span></a> Alexander Boswell, Esq., of Auchinleck, the author’s father&mdash;appointed to
-the bench in 1754; died 1782. This gentleman was a precise old Presbyterian,
-and therefore the most opposite creature in the world to his son, who was a
-cavalier in politics and an Episcopalian.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_104" id="Footnote_104"></a><a href="#FNanchor_104"><span class="label">[104]</span></a> Afterwards Lord Braxfield&mdash;appointed 1776; died 1800, while holding the
-office of Lord Justice-clerk. Lord Braxfield is the prototype of Stevenson’s
-<cite>Weir of Hermiston</cite>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_105" id="Footnote_105"></a><a href="#FNanchor_105"><span class="label">[105]</span></a> Alexander Lockhart, Esq., decidedly the greatest lawyer at the Scottish bar
-in his day&mdash;appointed to the bench in 1774; died in 1782.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_106" id="Footnote_106"></a><a href="#FNanchor_106"><span class="label">[106]</span></a> Andrew Pringle, Esq.&mdash;appointed a judge in 1759; died 1776. This gentleman
-was remarkable for his fine oratory, which was praised highly by Sheridan
-the lecturer (father of R. B. Sheridan) in his <cite>Discourses on English Oratory</cite>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_107" id="Footnote_107"></a><a href="#FNanchor_107"><span class="label">[107]</span></a> Henry Home, Esq.&mdash;raised to the bench 1752; died 1783. This great man,
-so remarkable for his metaphysical subtlety and literary abilities, was strangely
-addicted to the use of the coarse word in the text.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_108" id="Footnote_108"></a><a href="#FNanchor_108"><span class="label">[108]</span></a> Sir David Dalrymple&mdash;appointed a judge in 1766; died 1792. A story is
-told of Lord Hailes once making a serious objection to a law-paper, and, in
-consequence, to the whole suit to which it belonged, on account of the word
-<em>justice</em> being spelt in the manner mentioned in the text. Perhaps no author
-ever affected so much critical accuracy as Lord Hailes, and yet there never was
-a book published with so large an array of <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">corrigenda et addenda</i> as the first
-edition of the <cite>Annals of Scotland</cite>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_109" id="Footnote_109"></a><a href="#FNanchor_109"><span class="label">[109]</span></a> George Brown, Esq., of Coalstoun&mdash;appointed 1756; died 1776.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_110" id="Footnote_110"></a><a href="#FNanchor_110"><span class="label">[110]</span></a> Alexander Fraser of Strichen&mdash;appointed 1730; died 1774.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_111" id="Footnote_111"></a><a href="#FNanchor_111"><span class="label">[111]</span></a> James Erskine, Esq., subsequently titled Lord Alva&mdash;appointed 1761;
-died 1796. He was of exceedingly small stature, and upon that account
-denominated ‘Lordie.’</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_112" id="Footnote_112"></a><a href="#FNanchor_112"><span class="label">[112]</span></a> James Veitch, Esq.&mdash;appointed 1761; died 1793.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_113" id="Footnote_113"></a><a href="#FNanchor_113"><span class="label">[113]</span></a> Francis Garden, Esq.&mdash;appointed 1764; died 1793&mdash;author of several
-respectable literary productions.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_114" id="Footnote_114"></a><a href="#FNanchor_114"><span class="label">[114]</span></a> Robert Dundas, Esq., of Arniston&mdash;appointed 1760; died 1787.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_115" id="Footnote_115"></a><a href="#FNanchor_115"><span class="label">[115]</span></a> The bench being semicircular, and the President sitting in the centre, the
-seven judges on his right hand formed the <em>east</em> wing, those on his left formed
-the <em>west</em>. The decisions were generally announced by the words ‘Adhere’ and
-‘Alter’&mdash;the former meaning an affirmance, the latter a reversal, of the judgment
-of the Lord Ordinary.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_116" id="Footnote_116"></a><a href="#FNanchor_116"><span class="label">[116]</span></a> The term of the summer session was then from the 12th of June to the 12th
-of August.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_117" id="Footnote_117"></a><a href="#FNanchor_117"><span class="label">[117]</span></a> Henry, first Viscount Melville, then coming forward as an advocate at the
-Scottish bar. When this great man passed advocate, he was so low in cash
-that, after going through the necessary forms, he had only one guinea left in
-his pocket. Upon coming home, he gave this to his sister (who lived with
-him), in order that she might purchase him a gown; after which he had not a
-penny. However, his talents soon filled his coffers. The gown is yet preserved
-by the family.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_118" id="Footnote_118"></a><a href="#FNanchor_118"><span class="label">[118]</span></a> ‘To See’ is to appoint the petition against the judgment pronounced to be
-answered.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_119" id="Footnote_119"></a><a href="#FNanchor_119"><span class="label">[119]</span></a> John Erskine of Carnock, author of the <cite>Institute of the Law of Scotland</cite>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_120" id="Footnote_120"></a><a href="#FNanchor_120"><span class="label">[120]</span></a> Thomas Miller, Esq., of Glenlee&mdash;appointed to this office in 1766, upon
-the death of Lord Minto. He filled this situation till the death of Robert
-Dundas, in 1787, when (January 1788) he was made President of the Court of
-Session, and created a baronet, in requital for his long service as a judge.
-Being then far advanced in life, he did not live long to enjoy his new accession
-of honours, but died in September 1789.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_121" id="Footnote_121"></a><a href="#FNanchor_121"><span class="label">[121]</span></a> John Campbell, Esq., of Stonefield.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_122" id="Footnote_122"></a><a href="#FNanchor_122"><span class="label">[122]</span></a> James Burnet, Esq.&mdash;appointed 1767; died 1799.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_123" id="Footnote_123"></a><a href="#FNanchor_123"><span class="label">[123]</span></a> James Fergusson, Esq.&mdash;appointed 1761; died 1777. He always wore his
-hat on the bench, on account of sore eyes.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_124" id="Footnote_124"></a><a href="#FNanchor_124"><span class="label">[124]</span></a> Robert Bruce, Esq.&mdash;appointed 1764; died 1785.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_125" id="Footnote_125"></a><a href="#FNanchor_125"><span class="label">[125]</span></a> Alexander Tait, Clerk of Session.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_126" id="Footnote_126"></a><a href="#FNanchor_126"><span class="label">[126]</span></a> He was the grandson of Lord President Lockhart, who was shot by
-Chiesly of Dalry (see <a href="#Page_75">p. 75</a>).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_127" id="Footnote_127"></a><a href="#FNanchor_127"><span class="label">[127]</span></a> Within the memory of an old citizen, who was living in 1833, the Post-office
-was in the first floor of a house near the Cross, above an alley which still bears
-the name of the Post-office Close. Thence it was removed to a floor in the
-south side of the Parliament Square, which was fitted up like a shop, and the
-letters were dealt across an ordinary counter, like other goods. At this time
-all the out-of-door business of delivery was managed by one letter-carrier.
-About 1745 the London bag brought on one occasion no more than a single letter,
-addressed to the British Linen Company. From the Parliament Square the
-office was removed to Lord Covington’s house, above described; thence, after
-some years, to a house in North Bridge Street; thence to Waterloo Place; and
-finally, to a new and handsome structure on the North Bridge.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_128" id="Footnote_128"></a><a href="#FNanchor_128"><span class="label">[128]</span></a> Lord Gardenstone erected the building (in the form of a Grecian temple)
-which encloses St Bernard’s Well, on the Water of Leith, between the Dean
-Bridge and Stockbridge. He also founded the town of Laurencekirk in
-Kincardineshire, which he hoped to make a manufacturing centre.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_129" id="Footnote_129"></a><a href="#FNanchor_129"><span class="label">[129]</span></a> Notes to <cite>Redgauntlet</cite>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_130" id="Footnote_130"></a><a href="#FNanchor_130"><span class="label">[130]</span></a> Lord Grange, whose <cite>Diary of a Senator of the College of Justice</cite> was published
-in 1833.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_131" id="Footnote_131"></a><a href="#FNanchor_131"><span class="label">[131]</span></a> Lord Newton was known as ‘The Mighty.’ Lord Cockburn says it was
-not uncommon for judges on the bench to provide themselves with a bottle of
-port, which they consumed while listening to the case being tried before them.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_132" id="Footnote_132"></a><a href="#FNanchor_132"><span class="label">[132]</span></a> This story is told of John Clerk, who afterwards sat on the bench as Lord
-Eldin.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_133" id="Footnote_133"></a><a href="#FNanchor_133"><span class="label">[133]</span></a> It was very common for Scotch ladies of rank, even till the middle of the
-last century, to wear black masks in walking abroad or airing in a carriage;
-and for some gentlemen, too, who were vain of their complexion. They were
-kept close to the face by means of a string, having a button of glass or precious
-stone at the end, which the lady held in her mouth. This practice, I understand,
-did not in the least interrupt the flow of tittle-tattle and scandal among
-the fair wearers.
-</p>
-<p>
-We are told, in a curious paper in the <cite>Edinburgh Magazine</cite> for August 1817,
-that at the period above mentioned, ‘though it was a disgrace for ladies to be
-seen drunk, yet it was none to be a little intoxicated in good company.’</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_134" id="Footnote_134"></a><a href="#FNanchor_134"><span class="label">[134]</span></a> The principal oyster-parties, in old times, took place in Lucky Middlemass’s
-tavern in the Cowgate (where the south pier of the [South] bridge now stands),
-which was the resort of Fergusson and his fellow-wits&mdash;as witness his own
-verse:
-</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="wideverse">‘When big as burns the gutters rin,</div>
-<div class="wideverse">If ye ha’e catched a droukit skin,</div>
-<div class="wideverse">To Luckie Middlemist’s loup in,</div>
-<div class="wideverse indent6">And sit fu’ snug,</div>
-<div class="wideverse">Owre oysters and a dram o’ gin,</div>
-<div class="wideverse indent6">Or haddock lug.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>
-At these fashionable parties, the ladies would sometimes have the oyster-women
-to dance in the ball-room, though they were known to be of the worst
-character. This went under the convenient name of <em>frolic</em>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_135" id="Footnote_135"></a><a href="#FNanchor_135"><span class="label">[135]</span></a> The cry of ‘Gardy loo!’ at this hour was supposed to warn pedestrians;
-but, as Sir Walter Scott says, ‘it was sometimes like the shriek of the water-kelpie,
-rather the elegy than the warning of the overwhelmed passenger.’</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_136" id="Footnote_136"></a><a href="#FNanchor_136"><span class="label">[136]</span></a> This highly appropriate popular <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">sobriquet</i> cannot be traced beyond the reign
-of Charles II. Tradition assigns the following as the origin of the phrase: An
-old gentleman in Fife, designated Durham of Largo, was in the habit, at the
-period mentioned, of regulating the time of evening worship by the appearance
-of the smoke of Edinburgh, which he could easily see, through the clear summer
-twilight, from his own door. When he observed the smoke increase in density,
-in consequence of the good folk of the city preparing their supper, he would call
-all the family into the house, saying: ‘It’s time now, bairns, to tak’ the beuks,
-and gang to our beds, for yonder’s Auld Reekie, I see, putting on her nicht-cap!’</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_137" id="Footnote_137"></a><a href="#FNanchor_137"><span class="label">[137]</span></a> This gentleman, the ‘revered defender of beauteous Stuart,’ and the surviving
-friend of Allan Ramsay, had an unaccountable aversion to cheese, and not
-only forbade the appearance of that article upon his table, but also its introduction
-into his house. His family, who did not partake in this antipathy,
-sometimes smuggled a small quantity of cheese into the house, and ate it in
-secret; but he almost always discovered it by the <em>smell</em>, which was the sense
-it chiefly offended. Upon scenting the object of his disgust, he would start up
-and run distractedly through the house in search of it, and not compose himself
-again to his studies till it was thrown out of doors. Some of his ingenious
-children, by way of a joke, once got into their possession the coat with which
-he usually went to the court, and ripping up the sutures of one of its wide, old-fashioned
-skirts, sewed up therein a considerable slice of double Gloster. Mr
-Tytler was next day surprised when, sitting near the bar, he perceived the
-smell of cheese rising around him. ‘Cheese here too!’ cried the querulous old
-gentleman; ‘nay, then, the whole world must be conspiring against me!’ So
-saying, he rose, and ran home to tell his piteous case to Mrs Tytler and the
-children, who became convinced from this that he really possessed the singular
-delicacy and fastidiousness in respect of the effluvia arising from cheese which
-they formerly thought to be fanciful.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_138" id="Footnote_138"></a><a href="#FNanchor_138"><span class="label">[138]</span></a> The dress of the Edinburgh Defensive Band was as follows: a cocked hat,
-black stock, hair tied and highly powdered; dark-blue long-tailed coat, with
-orange facings in honour of the Revolution, and full lapels sloped away to show
-the white dimity vest; nankeen small-clothes; white thread stockings, ribbed
-or plain; and short nankeen spatterdashes. Kay has some ingenious caricatures,
-in miniature, of these redoubted Bruntsfield Links and Heriot’s Green warriors.
-The last two survivors were Mr John M’Niven, stationer, and Robert Stevenson,
-painter, who died in 1832.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_139" id="Footnote_139"></a><a href="#FNanchor_139"><span class="label">[139]</span></a> One of the panes is now (1847) destroyed, the other cracked. [The tavern
-is now out of existence.]</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_140" id="Footnote_140"></a><a href="#FNanchor_140"><span class="label">[140]</span></a> Souters’ clods and other forms of bread fascinating to youngsters, as well
-as penny pies of high reputation, were to be had at a shop which all old
-Edinburgh people speak of with extreme regard and affection&mdash;the <em>Baijen
-Hole</em>&mdash;situated immediately to the east of Forrester’s Wynd and opposite to
-the Old Tolbooth. The name&mdash;a mystery to later generations&mdash;seems to bear
-reference to the Baijens or Baijen Class, a term bestowed in former days upon
-the junior students in the college. <em>Bajan</em> or <em>bejan</em> is the French <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">bejaune</i>,
-‘<i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">bec jaune</i>,’ ‘greenbill,’ ‘greenhorn,’ ‘freshman.’</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_141" id="Footnote_141"></a><a href="#FNanchor_141"><span class="label">[141]</span></a> The fullest account yet published of this extraordinary coterie is that of
-Mr H. A. Cockburn in <cite>The Book of the Old Edinburgh Club</cite>, vol. iii. Creech
-refers to it in ironical terms as ‘the virtuous, the venerable and dignified Wig
-who so much to their own honour and kind attention always inform the public
-of their meetings.’ The reputation of the club was very different.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_142" id="Footnote_142"></a><a href="#FNanchor_142"><span class="label">[142]</span></a> The following were other eighteenth century Edinburgh clubs:
-</p>
-<p>
-<span class="smcap">The Poker Club</span> originated in a combination of gentlemen favourable to
-the establishment of militia in Scotland, and its name, happily hit on by
-Professor Adam Ferguson, was selected to avoid giving offence to the Government.
-A history of the club is given in Dugald Stewart’s Life, and also in
-Carlyle’s <cite>Autobiography</cite>, where he says: ‘Dinner was on the table soon after
-two o’clock, at one shilling a head, the wine to be confined to sherry and claret,
-and the reckoning called at six o’clock.’ The minutes of this interesting club
-are preserved in the University Library.
-</p>
-<p>
-<span class="smcap">The Mirror Club</span>, formed by the contributors to the periodical of that
-name. It had really existed before under the name of ‘The Tabernacle.’ ‘The
-Tabernacle,’ or ‘The Feast of Tabernacles,’ as Ramsay of Ochtertyre calls it,
-was a company of friends and admirers of Henry Dundas, first Viscount
-Melville.
-</p>
-<p>
-<span class="smcap">The Easy Club</span>, founded by Allan Ramsay the poet, consisted of twelve
-members, each of whom was required to assume the name of some Scottish
-poet. Ramsay took that of Gawin Douglas.
-</p>
-<p>
-<span class="smcap">The Capillaire Club</span> was ‘composed of all who were inclined to be witty
-and joyous.’
-</p>
-<p>
-<span class="smcap">The Facer Club</span>, which met in Lucky Wood’s tavern in the Canongate,
-was perhaps not of a high order. If a member did not drain his measure of
-liquor, he had to throw it at his own face.
-</p>
-<p>
-<span class="smcap">The Griskin Club</span> also met in the Canongate. Dr Carlyle and those who
-took part with him in the production of Home’s <cite>Douglas</cite> at the Canongate
-playhouse formed this club, and gave it its name from the pork griskins which
-was their favourite supper dish.
-</p>
-<p>
-<span class="smcap">The Ruffian Club</span>, ‘composed of men whose hearts were milder than their
-manners, and their principles more correct than their habits of life.’
-</p>
-<p>
-<span class="smcap">The Wagering Club</span>, instituted in 1775, still meets annually. An account
-of this club is given in <cite>The Book of the Old Edinburgh Club</cite>, vol. ii.
-</p>
-<p>
-Others may be mentioned by name only: <span class="smcap">The Diversorium</span>, <span class="smcap">The Haveral</span>,
-<span class="smcap">The Whin Bush</span>, <span class="smcap">The Skull</span>, <span class="smcap">The Six Foot</span>, <span class="smcap">The Assembly of Birds</span>,
-<span class="smcap">The Card</span>, <span class="smcap">The Borached</span>, <span class="smcap">The Humdrum</span>, <span class="smcap">The Apician</span>, <span class="smcap">The Blast
-and Quaff</span>, <span class="smcap">The Ocean</span>, <span class="smcap">The Pipe</span>, <span class="smcap">The Knights of the Cap and
-Feather</span>, <span class="smcap">The Revolutionary</span>, <span class="smcap">The Stoic</span>, and <span class="smcap">The Club</span>, referred to
-in Lockhart’s <cite>Life of Scott</cite>.
-</p>
-<p>
-Of a later period than those mentioned above were <span class="smcap">The Gowks Club</span>;
-<span class="smcap">The Right and Wrong</span>, of which James Hogg gives a short account; and
-<span class="smcap">The Friday Club</span>, instituted by Lord Cockburn, who also wrote an interesting
-history of it, recently printed by Mr H. A. Cockburn, in vol. iii. of <cite>The Book
-of the Old Edinburgh Club</cite>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_143" id="Footnote_143"></a><a href="#FNanchor_143"><span class="label">[143]</span></a> The Scottish peers on occasions of election of representatives to the House
-of Lords frequently brought their meetings to a close by dining at Fortune’s
-Tavern.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_144" id="Footnote_144"></a><a href="#FNanchor_144"><span class="label">[144]</span></a> See <a href="#Footnote_142">note</a>, <a href="#Page_157">p. 157</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_145" id="Footnote_145"></a><a href="#FNanchor_145"><span class="label">[145]</span></a> ‘The wags of the eighteenth century used to tell of a certain city treasurer
-who, on being applied to for a new rope to the Tron Kirk bell, summoned the
-Council to deliberate on the demand; an adjournment to Clerihugh’s Tavern,
-it was hoped, might facilitate the settlement of so weighty a matter, but one
-dinner proved insufficient, and it was not till their third banquet that the
-application was referred to a committee, who spliced the old rope, and settled
-the bill!’&mdash;Wilson’s <cite>Memorials of Old Edinburgh</cite>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_146" id="Footnote_146"></a><a href="#FNanchor_146"><span class="label">[146]</span></a> Since this was written, the whole group of buildings has been taken down,
-and new ones substituted (1868).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_147" id="Footnote_147"></a><a href="#FNanchor_147"><span class="label">[147]</span></a> The ‘White Horse’ is introduced in <cite>The Abbot</cite>&mdash;it was the scene of
-Roland Græme’s encounter with young Seton.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_148" id="Footnote_148"></a><a href="#FNanchor_148"><span class="label">[148]</span></a> The Corsican patriot whose acquaintance Boswell made on his tour abroad.
-Johnson characterised him as having ‘the loftiest port of any man he had
-ever seen.’</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_149" id="Footnote_149"></a><a href="#FNanchor_149"><span class="label">[149]</span></a> Peter Ramsay was a brother of William Ramsay of Barnton, the well-known
-sporting character of the early part of the nineteenth century.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_150" id="Footnote_150"></a><a href="#FNanchor_150"><span class="label">[150]</span></a> A punning friend, remarking on the old Scottish practice of styling elderly
-landladies by the term <em>Lucky</em>, said: ‘Why not?&mdash;<i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Felix qui pot</i>&mdash;&mdash;’</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_151" id="Footnote_151"></a><a href="#FNanchor_151"><span class="label">[151]</span></a> The following curious advertisement, connected with an inn in the Canongate,
-appeared in the <cite>Edinburgh Evening Courant</cite> for July 1, 1754. The
-advertisement is surmounted by a woodcut representing the stage-coach, a
-towering vehicle, protruding at top&mdash;the coachman a stiff-looking, antique
-little figure, who holds the reins with both hands, as if he were afraid of the
-horses running away&mdash;a long whip streaming over his head and over the top
-of the coach, and falling down behind&mdash;six horses, like starved rats in appearance&mdash;a
-postillion upon one of the leaders, with a whip:
-</p>
-<p>
-‘The Edinburgh Stage-Coach, for the better accommodation of Passengers,
-will be altered to a new genteel two-end Glass Machine, hung on Steel Springs,
-exceeding light and easy, to go in ten days in summer and twelve in winter;
-to set out the first Tuesday in March, and continue it from Hosea Eastgate’s,
-the <em>Coach and Horses</em> in Dean Street, Soho, London, and from John Somerville’s
-in the Canongate, Edinburgh, every other Tuesday, and meet at Burrowbridge
-on Saturday night, and set out from thence on Monday morning, and
-get to London and Edinburgh on Friday. In the winter to set out from London
-and Edinburgh every other [alternate] Monday morning, and to go to Burrowbridge
-on Saturday night; and to set out from thence on Monday morning,
-and get to London and Edinburgh on Saturday night. Passengers to pay as
-usual. Performed, if God permits, by your dutiful servant,
-</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-<span class="smcap">Hosea Eastgate</span>.<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="center">
-‘Care is taken of small parcels <em>according to their value</em>.’
-</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_152" id="Footnote_152"></a><a href="#FNanchor_152"><span class="label">[152]</span></a> The pillar was restored to Edinburgh, and for some years stood within
-an enclosed recess on the north side of St Giles’. When Mr W. E. Gladstone
-rebuilt the Cross in 1885, a little to the south of its former site, between
-St Giles’ Church and the Police Office, the original pillar was replaced in its
-old position.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_153" id="Footnote_153"></a><a href="#FNanchor_153"><span class="label">[153]</span></a> Bishop Forbes inserts in his manuscript (which I possess) a panegyrical
-epitaph for Ned Burke, stating that he died in Edinburgh in November 1751.
-He also gives the following particulars from Burke’s conversation:
-</p>
-<p>
-‘One of the soles of Ned’s shoes happening to come off, Ned cursed the day
-upon which he should be forced to go without shoes. The Prince, hearing him,
-called to him and said: “Ned, look at me”&mdash;when (said Ned) I saw him holding
-up one of his feet at me, where there was de’il a sole upon the shoe; and
-then I said: “Oh, my dear! I have nothing more to say. You have stopped
-my mouth indeed.”
-</p>
-<p>
-‘When Ned was talking of seeing the Prince again, he spoke these words:
-“If the Prince do not come and see me soon, good faith I will go and see my
-daughter [Charles having taken the name of Betty Burke when in a female
-disguise], and crave her; for she has not yet paid her christening money, and
-as little has she paid the coat I ga’e her in her greatest need.”’</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_154" id="Footnote_154"></a><a href="#FNanchor_154"><span class="label">[154]</span></a> ‘Upon the 26th of February [1617], the Cross of Edinburgh was taken
-down. The old long stone, about forty footes or thereby in length, was to be
-translated, by the devise of certain mariners in Leith, from the place where it
-had stood past the memory of man, to a place beneath in the High Street,
-without any harm to the stone; and the body of the old Cross was demolished,
-and another builded, whereupon the long stone or obelisk was erected and set
-up, on the 25th day of March.’&mdash;Calderwood’s <cite>Church History</cite>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_155" id="Footnote_155"></a><a href="#FNanchor_155"><span class="label">[155]</span></a> See <cite>Domestic Annals of Scotland</cite>, ii. 436.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_156" id="Footnote_156"></a><a href="#FNanchor_156"><span class="label">[156]</span></a> <cite>Waverley Annotations</cite>, i. 435.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_157" id="Footnote_157"></a><a href="#FNanchor_157"><span class="label">[157]</span></a> What is said to be the original Blue Blanket is still preserved in the
-National Museum of Antiquities of Scotland.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_158" id="Footnote_158"></a><a href="#FNanchor_158"><span class="label">[158]</span></a> <cite>Scots Magazine</cite>, June 1767.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_159" id="Footnote_159"></a><a href="#FNanchor_159"><span class="label">[159]</span></a> The skeleton of this singular being exists entire in the class-room of the
-professor of anatomy in the College.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_160" id="Footnote_160"></a><a href="#FNanchor_160"><span class="label">[160]</span></a> Notes to <cite>Waverley</cite>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_161" id="Footnote_161"></a><a href="#FNanchor_161"><span class="label">[161]</span></a> <cite>Waverley Annotations</cite>, i. 70.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_162" id="Footnote_162"></a><a href="#FNanchor_162"><span class="label">[162]</span></a> The buildings in this alley are now demolished.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_163" id="Footnote_163"></a><a href="#FNanchor_163"><span class="label">[163]</span></a> He is said to have been a nobleman of considerable talent, and a great
-underhand supporter of the exiled family; see the <cite>Lockhart Papers</cite>. George
-Lockhart had married his daughter Euphemia, or <em>Lady Effie</em>, as she was
-commonly called. In the <cite>Edinburgh Annual Register</cite> there is preserved a
-letter from Lord Eglintoune to his son, replete with good sense as well as
-paternal affection.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_164" id="Footnote_164"></a><a href="#FNanchor_164"><span class="label">[164]</span></a> The earl was forty-nine and Miss Kennedy twenty.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_165" id="Footnote_165"></a><a href="#FNanchor_165"><span class="label">[165]</span></a> The anecdote which follows is chiefly taken from <cite>The Tell-tale</cite>, a rare
-collection, published in 1762.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_166" id="Footnote_166"></a><a href="#FNanchor_166"><span class="label">[166]</span></a> Notes by C. K. Sharpe in Stenhouse’s edition of the <cite>Scots Musical
-Museum</cite>, ii. 200.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_167" id="Footnote_167"></a><a href="#FNanchor_167"><span class="label">[167]</span></a> As a specimen of the complimentary intercourse of the poet with Lady
-Eglintoune, an anecdote is told of her having once sent him a basket of fine
-fruit; to which he returned this stanza:
-</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Now, Priam’s son, ye may be mute,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">For I can bauldly brag wi’ thee;</div>
-<div class="verse">Thou to the fairest gave the fruit&mdash;</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">The fairest gave the fruit to me.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>
-The love of raillery has recorded that on this being communicated by
-Ramsay to his friend Eustace Budgell, the following comment was soon after
-received from the English wit:
-</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘As Juno fair, as Venus kind,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">She may have been who gave the fruit;</div>
-<div class="verse">But had she had Minerva’s mind,</div>
-<div class="verse indent2">She’d ne’er have given ’t to such a brute.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_168" id="Footnote_168"></a><a href="#FNanchor_168"><span class="label">[168]</span></a> An old gentleman told our informant that he never saw so beautiful a
-figure in his life as Lady Eglintoune at a Hunters’ Ball in Holyrood House,
-dancing a minuet in a large hoop, and a suit of black velvet, trimmed with
-gold.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_169" id="Footnote_169"></a><a href="#FNanchor_169"><span class="label">[169]</span></a> Snuff-taking was prevalent among young women in our grandmothers’
-time. Their flirts used to present them with pretty snuff-boxes. In one of the
-monthly numbers of the <cite>Scots Magazine</cite> for the year 1745 there is a satirical
-poem by a swain upon the practice of snuff-taking; to which a lady replies
-next month, defending the fashion as elegant and of some account in coquetry.
-Almost all the old ladies who survived the commencement of this century took
-snuff. Some kept it in pouches, and abandoned, for its sake, the wearing of
-white ruffles and handkerchiefs.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_170" id="Footnote_170"></a><a href="#FNanchor_170"><span class="label">[170]</span></a> A gown then required ten yards of stuff.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_171" id="Footnote_171"></a><a href="#FNanchor_171"><span class="label">[171]</span></a> This verse appears in a manuscript subsequent to 1760. The name, however,
-is Sleigh, not Lee. Mrs Mally Sleigh was married in 1725 to the Lord
-Lyon Brodie of Brodie. Allan Ramsay celebrates her.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_172" id="Footnote_172"></a><a href="#FNanchor_172"><span class="label">[172]</span></a> James Erskine on ascending the bench first took the title of Lord Tinwald,
-from his estate in Dumfriesshire. That of Lord Alva he assumed when he
-purchased the family estate of Alva, in Clackmannanshire, from his eldest
-brother, Sir Charles Erskine.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_173" id="Footnote_173"></a><a href="#FNanchor_173"><span class="label">[173]</span></a> The site of Mylne Square is now occupied by the block of buildings directly
-opposite the north front of the Tron Church.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_174" id="Footnote_174"></a><a href="#FNanchor_174"><span class="label">[174]</span></a> The first of this name was made ‘master-mason’ to the king in 1481,
-and the position descended in regular succession in the family till 1710, when
-they adopted the style of architect.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_175" id="Footnote_175"></a><a href="#FNanchor_175"><span class="label">[175]</span></a> Lady Glenorchy built a chapel, which was named after her, on the low
-ground to the south of the Calton Hill. The chapel was swept away, along
-with that of the fine Gothic building Trinity College Church, for the convenience
-of the North British Railway. The lady’s name is still preserved in Lady
-Glenorchy’s Established Church in Roxburgh Place and Lady Glenorchy’s
-United Free Church in Greenside.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_176" id="Footnote_176"></a><a href="#FNanchor_176"><span class="label">[176]</span></a> The Canongate seems to have been paved about the same time. In 1535
-the king granted to the Abbot of Holyrood a duty of one penny upon every
-loaded cart, and a halfpenny upon every empty one, to repair and maintain
-the causeway.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_177" id="Footnote_177"></a><a href="#FNanchor_177"><span class="label">[177]</span></a> George Lockhart of Carnwath lived here in 1753. Afterwards he resided
-in Ross House, a suburban mansion, which afterwards was used as a lying-in
-hospital. The park connected with this house is now occupied by George
-Square. While in Mr Lockhart’s possession Ross House was the scene of
-many gay routs and balls.
-</p>
-<p>
-The Lords Ross, the original proprietors of this mansion, died out in 1754.
-One of the last persons in Scotland supposed to be possessed by an evil spirit
-was a daughter of George, the second last lord. A correspondent says: ‘A
-person alive in 1824 told me that, when a child, he saw her clamber up to the
-top of an old-fashioned four-post bed like a cat. In her fits it was almost
-impossible to hold her. About the same time, a daughter of Lord Kinnaird
-was supposed to have the second-sight. One day, during divine worship in
-the High Church, she fainted away; on her recovery, she declared that when
-Lady Janet Dundas (a daughter of Lord Lauderdale) entered the pew with
-Miss Dundas, who was a beautiful young girl, she saw the latter as it were in
-a shroud gathered round her neck, and upon her head. Miss Dundas died a
-short time after.’</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_178" id="Footnote_178"></a><a href="#FNanchor_178"><span class="label">[178]</span></a> Both facts from Moyses’s <cite>Memoirs</cite>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_179" id="Footnote_179"></a><a href="#FNanchor_179"><span class="label">[179]</span></a> In the house to the north of this was a shop kept by an eccentric personage,
-who exhibited a sign bearing this singular inscription:
-</p>
-<p class="center">
-ORRA THINGS BOUGHT AND SOLD&mdash;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-which signified that he dealt in odd articles, such as a single shoe-buckle, one of
-a pair of skates, a teapot wanting a lid, or perhaps, as often, a lid <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">minus</i> a
-teapot; in short, any unpaired article which was not to be got in the shops where
-only new things were sold, and which, nevertheless, was now and then as
-indispensably wanted by householders as anything else.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_180" id="Footnote_180"></a><a href="#FNanchor_180"><span class="label">[180]</span></a> The present article is almost wholly from original sources, a fact probably
-unknown to a contemporary novelist, who has made it the groundwork of a
-fiction without any acknowledgment. Some additional particulars may be
-found in <cite>Tales of the Century</cite>, by John Sobieski Stuart (Edinburgh, 1846). In
-the <cite>Spalding Miscellany</cite>, vol. iii., are several letters of Lord Grange, containing
-allusions to his wife; and a production of his, which has been printed under
-the title of <cite>Diary of a Senator of the College of Justice</cite> (Stevenson, Edinburgh,
-1833), is worthy of perusal.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_181" id="Footnote_181"></a><a href="#FNanchor_181"><span class="label">[181]</span></a> Here and elsewhere a paper in Lord Grange’s own hand is quoted.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_182" id="Footnote_182"></a><a href="#FNanchor_182"><span class="label">[182]</span></a> ‘Then, and some time before and after, there was a stage-coach from hence
-to England.’ So says his lordship; implying that in 1751, when he was
-writing, there was no such public conveniency! It had been tried, and had
-failed.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_183" id="Footnote_183"></a><a href="#FNanchor_183"><span class="label">[183]</span></a> If we could believe Lord Lovat, however, he personally was innocent, and
-regretted he was innocent, of any association with the abduction of Lady
-Grange. ‘They said it was all my contrivance, and that it was my servants
-that took her away; but I defyed them then, as I do now, and do declare to
-you upon honour, that I do not know what has become of that woman, where
-she is or who takes care of her, but if I had contrived and assisted, and saved
-my Lord Grange from that devil, who threatened every day to murder him
-and his children, I would not think shame of it before God or man.’&mdash;Letter
-of Lord Lovat’s quoted in <cite>Genealogie of the Hayes of Tweeddale</cite>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_184" id="Footnote_184"></a><a href="#FNanchor_184"><span class="label">[184]</span></a> About four gallons.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_185" id="Footnote_185"></a><a href="#FNanchor_185"><span class="label">[185]</span></a> Named after John Cant, a pious citizen of the sixteenth century, who, with
-his wife, Agnes Kerkettle, was a contributor to the foundation of the Convent
-of St Catherine of Siena on the south side of the Meadows. The district is
-now known as Sciennes&mdash;pronounced <em>Sheens</em>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_186" id="Footnote_186"></a><a href="#FNanchor_186"><span class="label">[186]</span></a> Only fragments of the ancient buildings remain in Cant’s and Dickson’s
-Closes.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_187" id="Footnote_187"></a><a href="#FNanchor_187"><span class="label">[187]</span></a> At the head of the Old Bank Close, to the westward; burned down in
-1771.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_188" id="Footnote_188"></a><a href="#FNanchor_188"><span class="label">[188]</span></a> Only a small portion of this building now remains.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_189" id="Footnote_189"></a><a href="#FNanchor_189"><span class="label">[189]</span></a> The Advocates’ Library.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_190" id="Footnote_190"></a><a href="#FNanchor_190"><span class="label">[190]</span></a> In the parish of Borthwick.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_191" id="Footnote_191"></a><a href="#FNanchor_191"><span class="label">[191]</span></a> This anecdote was related to me by the first Lord Wharncliffe, grandson’s
-grandson to Sir George, about 1828.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_192" id="Footnote_192"></a><a href="#FNanchor_192"><span class="label">[192]</span></a> Cromarty, at seventy, contrived to marry ‘a young and beautiful countess
-in her own right, a widow, wealthy, and in universal estimation. The following
-distich was composed on the occasion:
-</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">Thou sonsie auld carl, the world has not thy like,</div>
-<div class="verse">For ladies fa’ in love with thee, though thou be ane auld tyke.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p class="right">
-C. K. Sharpe, Notes to <cite>Law’s Memorials</cite>, p. xlvii.
-</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_193" id="Footnote_193"></a><a href="#FNanchor_193"><span class="label">[193]</span></a> This historic building was demolished many years ago. Its main front
-faced the Cowgate, and to the north and east were extensive gardens.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_194" id="Footnote_194"></a><a href="#FNanchor_194"><span class="label">[194]</span></a> In this house, too, Queen Mary was entertained at a banquet given by the
-citizens. ‘Upon the nynt day of Februar at evin the Queen’s grace come up
-in ane honourable manner fra the palice of Holyrudhouse to the Cardinal’s
-ludging in Blackfriars Wynd, ... and efter supper the honest young men in
-the town come with ane convoy to her,’ and escorted her back to Holyrood.&mdash;<cite>Diurnal
-of Occurrents.</cite>
-</p>
-<p>
-Before the opening of the original High School in the grounds of the Blackfriars’
-Monastery the pupils were temporarily accommodated in Beaton’s palace.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_195" id="Footnote_195"></a><a href="#FNanchor_195"><span class="label">[195]</span></a> The title ‘Ambassador Keith’ is usually applied to Sir Robert’s father, who,
-after several minor diplomatic appointments on the Continent, was the representative
-of Great Britain at the court of St Petersburg. An interesting
-sketch of him, under the title of ‘Felix,’ by Mrs Cockburn, is appended to the
-volume of that lady’s <cite>Letters</cite>, edited by Mr T. Craig Brown. Miss Keith,
-known to Edinburgh society as ‘Sister Anne,’ was Scott’s ‘Mrs Bethune
-Balliol’ of the <cite>Chronicles of the Canongate</cite>. This gentleman was absent from
-Edinburgh about twenty-two years, and returned at a time when it was supposed
-that manners were beginning to exhibit symptoms of great improvement.
-He, however, complained that they were degenerated. In his early
-time, he said, every Scottish gentleman of £300 a year travelled abroad when
-young, and brought home to the bosom of domestic life, and to the profession
-in which it might be his fate to engage, a vast fund of literary information,
-knowledge of the world, and genuine good manners, which dignified his character
-through life. But towards the year 1770 this practice had been entirely
-given up, and in consequence a sensible change was discoverable upon the
-face of good society. (See the <cite>Life of John Home</cite>, by Henry Mackenzie, Esq.).</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_196" id="Footnote_196"></a><a href="#FNanchor_196"><span class="label">[196]</span></a> It is curious to observe how, in correspondence with the change in our
-manners and customs, one trade has become extinct, while another succeeded
-in its place. At the end of the sixteenth century the manufacture of offensive
-weapons predominated over all other trades in Edinburgh. We had then
-cutlers, whose <em>essay-piece</em>, on being admitted of the corporation, was ‘ane plain
-finished quhanzear’ or sword; gaird-makers, whose business consisted in
-fashioning sword-handles; Dalmascars, who gilded the said weapon; and belt-makers,
-who wrought the girdles that bound it to the wearer’s body. There
-were also dag-makers, who made hackbuts (short-guns) and dags (pistols).
-These various professions all became associated in the general one of armourers,
-or gunsmiths, when the wearing of weapons went into desuetude&mdash;there being
-then no further necessity for the expedition and expediency of the modern
-political economist’s boasted ‘division of labour.’ As the above arts gave way,
-those which tended to provide the comforts and luxuries of civilised life gradually
-arose. About 1586 we find the first notice of locksmiths in Edinburgh, and
-there was then only one of the trade, whose essay was simply ‘a kist lock.’
-In 1609, however, as the security of property increased, the essay was ‘a kist
-lock and a hingand bois lock, with an double plate lock;’ and in 1644 ‘a key
-and sprent band’ were added to the essay. In 1682 ‘a cruik and cruik band’
-were further added; and in 1728, for the safety of the lieges, the locksmith’s
-essay was appointed to be ‘a cruik and cruik band, a pass lock with a round
-filled bridge, not cut or broke in the backside, with nobs and jamb bound.’ In
-1595 we find the first notice of shearsmiths. In 1609 a heckle-maker was
-admitted into the Corporation of Hammermen. In 1613 a tinkler makes his
-appearance; Thomas Duncan, the first tinkler, was then admitted. Pewterers
-are mentioned so far back as 1588. In 1647 we find the first knock-maker
-(<em>clock-maker</em>), but so limited was his business that he was also a locksmith.
-In 1664 the first white-iron man was admitted; also the first harness-maker,
-though lorimers had previously existed. Paul Martin, a distressed French
-Protestant, in 1691, was the first manufacturer of surgical instruments in
-Edinburgh. In 1720 we find the first pin-maker; in 1764, the first edge-tool
-maker and first fish-hook maker.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_197" id="Footnote_197"></a><a href="#FNanchor_197"><span class="label">[197]</span></a> The Highland appellative of Lord Lovat, expressing <em>the son of Simon</em>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_198" id="Footnote_198"></a><a href="#FNanchor_198"><span class="label">[198]</span></a> <cite>Quarterly Review</cite>, vol. xiv. p. 326.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_199" id="Footnote_199"></a><a href="#FNanchor_199"><span class="label">[199]</span></a> First door up the stair at the head of the wynd, on the west side. The
-house was burnt down in 1824, but rebuilt in its former arrangement.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_200" id="Footnote_200"></a><a href="#FNanchor_200"><span class="label">[200]</span></a> [The window-tax was first imposed in 1695, and repealed in 1851.]</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_201" id="Footnote_201"></a><a href="#FNanchor_201"><span class="label">[201]</span></a> An old domestic of her ladyship’s preserved one of her shoes as a relic for
-many years. The heel was three inches deep.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_202" id="Footnote_202"></a><a href="#FNanchor_202"><span class="label">[202]</span></a> [The view of the famous ‘Douglas Cause,’ affirmed in the House of Lords
-in 1771.]</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_203" id="Footnote_203"></a><a href="#FNanchor_203"><span class="label">[203]</span></a> Mrs Grant of Laggan held another opinion of General Simon Fraser. A
-pleasing exterior covered a large share of the paternal character&mdash;‘No heart
-was ever harder, no hands more rapacious than his.’</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_204" id="Footnote_204"></a><a href="#FNanchor_204"><span class="label">[204]</span></a> Myln’s <cite>Lives of the Bishops of Dunkeld</cite>. Edinburgh, 1831.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_205" id="Footnote_205"></a><a href="#FNanchor_205"><span class="label">[205]</span></a> Originally the name was the ‘Wynd of the Blessed Virgin Mary in the
-Fields,’ as being the approach to the collegiate church so named which stood
-on the site of the University&mdash;the ‘Kirk o’ Field’ of the Darnley tragedy.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_206" id="Footnote_206"></a><a href="#FNanchor_206"><span class="label">[206]</span></a> Now Chambers Street.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_207" id="Footnote_207"></a><a href="#FNanchor_207"><span class="label">[207]</span></a> A small ‘bit’ of College Wynd, ending in a <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">cul de sac</i>, is all that remains of
-this once leading thoroughfare between the city and the ‘Oure Tounis Colledge.’</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_208" id="Footnote_208"></a><a href="#FNanchor_208"><span class="label">[208]</span></a> When it became an unfashionable place of residence it was dubbed by the
-fops of the town ‘Cavalry Wynd.’ The northern end of Guthrie Street is the
-site of the old Horse Wynd.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_209" id="Footnote_209"></a><a href="#FNanchor_209"><span class="label">[209]</span></a> Macgill was King’s Advocate to James VI., and is said to have died of
-grief when his rival, Thomas Hamilton, was preferred for the presidentship.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_210" id="Footnote_210"></a><a href="#FNanchor_210"><span class="label">[210]</span></a> Most of the traditionary
-anecdotes in this article were
-communicated by Charles,
-eighth Earl of Haddington,
-through conversation with Sir
-Walter Scott, by whom they
-were directly imparted to the
-author.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_211" id="Footnote_211"></a><a href="#FNanchor_211"><span class="label">[211]</span></a> Near by is the Magdalen Chapel, a curious relic of the sixteenth century,
-belonging to the Corporation of Hammermen. It was erected immediately
-before the Reformation by a pious citizen, Michael Macquhan, and Jonet
-Rhynd, his widow, whose tomb is shown in the floor. The windows towards
-the south were anciently filled with stained glass; and there still remain some
-specimens of that kind of ornament, which, by some strange chance, had
-survived the Reformation. In a large department at the top of one window
-are the arms of Mary of Guise, who was queen-regent at the time the chapel
-was built. The arms of Macquhan and his wife are also to be seen. In the
-lower panes, which have been filled with small figures of saints, only one
-remains&mdash;a St Bartholomew&mdash;who, by a rare chance, has survived the general
-massacre. The whole is now very carefully preserved. When the distinguished
-Reformer, John Craig, returned to Scotland at the Reformation, after an
-absence of twenty-four years, he preached for some time in this chapel, in the
-Latin language, to a select congregation of the learned, being unable, by long
-disuse, to hold forth in his vernacular tongue. This divine subsequently was
-appointed a colleague to John Knox, and is distinguished in history for having
-refused to publish the banns between Queen Mary and Bothwell, and also for
-having written the National Covenant in 1589. Another circumstance in the
-history of this chapel is worthy of notice. The body of the Earl of Argyll,
-after his execution, June 30, 1685, was brought down and deposited in this
-place, to wait till it should be conveyed to the family burying-place at Kilmun.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_212" id="Footnote_212"></a><a href="#FNanchor_212"><span class="label">[212]</span></a> The amateurs who took the lead as choristers were Gilbert Innes, Esq. of
-Stow; Alexander Wight, Esq., advocate; Mr John Hutton, papermaker;
-Mr John Russel, W.S.; and Mr George Thomson. As an instrumentalist, we
-could boast of our countryman the Earl of Kelly, who also composed six overtures
-for an orchestra, one of which I heard played in the hall, himself leading
-the band.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_213" id="Footnote_213"></a><a href="#FNanchor_213"><span class="label">[213]</span></a> See a different account of this custom, <a href="#Page_147">p. 147</a>.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_214" id="Footnote_214"></a><a href="#FNanchor_214"><span class="label">[214]</span></a> [‘John M. Giornovicki, commonly known in Britain under the name of
-Jarnowick, was a native of Palermo. About 1770 he went to Paris, where he
-performed a concerto of his famous master Lolli, but did not succeed. He then
-played one of his own concertos, that in A major, and became quite the fashion.
-The style of Giornovicki was highly elegant and finished, his intonation perfect,
-and his taste pure. The late Domenico Dragonetti, one of the best judges in
-Europe, told me that Giornovicki was the most elegant and graceful violin-player
-he had ever heard before Paganini, but that he wanted power. He
-seems to have been a dissipated and passionate man; a good swordsman too,
-as was common in those days. One day, in a dispute, he struck the Chevalier
-St George, then one of the greatest violin-players and best swordsmen in
-Europe. St George said coolly: “I have too much regard for his musical
-talent to fight him.” A noble speech, showing St George in all respects the
-better man. Giornovicki died suddenly at St Petersburg in 1804.’&mdash;G. F. G.]</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_215" id="Footnote_215"></a><a href="#FNanchor_215"><span class="label">[215]</span></a> G. T., it may now be explained, was George Thomson, the well-known and
-generally loved editor of the <cite>Melodies of Scotland</cite>. He might rather have
-described himself as <i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Nonogenarius</i>, for at his death, in 1851, he had reached the
-age of ninety-four, his violin, as he believed, having prolonged his life much
-beyond the usual term.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_216" id="Footnote_216"></a><a href="#FNanchor_216"><span class="label">[216]</span></a> The earl was the leader of the amateur orchestra of St Cecilia’s Hall, which
-included Lord Colville, Sir John Pringle, Mr Seton of Pitmedden, General
-Middleton, Lord Elcho, Sir Gilbert Elliot, Mrs Forbes of Newhall, and others
-of the aristocracy. General Middleton was credited with ‘singing a song with
-much humour,’ which he sometimes accompanied with a key and tongs. Sir
-Gilbert Elliot, who played the German flute, was the first to introduce that
-instrument to a Scottish audience. St Cecilia’s Hall has passed through many
-vicissitudes since then, and is now a bookbinder’s warehouse, but its fine
-ceiling and the orchestral balcony at the southern end are still preserved as
-memorials of its early days.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_217" id="Footnote_217"></a><a href="#FNanchor_217"><span class="label">[217]</span></a> About seventy paces to the east of the site of the Prebendaries’ Chamber,
-and exactly opposite to the opening of Roxburgh Place, was a projection in the
-wall, which has been long demolished and the wall altered. Close, however,
-to the west of the place, and near the ground, are some remains of an arch in
-the wall, which Malcolm Laing supposes to have been a gun-port connected
-with the projection at this spot. It certainly has no connection, as Arnot and
-(after him) Whitaker have supposed, with the story of Darnley’s murder.
-[This relic of the Flodden wall is now removed, but a portion of the wall
-itself still stands behind the houses at the north-east junction of Drummond
-Street and the Pleasance. Another portion was recently discovered at the
-east end of Lothian Street, between that street and the Royal Scottish Museum.
-Another part forms the north side of a <i lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">cul de sac</i> at Lindsay Place, and at the
-Vennel is the largest part of this old wall, with one of its few towers, forming
-the western boundary of the grounds of Heriot’s Hospital.]</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_218" id="Footnote_218"></a><a href="#FNanchor_218"><span class="label">[218]</span></a> Hose in those days covered the whole of the lower part of the person.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_219" id="Footnote_219"></a><a href="#FNanchor_219"><span class="label">[219]</span></a> This indicates pretty nearly the site of the house of Bassendyne, the early
-printer. It must have been opposite, or nearly opposite, to the Fountain Well.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_220" id="Footnote_220"></a><a href="#FNanchor_220"><span class="label">[220]</span></a> Now removed and the site built over. There was also a Cunyie House in
-Candlemaker Row, which was used as the Mint during the regency of Mary of
-Guise.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_221" id="Footnote_221"></a><a href="#FNanchor_221"><span class="label">[221]</span></a> The Assembly Room, afterwards occupied by the Commercial Bank, was in
-Bell’s Wynd, to which place it was removed in 1756 from the older room in
-Assembly Close. A scallop-shell above the entrance to Bell’s Wynd long commemorated
-the site of the Clamshell Turnpike, the lodging of the Earl of
-Home, to which Queen Mary, accompanied by Darnley, retreated on their
-return from Dunbar in 1566, rather than enter Holyrood so soon after the
-murder of Rizzio.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_222" id="Footnote_222"></a><a href="#FNanchor_222"><span class="label">[222]</span></a> It must have been after Miss Nicky Murray’s day that an Edinburgh
-Writer to the Signet, describing the unruliness of an assembly, writes: ‘I saw
-an English lady stand up at the head of a sett with a ticket No. 1 of that sett.
-By-and-bye my namesake, Miss Mary &mdash;&mdash;, came up, hauling after her a
-foolish-looking young man, who did as he was bid, and with all the ease in the
-world placed herself above the stranger, No. 1. The lady politely said there
-must be some mistake, for she had that place. “No,” said Miss Mary, “I can’t
-help your ticket, for I have the Lady Directress’s permission to lead down the
-sett!” The lady had spunk, and scolded, for which I liked her the better;
-only she dealt her sarcasms about Scotch politeness, Edinburgh manners, and
-so forth, rather too liberally and too loudly.’</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_223" id="Footnote_223"></a><a href="#FNanchor_223"><span class="label">[223]</span></a> [The right of this house to be called ‘John Knox’s House’ has been
-strenuously disputed; several other houses in which Knox actually lived have
-been identified by Robert Miller, F.S.A. Scot., Lord Dean of Guild of Edinburgh,
-in <cite>John Knox and the Town Council of Edinburgh, with a Chapter on
-the so-called ‘John Knox’s House’</cite> (1898). For the genuineness of the tradition,
-said not to be older than 1806, see Lord Guthrie’s <cite>John Knox and John Knox’s
-House</cite> (1898).]</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_224" id="Footnote_224"></a><a href="#FNanchor_224"><span class="label">[224]</span></a> The following advertisement, inserted in the <cite>Edinburgh Courant</cite> of
-August 1, 1754, illustrates the above in a striking manner: ‘If any person
-has lost a <span class="smcap lowercase">LARGE SOW</span>, let them call at the house of Robert Fiddes, gardener
-to Lord Minto, over against the Earl of Galloway’s, in the Horse Wynd, where,
-upon proving the property, paying expenses and damages done by the said sow,
-they may have the same restored.’</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_225" id="Footnote_225"></a><a href="#FNanchor_225"><span class="label">[225]</span></a> Lord Lindsay’s <cite>Lives of the Lindsays</cite>, iii. 190.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_226" id="Footnote_226"></a><a href="#FNanchor_226"><span class="label">[226]</span></a> ‘During this peaceable
-time [1668-1675], he
-[John, Earl of Tweeddale]
-built the park of Yester
-of stone and lime, near
-seven miles about, in
-seven years’ time, at the
-expense of 20,000 pound;
-bought a house in Edinburgh
-from Sir William
-Bruce for 1000 pound
-sterling, and ane other
-house within the same
-court, which, being rebuilt
-from the foundation,
-the price of it and reparations
-of both stood him
-1000 sterling.’&mdash;Father
-Hay’s <cite>Genealogie of the Hayes of Tweeddale</cite> (Edinburgh, 1835), p. 32.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_227" id="Footnote_227"></a><a href="#FNanchor_227"><span class="label">[227]</span></a> The notes are thus described in the <cite>Hue and Cry</cite>: £1300 in twenty-pound
-notes of Sir W. Forbes and Company; £1000 in twenty-pound notes of the
-Leith Banking Company; £1400 in twenty, ten, and five pound notes of
-different banks; 240 guinea and 440 pound notes of different banks&mdash;in all,
-£4392.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_228" id="Footnote_228"></a><a href="#FNanchor_228"><span class="label">[228]</span></a> It was in this part of the High Street also that Robert Lekprevick, the
-Scottish printer, lived before he removed to St Andrews in 1571.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_229" id="Footnote_229"></a><a href="#FNanchor_229"><span class="label">[229]</span></a> ‘&mdash;&mdash; deliure a Jacques le tailleur deux chanteaux de damas gris broches
-dor pour faire vne robbe a vne poupine;’ also ‘trois quartz et demi de toille
-dargent et de soze blanche pour faire vne cotte et aultre chose a des poupines.’&mdash;<cite>Catalogues
-of the Jewels, Dresses, Furniture, &amp;c. of Mary Queen of Scots</cite>,
-edited by Joseph Robertson. Edinburgh, 1863, p. 139.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_230" id="Footnote_230"></a><a href="#FNanchor_230"><span class="label">[230]</span></a> A skull represented as Buchanan’s has long
-been shown in the College of Edinburgh. It is
-extremely thin, and being long ago shown in company
-with that of a known idiot, which was, on the
-contrary, very thick, it seemed to form a commentary
-upon the popular expression which sets forth
-density of bone as an invariable accompaniment
-of paucity of brain. The author of a diatribe
-called <cite>Scotland Characterised</cite>, which was published
-in 1701, and may be found in the <cite>Harleian
-Miscellany</cite>, tells us that he had seen the skull in
-question, and that it bore ‘a very pretty distich
-upon it [the composition of Principal Adamson,
-who had caused the skull to be lifted]&mdash;the first
-line I have forgot, but the second was:
-</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">“Et decus es tumulo jam, Buchanane, tuo.”’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_231" id="Footnote_231"></a><a href="#FNanchor_231"><span class="label">[231]</span></a> [Dr David Hay Fleming has shown that the contemporary evidence is all in
-favour of the Covenant’s having been signed <em>in</em> the Greyfriars’ Church, and not
-in the churchyard; see a chapter by him in Mr Moir Bryce’s <cite>Old Greyfriars’
-Church, Edinburgh</cite> (1912). And in the same book Mr Moir Bryce has proved
-that the small strip of ground long erroneously believed to be the Covenanters’
-prison was not separated off till 1703-4, and that the Covenanters were interned
-on a much larger area to the east, now built over.]</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_232" id="Footnote_232"></a><a href="#FNanchor_232"><span class="label">[232]</span></a> The Back Stairs, built on the site of St Giles’ Churchyard, gave direct communication
-between the Cowgate and Old Parliament Square. It was by this
-way that Robertson the smuggler escaped from the Tolbooth Church, where he
-and his accomplice Wilson had been taken, as was usual with condemned
-prisoners, the Sunday before their execution. It was Porteous’s behaviour at
-the execution of Wilson that led to the riot and his own death in the Grassmarket.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_233" id="Footnote_233"></a><a href="#FNanchor_233"><span class="label">[233]</span></a> The pistols belonged to Mr Cayley himself, having been borrowed a few
-days before by Mr Macfarlane.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_234" id="Footnote_234"></a><a href="#FNanchor_234"><span class="label">[234]</span></a> A little below the church.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_235" id="Footnote_235"></a><a href="#FNanchor_235"><span class="label">[235]</span></a> Subjoined is a list of persons of note who lived in the Canongate in
-the early days of the late Mr Chalmers Izett, whose memory extended
-back to 1769:
-</p>
-
-<ul><li>‘DUKES.</li>
-<li>Hamilton.</li>
-<li>Queensberry.</li></ul>
-
-<ul>
-<li>EARLS.</li>
-<li>Breadalbane.</li>
-<li>Hyndford.</li>
-<li>Wemyss.</li>
-<li>Balcarras.</li>
-<li>Moray.</li>
-<li>Dalhousie.</li>
-<li>Haddington.</li>
-<li>Mar.</li>
-<li>Srathmore.</li>
-<li>Traquair.</li>
-<li>Selkirk.</li>
-<li>Dundonald.</li>
-<li>Kintore.</li>
-<li>Dunmore.</li>
-<li>Seafield.</li>
-<li>Panmure.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
-<li>COUNTESSES.</li>
-<li>Tweeddale.</li>
-<li>Lothian.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
-<li>LORDS.</li>
-<li>Haddo.</li>
-<li>Colvill.</li>
-<li>Blantyre.</li>
-<li>Nairn.</li>
-<li>Semple.</li>
-<li>A. Gordon.</li>
-<li>Cranstoun.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
-<li>L. OF SESSION.</li>
-<li>Eskgrove.</li>
-<li>Hailes.</li>
-<li>Prestongrange.</li>
-<li>Kames.</li>
-<li>Milton.</li>
-<li>Montgomery.</li>
-<li>Bannatyne.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
-<li>BARONETS.</li>
-<li>Sir J. Grant.</li>
-<li>Sir J. Suttie.</li>
-<li>Sir J. Whiteford.</li>
-<li>Sir J. Stewart.</li>
-<li>Sir J. Stirling.</li>
-<li>Sir J. Sinclair, Glorat.</li>
-<li>Sir J. Halkett.</li>
-<li>Sir James Stirling.</li>
-<li>Sir D. Hay.</li>
-<li>Sir B. Dunbar.</li>
-<li>Sir J. Scott, Ancrum.</li>
-<li>Sir R. Anstruther.</li>
-<li>Sir J. Sinclair, Ulbster.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
-<li>COMMANDERS-IN-CHIEF.</li>
-<li>General Oughton.</li>
-<li>General Skene.</li>
-<li>Lord A. Gordon.</li>
-<li>Lord Moira.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
-<li>EMINENT MEN.</li>
-<li>Adam Smith.</li>
-<li>Dr Young.</li>
-<li>Dugald Stewart.</li>
-<li>Dr Gardner.</li>
-<li>Dr Gregory.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
-<li>BANK.</li>
-<li>Douglas, Heron, and Company.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
-<li>LADIES’ BOARDING-SCHOOL.</li>
-<li>Mrs Hamilton, Chessels’s Court.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul>
-<li>PRINCIPAL INNS.</li>
-<li>Ramsay’s, St Mary’s Wynd.</li>
-<li>Boyd’s, Head of Canongate.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>
-‘Two coaches went down the Canongate to Leith&mdash;one hour in going, and
-one hour in returning.’</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_236" id="Footnote_236"></a><a href="#FNanchor_236"><span class="label">[236]</span></a> Removal.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_237" id="Footnote_237"></a><a href="#FNanchor_237"><span class="label">[237]</span></a> ‘At a former period, when the Canongate of Edinburgh was a more fashionable
-residence than at present, a lady of rank who lived in one of the closes,
-before going out to an evening-party, and at a time when hairdressers and
-peruke-makers were much in demand, requested a servant (newly come home)
-to tell Tam Tough the hairdresser to come to her immediately. The servant
-departed in quest of Puff, but had scarcely reached the street before she forgot
-the barber’s name. Meeting with a caddy, she asked him if he knew where the
-hairdresser lived. “Whatna hairdresser is ’t?” replied the caddy. “I ha’e
-forgot his name,” answered she. “What kind o’ name wus ’t?” responded
-Donald. “As near as I can mind,” said the girl, “it was a name that wad
-neither <em>rug</em> nor <em>rive</em>.” “The deil ’s in ’t,” answered Donald, “but that’s a tam’d
-tough name.” “Thank ye, Donald, that’s the man’s name I wanted&mdash;<em>Tam
-Tough</em>.”’&mdash;[<em>From an Edinburgh Newspaper.</em>]</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_238" id="Footnote_238"></a><a href="#FNanchor_238"><span class="label">[238]</span></a> The inscription is now removed.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_239" id="Footnote_239"></a><a href="#FNanchor_239"><span class="label">[239]</span></a> With the exception of Lord Kames’s house, all the others referred to have
-been swept away by the North British Railway and the Corporation Gasworks,
-which at one time occupied the eastern side of the street.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_240" id="Footnote_240"></a><a href="#FNanchor_240"><span class="label">[240]</span></a> Although it was outside the wall, the city authorities claimed jurisdiction
-over the Canongate as far as St John’s Cross, notwithstanding that the Canongate
-was a separate burgh, which it continued to be till the middle of the
-nineteenth century. Proclamations were made at St John’s Cross as well as
-at the Mercat Cross in the High Street, and at it the Canongate burgh officials
-joined the city fathers when paying ceremonial visits to Holyrood.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_241" id="Footnote_241"></a><a href="#FNanchor_241"><span class="label">[241]</span></a> Strap in <cite>Roderick Random</cite> was supposed to represent one Hutchinson, a
-barber near Dunbar. The man encouraged the idea as much as possible.
-When Mr [Warren] Hastings (governor of India) and his wife visited Scotland,
-they sent for this man, and were so pleased with him that Mr Hastings afterwards
-sent him a couple of razors, mounted in gold, from London.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_242" id="Footnote_242"></a><a href="#FNanchor_242"><span class="label">[242]</span></a> For many years the Practising School for Teachers under the management
-of the Free Church of Scotland, now the Training College for Teachers under
-the Provincial Council of Education.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_243" id="Footnote_243"></a><a href="#FNanchor_243"><span class="label">[243]</span></a> The terraces have long since been deprived of their last semblance of the old
-gardens; but while recent excavations were being made for an extension of the
-educational buildings, the statue of the boy was discovered underground in
-the lowest terrace. The statue is preserved, and forms a connecting link
-between ‘My Lady Murray’s Yards’ and the ‘Yards’ of the modern school.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_244" id="Footnote_244"></a><a href="#FNanchor_244"><span class="label">[244]</span></a> On the north side of the High Street, opposite the Tron Church. The site
-is now covered by the opening of Cockburn Street.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_245" id="Footnote_245"></a><a href="#FNanchor_245"><span class="label">[245]</span></a> I was indebted to my friend Dr John Brown (<cite>Horæ Subsecivæ</cite>, p. 42) for
-drawing my attention to a quotation of Seneca by Beyerlinck (<cite>Magn. Theatr.
-Vit. Human.</cite>, tom. vi. p. 60), involving this fine expression. Some one, however,
-has searched all over the writings of Seneca for it in vain.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_246" id="Footnote_246"></a><a href="#FNanchor_246"><span class="label">[246]</span></a> The close entering by the archway at the east end of the house, now called
-‘Bakehouse Close,’ was formerly ‘Hammermen’s Close.’</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_247" id="Footnote_247"></a><a href="#FNanchor_247"><span class="label">[247]</span></a> ‘The Speaking House’ is now recognised as a town mansion of the Huntly
-family. It is said to be associated with the first marquis, who killed the
-‘Bonnie Earl of Moray’ at Donibristle, and died in 1636 at Dundee on his way
-north to Aberdeenshire. His son, the second marquis, who was beheaded in
-1649, was residing in this house ten years prior to his execution, and in it his
-daughter Lady Ann was married to Lord Drummond, third Earl of Perth.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_248" id="Footnote_248"></a><a href="#FNanchor_248"><span class="label">[248]</span></a> Which he named Gosford, after the estate in East Lothian, which was
-acquired by Sir Archibald’s ancestor, a wealthy burgess in the reign of Queen
-Mary. The Viscounts Gosford take their title from the Irish estate.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_249" id="Footnote_249"></a><a href="#FNanchor_249"><span class="label">[249]</span></a> In his MS. Diaries in the Advocates’ Library.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_250" id="Footnote_250"></a><a href="#FNanchor_250"><span class="label">[250]</span></a> In an advertisement in a Jacobite newspaper, called <cite>The Thistle</cite>, which
-rose and sank in 1734, the house is advertised as having lately been occupied
-by the Duchesses of Gordon and Perth. [1868. It is in the course of being
-taken down to make way for a railway.]</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_251" id="Footnote_251"></a><a href="#FNanchor_251"><span class="label">[251]</span></a> In 1864 this favourite Scottish pastime was resuscitated on Leith Links,
-and is now enjoyed with a relish as keen as ever.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_252" id="Footnote_252"></a><a href="#FNanchor_252"><span class="label">[252]</span></a> <cite>Archæologia Scotica</cite>, i.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_253" id="Footnote_253"></a><a href="#FNanchor_253"><span class="label">[253]</span></a> A newspaper, giving an account of Lord Palmerston’s visit to Edinburgh in
-1865, mentions that his lordship, during his stay in the city, was made aware
-that an aged woman of the name of Peggie Forbes, who had been a servant with
-Dugald Stewart, well remembered his lordship when under the professor’s roof
-in early days. Interested in the circumstance, Lord Palmerston took occasion
-to pay her a visit at her dwelling, No. 1 Rankeillor Street, and expressed his
-pleasure at renewing the acquaintance of the old domestic. Dr John Brown
-had discovered the existence of this old association, and with it a box of tools
-which were the property of ‘young Maister Henry’ of those days. The sight
-of them called up within the breast of the Premier further associations of days
-long bygone.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_254" id="Footnote_254"></a><a href="#FNanchor_254"><span class="label">[254]</span></a> Robertson, in his <cite>Rural Recollections</cite> (Irvine, 1829), says: ‘The earliest
-evidence that I have met with of potatoes in Scotland is an old household book
-of the Eglintoune family in 1733, in which potatoes appear at different times as
-a dish at supper.’ They appear earlier than this&mdash;namely, in 1701&mdash;in the
-household book of the Duchess of Buccleuch and Monmouth, where the price
-per peck is intimated at 2s. 6d.&mdash;See Arnot’s <cite>History of Edinburgh</cite>, 4to, p. 201.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_255" id="Footnote_255"></a><a href="#FNanchor_255"><span class="label">[255]</span></a> A noted brewer, much given to preaching. Of him Claudero says:
-</p>
-<div class="poetry-container"><div class="poetry"><div class="stanza">
-<div class="verse">‘Our souls with gospel he did cheer,</div>
-<div class="verse">Our bodies, too, with ale and beer;</div>
-<div class="verse"><i lang="la" xml:lang="la">Gratis</i> he gospel got and gave away;</div>
-<div class="verse">For ale and beer he only made us pay.’</div>
-</div></div></div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_256" id="Footnote_256"></a><a href="#FNanchor_256"><span class="label">[256]</span></a> This thriving parliamentary burgh originated in a cottage built, and long
-inhabited, by a retired seaman of Admiral Vernon’s squadron, who gave it this
-name in commemoration of the triumph which his commander there gained
-over the Spaniards in 1739. There must have been various houses at the spot
-in 1753, when we find one ‘George Hamilton, in Portobello,’ advertising in the
-<cite>Edinburgh Courant</cite> that he would give a reward of three pounds to any one
-who should discover the author of a scandalous report, which represented him
-as harbouring robbers in his house. The waste upon which Portobello is now
-partly founded was dreadfully infested at this time with robbers, and resorted
-to by smugglers; see <cite>Courant</cite>. [Portobello, while remaining one of the ‘Leith
-burghs’ for parliamentary purposes, was municipally incorporated with Edinburgh
-in 1896. Claudero’s ‘Frigate Whins’ are better known as the ‘Figgate
-Whins.’]</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_257" id="Footnote_257"></a><a href="#FNanchor_257"><span class="label">[257]</span></a> Claudero could have little serious expectation that several of these predictions
-would come to pass before he had been forty years in his grave.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_258" id="Footnote_258"></a><a href="#FNanchor_258"><span class="label">[258]</span></a> A celebrated and much-esteemed fishing-rod maker, who afterwards
-flourished in the old wooden <em>land</em> at the head of Blackfriars Wynd. He
-survived to recent times, and was distinguished for his adherence to the cocked
-hat, wrist ruffles, and buckles of his youth. He was a short, neat man, very
-well bred, a great angler, intimate with the great, a Jacobite, and lived to near
-a century. He had fished in almost every trouting stream in the three
-kingdoms, and was seen skating on Lochend at the age of eighty-five.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_259" id="Footnote_259"></a><a href="#FNanchor_259"><span class="label">[259]</span></a> This seems to bear some reference to the seizure of young Macdonald of
-Kinlochmoidart at Lesmahagow in 1745.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_260" id="Footnote_260"></a><a href="#FNanchor_260"><span class="label">[260]</span></a> Introduction to Law’s <cite>Memorials</cite>, p. lxxx.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_261" id="Footnote_261"></a><a href="#FNanchor_261"><span class="label">[261]</span></a> See letters of Gay, Swift, Pope, and Arbuthnot, in Scott’s edition of Swift.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_262" id="Footnote_262"></a><a href="#FNanchor_262"><span class="label">[262]</span></a> In a letter from Gay to Swift, dated February 15, 1727-8, we find the
-subject illustrated as follows: ‘As to my favours from great men, I am in the
-same state you left me; but I am a great deal happier, as I have expectations.
-The Duchess of Queensberry has signalised her friendship to me upon this
-occasion [the bringing out of the <cite>Beggar’s Opera</cite>] in such a conspicuous manner,
-that I hope (for her sake) you will take care to put your fork to all its proper
-uses, and suffer nobody for the future to put their knives in their mouth.’
-</p>
-<p>
-In the <em><abbr title="postscript">P.S.</abbr></em> to a letter from Gay to Swift, dated Middleton Stoney, November
-9, 1729, Gay says: ‘To the lady I live with I owe my life and fortune. Think
-of her with respect&mdash;value and esteem her as I do&mdash;and never more despise
-a fork with three prongs. I wish, too, you would not eat from the point of
-your knife. She has so much goodness, virtue, and generosity, that if you
-knew her, you would have a pleasure in obeying her as I do. She often wishes
-she had known you.’</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_263" id="Footnote_263"></a><a href="#FNanchor_263"><span class="label">[263]</span></a> Record of that Society.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_264" id="Footnote_264"></a><a href="#FNanchor_264"><span class="label">[264]</span></a> The date over the exterior gateway of the Tailors’ Hall, towards the
-Cowgate, is 1644; but it is ascertained that the corporation had its hall at this
-place at an earlier period. An assembly of between two and three hundred
-clergymen was held here on Tuesday the 27th of February 1638 in order to
-consider the National Covenant, which was presented to the public next day
-in the Greyfriars Church. We are informed by the Earl of Rothes, in his
-<cite>Relations</cite> of the transactions of this period, in which he bore so distinguished a
-part, that some few objected to certain points in it; but being taken aside into
-the garden attached to this hall, and there lectured on the necessity of mutual
-concession for the sake of the general cause, they were soon brought to give
-their entire assent.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_265" id="Footnote_265"></a><a href="#FNanchor_265"><span class="label">[265]</span></a> The announcements of entertainments given at this fashionable place
-of amusement in the eighteenth century make amusing reading to-day.
-‘February 17, 1743. We hear that on Monday 21st instant, at the Tailors’
-Hall, Cowgate, at the desire of several ladies of distinction, will be performed
-a concert of vocal and instrumental music. After which will be given gratis
-<cite>Richard the Third</cite>, containing several historical passages. To which will be
-added gratis “The Mock Lawyer.” Tickets for the Concert (on which <em>are</em> [sic]
-printed a new device called Apology and Evasion) to be had at the Exchange
-and John’s Coffee-houses, and at Mr Este’s lodgings at Mr Monro’s, musician
-in the Cowgate, near Tailors’ Hall. As Mrs Este’s present condition will not
-admit a personal application, she hopes the ladies notwithstanding will grace
-her concert.’</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_266" id="Footnote_266"></a><a href="#FNanchor_266"><span class="label">[266]</span></a> Among the audience
-on the first night of the
-performance of <cite>Douglas</cite>
-were the two daughters
-of John and Lady Susan
-Renton, one of whom,
-Eleanor, was the mother
-of Charles Kirkpatrick
-Sharpe, to whom the
-author in his ‘Introductory
-Notice’ expresses
-his indebtedness for assistance
-on the first appearance of this work. And it was for attending one
-of the performances that the minister of Liberton Church brought himself
-under sentence of six weeks’ suspension by the Presbytery of Edinburgh&mdash;a
-sentence modified in consideration of his plea that though he attended the play,
-‘he concealed himself as well as he could to avoid giving offence.’</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_267" id="Footnote_267"></a><a href="#FNanchor_267"><span class="label">[267]</span></a> Maitland, in his <cite>History of Edinburgh</cite>, 1753, says that the encouragement
-given to the diversions at the house ‘is so very great, ’tis to be feared it will
-terminate in the <em>destruction of the university</em>. Such diversions,’ he adds, ‘are
-noways becoming a seat of the Muses.’</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_268" id="Footnote_268"></a><a href="#FNanchor_268"><span class="label">[268]</span></a> The Theatre Royal in Shakespeare Square, where the General Post Office
-now stands.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_269" id="Footnote_269"></a><a href="#FNanchor_269"><span class="label">[269]</span></a> Letter of Captain Amory, MS.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_270" id="Footnote_270"></a><a href="#FNanchor_270"><span class="label">[270]</span></a> The north and south sides only of this square now remain. The west was
-removed to make a thoroughfare&mdash;Marshall Street, connecting Nicolson Square
-and Potterrow.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_271" id="Footnote_271"></a><a href="#FNanchor_271"><span class="label">[271]</span></a> The site was midway between Edinburgh and Leith, now represented by
-Shrub Place.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_272" id="Footnote_272"></a><a href="#FNanchor_272"><span class="label">[272]</span></a> Sir Walter’s brother Thomas was married to a sister of Mr M’Culloch.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_273" id="Footnote_273"></a><a href="#FNanchor_273"><span class="label">[273]</span></a> It was also along this road that the anxious citizens, watching on the
-Castle esplanade, saw the royalist cavalry retiring at full gallop from Coltbridge
-on the approach of Prince Charlie and his Highland army.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_274" id="Footnote_274"></a><a href="#FNanchor_274"><span class="label">[274]</span></a> In Mr Lockhart’s clever book, <cite>Peter’s Letters to his Kinsfolk</cite>, the murderer
-is called Gabriel. A work called <cite>Celebrated Trials</cite> (6 vols. 1825) gives an
-erroneous account of the murder, styling the murderer as the Rev. Thomas
-Hunter.</p></div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_275" id="Footnote_275"></a><a href="#FNanchor_275"><span class="label">[275]</span></a> See <cite>Domestic Annals of Scotland</cite>, i. 407.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p>Transcriber&rsquo;s Note&mdash;the following changes have been made to this text:</p>
-
-<p>Footnote 167: ancedote to anecdote&mdash;&lsquo;an anecdote is told&rsquo;.</p>
-
-<p>Page 238: encirling to encircling&mdash;&lsquo;encircling the head&rsquo;.</p>
-
-<p>Page 291: where to were&mdash;&lsquo;what were called the Back Stairs&rsquo;.</p>
-
-<p>Page 371: Newhailes to New Hailes&mdash;&lsquo;Dalrymple, Miss, Newhailes&rsquo;.</p>
-
-<p>Page 372: Fyfie to Fyvie&mdash;&lsquo;Fyvie, Lord&rsquo;.</p>
-<p class="ml4">Hardcarse to Harcarse&mdash;&lsquo;Harcarse, Lord&rsquo;.</p>
-
-
-<p>Page 373: Jamieson to Jameson&mdash;&lsquo;Jameson, George&rsquo;.</p>
-
-<p>Page 374: Moyse's to Moyses's.</p>
-<p class="ml4">North Esk to Northesk.</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="pgx" />
-<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TRADITIONS OF EDINBURGH***</p>
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