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Index for “A Series of Original Portraits and Caricature Etchings”

BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES. 227
No. CCXLVII.
ANDREW DONALDSON,
TEACHER OF GREEK AXD HEBREW.
OF the family or early history of this eccentric personage little is known. He
was born, it is believed, at Auchtertool,’ and was educated with a view to the
pulpit; but his resources were limited, and, no doubt with the resolution of
embracing the earliest opportunity of following out his original intention, he
accepted the situation of Master in the Grammar School of Dunfermline. He
was an ardent student; and it is supposed that too close application, particularly
in acquiring a knowledge of the Greek and Hebrew languages, tended to impair
the faculties of a mind which might otherwise have shone forth with more than
ordinary lustre. The result was, he soon tired of the irksome duties of a preceptor,
and resigned his situation. He “was sure Job never was a schoolmaster,
otherwise we should not have heard so much of his patience.”
Among other whims entertained, he deemed it unlawful to shave, on the
ground that, as man was created perfect, any attempt at mutilation or amendment
was not only presumptuous but sinful. Following up this theory in
practice, he increased the singularity of his appearance, by approximating still
more closely to the dress and deportment of the ancient prophets. His usual
attire was a loose great-coat, reaching nearly to the ankle. In his hand he
carried a staff of enormous length; and, as he seldom wore a hat or any other
. covering, his flowing locks, bald forehead, and strongly marked countenance,
were amply displayed. He adhered to the strictest simplicity of diet, and
preferred sleeping on the floor, with or without a carpet, if permitted by his
friends. He was tenacious of his beard ; and when on one occasion entreaty so
far prevailed as to induce his consent to be shaved, the violence of his regret
for what he considered a sinful compliance, was so excessive, that those interested
in his welfare, convinced of the danger of such an experiment, refrained
in future from all similar attempts.
Notwithstanding his grotesque and formidable appearance, unless when under
some transitory excitement, Andrew was a man of gentle, kind, and even engaging
manners. Occasionally, when actuated by some strong mental paroxysm,
he has been known to exchange his pilgrim’s staff for an iron rod, with which
1 ‘‘ 14th December 1714. Andrew, son to Gdbert Donaldson and Elizabeth Thallon, was baEtized.
Witness, George Skene and Jsmes Venterr”
“ Extracted from Auchtertool parish Register, the 1st day of March 1838, by
4 ‘ J o T~E OM~OS.N ,C lk.” ... SKETCHES. 227 No. CCXLVII. ANDREW DONALDSON, TEACHER OF GREEK AXD HEBREW. OF the family or early ...

Book 9  p. 303
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BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES. 371
The Highland Society was originated by him and some other patriotic gentlemen;
and till the day of his death he used every exertion to promote the
laudable objects it had in view. He was an original member of the Bannatyne
Club, which, at its institution, was limited to thirty-one; though, in consequence
of its success, it soon extended to one hundred associates. At the sale
of his valuable library-which was especially rich in historical, genealogical, and
antiquarian works-a set of the Bannatyne Publications was purchased for
Sir John Hay,Bart. of Smithfield and Hayston (25th April 1834) for one
hundred and sixty-eight pounds sterling. It wanted, however, one or two of
the “ Garlands.”
Those who remember the ci-devunt judge-though there cannot be many-will
concur in our statement, that he retained to the last hour of his earthly existence
the bearing and manners of the old Scottish gentleman-a race, we reget to say,
almost extinct. To a cultivated mind was united that simplicity and ease of
address which rendered his society peculiarly attractive. He was learned
without pedantry, dignified without pride, beneficent without ostentation, and
joyous without frivolity. In his youth he must have been handsome, as even
the infirmities of age were unable entirely to efface the remains of manly
beauty.
Sir William resided during his latter years in Whitefoord House, Canongate,
where he died on the 30th of October 1833, in the ninety-first year of his age.
When an advocate, he lived for many years in Craig’s Close, fourth storey, first
stair, left hand. The house was his own property ; and it continued in his
possession until his death. It was afterwards long occupied by the printing
establishment of Messrs. Thomas Allan and Co., proprietors of the Culedonian
Mercury Newspaper.
No. CCXCV.
TRAINING A COUNCILLOR.
IN 3817 a Reform in the Burghs was keenly agitated throughout the country,
and nowhere more warmly than in Edinburgh. At the annual return of Councillors
in October of that year, much excitement prevailed, and an attempt was
made to disfranchise the city. For this purpose meetings were held by the
various Corporations-committees were formed-and money voted to carry on
the process. The subject was accordingly brought before the Court of Session ;
and, after some litigation, a decision was recorded against the Council. The
latter, however, resolved to appeal ; and, from certain favourable circumstances
not duly weighed by the Court, confident hopes were entertained of a reversal.
Under these circumstances, a compromise was entered into, by which, on the ... SKETCHES. 371 The Highland Society was originated by him and some other patriotic gentlemen; and ...

Book 9  p. 495
(Score 0.73)

NioiLson Street.] JOHN MACLAREN. 337
spend a portion of each day in education, often
passing an hour or more daily in learning to read
by means of raised letters, under the direction of
the chaplain.
One of the most remarkable inmates here was
John Maclaren, who deserves to be recorded for
his wonderful memory. He was a native of Edinburgh,
and lost his sight by small-pox in infancy.
He was admitted into the first asylum ir. Shakespeare
Square in 1793, and was the last survivor
In West Richmond Street, which opens off the
east side of Nicolson Street, is the McCrie Free
Church, so named from being long the scene of
the labours of Dr. Thomas McCric, the zealous
biographer of Knox and Melville. Near it, a large
archway leads into a small and dingy-looking court,
named Simon Square, crowded by a humble, but
dense population ; yet it has associations intimately
connected with literature and the fine arts, for
there a poor young student from Rnnandale, named
SURGEONS? HALL.
of the original members. With little exception,
he had committed the whole of the Scriptures to
memory, and was most earnest in his pious efforts
to instruct the blind boys of the institution in portions
of the sacred volume. He could repeat an
entire passage of the Bible, naming chapter and
verse, wherever it might be opened for him. As
age came upon him the later events of his life eluded
his memory, while all that it had secured of the
earlier remained distinct to the last. Throughout
his long career he was distinguished by his zeal
in promoting the spiritual welfare and temporal
comfort of the little community of which he was
a member, and also for 3 life of increasing industry,
which closed on the 14th of November, 1840.
91
Thomas Carlyle, lodged when he first came to
Edinburgh, and in a narrow alley called Paul
Street David Wilkie took up his abode on his
arrival in Edinburgh in 1799.
He was then in his fourteenth year; and so little
was thought of his turn for art, that it required all
the powerful influence of the kind old Earl of
Leven to obtain him admission as a student at the
Academy of the Board of Trustees. The room he
occupied in Paul Street was a little back one, about
ten feet square, at the top of a common stair on
the south side of the alley, and near the Pleasance.
From this he removed to a better lodging in East
Richmond Street, and from thence to an attic in
Palmer?s Lane, West Nicolson Street, where hq ... Street.] JOHN MACLAREN. 337 spend a portion of each day in education, often passing an hour or more ...

Book 4  p. 337
(Score 0.73)

INDEX TO THE PORTRAITS, ETC. 489
NO. Page
the Green” .............................. ccxli 214
ing unlawful oaths .............. .cclxxxix 353
M‘Kellar, Alexander ; or “The Cock 0’
M‘Kinlay, Andrew, tried for administer-
N
XAPOLEOI.N, E mperor ...............c ccxxxri 478
Nugent, Mr., of the Pembrokeshire
Cavalry ............................... ..cccxlv 479
0
O’BRIES, the Irish Giant. .................. ccx 116
Oman, Mr. Charles ........................ cclxiv 283
P
PAINE, Mr. Thomas, Secretary for
Foreign Affairs to the American
Congress .......................... ,..ccxxxiv 184
Paul, Emperor of Russia. ............. .cccxxxii 477
Peddie, Rev. Dr. James, of the Associate
Congregation, Bristo Street ... cclxxrvii 351
Peddie, Rev. Dr. James, in 1810 ... cclxxxviii 352
Peddie, Rev. Dr. James ..............c ccxxxix 479
Pierie, E. Alexander ................... .cccviii 411
Pitt, Right Hon. William ................. cclvi 257
Pratt, George .............................. .clxxxi 30
I’rrtt, George, and a Fool .............. cccxliii 479
Pringle, John, Esq. ........................ cclxvi 289
Penny, Mrs .................................. clxxiii 15
Pitt, Right Hon. William .................. cclv 255
R
RAE, Mr. John, surgeon-dentist ...... .cclxiv 283
Rae, Mr. John, surgeon-dentist ........ cclxvi 289
Rigg, James Hume, Esq., of Norton ... ccxxi 148
Ritchie, Mr. Alexander, Scotch cloth
Robertson, William, Lord Robertson.. ... ccc 383
Robertson, William, Lord Robertson cccxii 417
Robinson, Wm. Rose, Esq., Sheriff of
Lanark.. ............................. .cccxxvi 465
Rocheid, James, Esq., of Inverleith clxxxvii 46
Rose, John, Esq., of Holme, in the uniform
of the Grant Fencibles. ... cccxxvii 466
Ross, Mathew, Esq., Dean of Faculty cccxx 43f
Ross, Mr. W. BI., deacon of the tailors ccxcv 372
Rowan, Archibald Hamilton, Esq., of
Billileagh, in Ireland ............... ccxxx 167
VOL. II.
Kanken, William, Esq.. ..................... ccx 117
shop. ................................... .clxxiii 11
9
No. Page
Scorn, milliam. ........................ eelxxviii 322
Scott, Mr. David, farmer, Northfield cccxiv 425
Scott, Sir Walter, Bart. ................ cccxxvi 463
Service Rewarded, Faithful. ............... ccxi 118
Session, Last Sitting of the Old Court of ccc 380
Session, Second Division of the Court
of .......................................... cccxii 417
Set-to, A Political ; or “Freedom of
Election” Illustrated. ............... cccvii 401
Simeon, Rev. Charles, A.M. of Tiinity
Church, Cambridge’ ................... cckx 296
Sinclair, Mr. Charles, one of the delegates
to the British Convention ccxxxvii 191
Sinclair, Sir John, Bart. of Ulbster ....... cxciii 61
Skey, Major, of the Shropshire
Militia. .............................. cccxxviii 468
Skinner, Mr. WiIIiam ................... ..cccvii 402
Skirving, Citizen ........................... ccclix 481
Smith, Mrs., in the costume of 1795 ... cccxv 425
Smythe, David, Lord Methven. ...... cclxxix 325
Sommers, Mr. Thomas, his Majesty’s
glazier. ..................................... .ccl 235
Steele, John, aged 109 years ............ ccxcvi 375
Stewart, Archibald Macarthur, Esq., of
Ascog. ................................... .ccxxi 150
Stirling, Sir James, Bart.. ............... cclviii 263
Stonefield, Lord .............................. cxciv 71
Struthers, Rev. Janes, of the Relief
Chapel, College Street. .............. .ccxv 133
Struthers, Rev. James, of thc Relief
Chapel ................................... ccxvi 134
Suttie, Margaret, a hawker of salt. ... ccxxix 166
Sym, Robert, Esq., Writer to the
Signet ................................ .cccxxiii 455
Syme, Old Geordie, a famous piper ... ccxviii 137
T
TAIT, Old John, the broom-maker ..... ccxx 143
Taylor, Quarter-Master.. ............. ..clxxxvii 48
Tronmen, The City; or Chimncy-
Sfi-eepen. .............................. ccxxiv 155
Turnbull, Rev. Dr. Alexander, of Dalladies
.................................. ccxxviii 163
Tytler, Alexander Fraser, Lord Woodhouselee
... ccc 380
Tytler, Alex. Fraser, Lord Woodhowlee
................................. cccxii 417
V
VYSE, Lieut.-General, in command of
the Forces in Scotland. .......... cclxxxri 349
3 R ... TO THE PORTRAITS, ETC. 489 NO. Page the Green” .............................. ccxli 214 ing unlawful ...

Book 9  p. 680
(Score 0.73)

THE EARLY CHURCH. I39 St. Giles?s Church.]
of that hospital used to present a bowl of ale to away. The first stone church was probably of
every felon as he passed their gate to Newgate.
Among the places enumerated by Simon Dunelmensis,
of Durham, as belonging to the see
.of Lindkfarn in 854, when Earnulph, who removed
it to Chester-le-Street, was bishop, he includes
that of Edinburgh. From this it must
be distinctly inferred that a church of some
kind existed on the long slope that led to Dun
Edin, but no authentic record of it occurs till the
reign of King Alexander II., when Baldred deacon
of Lothian, and John perpetual vicar of the
church of St. Giles at Edinburgh, attached their
seals to copies of certain Papal bulls and charters
of the church of Megginche, a dependency of the
church of Holyrood ; and (according to the Liber
Cartaruni Sanctae Crucis) on the Sunday before the
feast of St. Thomas, in the year 1293, Donoca,
daughter of John, son of Herveus, resigned certain
Iands to the monastery of Holyrood, in full consis-,
Norman architecture. A beautiful Norman dborway,
which stood below the third window from the
west, was wantonly destroyed towards the end of
the eighteenth century. ?? This fragment,? says
Wilson, ?sufficiently enables us to picture the
little parish church of St. Giles in the reign of
David I. Built in the massive style of the early
Norman period, it would consist simply of a nave
and chancel, united by a rich Norman chancel
arch, altogether occupying only a portion of the
centre of the present nave. Small circular-headed
windows, decorated with zig-zag mouldings, would
admit the light to its sombre interior; while its
west front was in all probability surmounted by
a simple belfry, from whence the bell would summon
the natives of the hamlet to matins and
vespers, and with slow measured sounds toll their
knell, as they were laid in the neighbouring churchyard.
This ancient church was never entire4 detory,
held in the church of St. Giles. Its solid masonry was probably very
is again mentioned, when William the bishop of St. forces of Edward 11. in 1322, when Holyrood was
,%ndrews confirmed numerous gifts bestowed upon spoiled, or by those of his son in 1335, when
the abbey and its dependencies. In 1359 King the whole country was wasted with fire and sword.
David II., by a charter under his great seal, con- The town was again subjected to the like violence,
Catharine in the church of St. Giles all the lands I conflagration of 1385, when the English army
.of Upper Merchiston, the gift of Roger Hog, under Richard 11. occupied the town for five days,
burgess of Edinburgh. It is more than probable and then laid it and the abbey of Holyrood in
961, and built up again within the year. Of what ? the original fabric by the piety of private donors,
must the materials have been? asks Maitland. I or by the zeal of its own clergy to adapt it to
Burned again in 1187, it was rebuilt on arches of, the wants of the rising town. In all the changes
.stone--? a wonderful work,? say the authors of the that it underwent for above seven centuries, the
day. I original north door, with its beautifully recessed
A portion of the church of St. Giles was arched ? Norman arches and grotesque decorations, always
I with stone in 1380, as would appear from a con- commanded the veneration of the innovators, and I tract noted by Maitland, who has also preserved remained as a precious relic of the past, until the
the terms of another contract, made in 1387, be- tasteless improvers of the eighteenth century de-.
tween the provost and community of Edinburgh I molished it without a cause, and probably for no
on one hand, an? two masons on the other, for the better reason than to evade the cost of its repair !?
construction of five separate vaulted chapels along I In the year 1462 great additions and repairs.
the south side of the church, the architectural appear to have been in progress, for the Town.
features of which prove its existence at a period Council then passed a law that all persons selling
I long before any of these dates, and when Edin- corn before it was entered should forfeit one chal-
I der to church work. In the year 1466 it was I burgh was merely a cluster of thatched huts.
The edifice, as it now stands, is a building erected into a collegiate church by James III.,.
including the work of many different and remote the foundation consisting (according to Keitli and
I periods. By all men of taste and letters in Edin- others) of a provost, curate, sixteen prebendaries,.
burgh it has been a general subject of regret that sacristan, beadle, minister of the choir, and four
the restoration in 1829 was conducted in a man- choristers. - Various sums of money, lands, tithes,
ner so barbarous and irreverent, that many of its &c., were appropriated for the support of the new
In an Act ? molished.
passed in 1319, in the reign of Robert I., the church I partially affected by the ravages of the invading
firmed to the chaplain officiating at the altar of St. i probably with results little more lasting, by the
that the first church on the site was of wood. St. i ashes. The Norman architecture disappeared
Paul?s Cathedral, at London, was burned down in I piecemeal, as chapels and aisles were added to ... EARLY CHURCH. I39 St. Giles?s Church.] of that hospital used to present a bowl of ale to away. The first stone ...

Book 1  p. 139
(Score 0.73)

Leith Wynd.] THE TRINITY HOSPITAL. 307
was abandoned. At length, as stated, Robert
Pont, in. 1585, resigned all his rights and interests
in the establishment, for the sum of 300 merks
down, and an annuity of A160 Scots.
In 1587 an Act was passed revoking all grants
made during the king?s minority, of hospitals,
Maiso?ss Dieu, and ? lands or rentis appertaining
thereto,? the object of which was, that they might
be applied to this original purpose-the sustentation
of the poor, and not to the aggrandisement of
mere individuals ; and in this Act it was specially
ordained, that the rents of the Trinity College,
? quhilk is now decayit,? be .assigned to ? the new
hospital1 erectit be the Provest, Baillies, and
Counsall;? and thus it became for ever a corporation
charity, for which a suitable edifice was found
by simply repairing the ruinous buildings, occupied
of old by the Provost and prebends, south of the
church, and on the west side of the wynd.
It was a fine specimen of the architecture and
monastic accommodation of the age in which it
was erected. It was two storeys high, and formed
two sides of a square, and though far from ornamental,
its air of extreme antiquity, the smallness
and depth of its windows, its silent, melancholy,
and deserted aspect, in the very heart of a crowded
city, and latterly amid the uproar and bustle of the
fast-encroaching railway, seldom failed to strike the
passer with a mysterious interest.
Along the interior of the upper storey of the
longer side there was a gallery, about half the
width of the house, lighted from the west, which
served alike as a library (consisting chiefly of
quaint old books of dry divinity), a promenade, and
grand corridor, winged with a range of little rooms,
some whilom the prebends? cells, each of which had
a bed, table, and chair, for a single occupant The
other parts of the building were more modem
sitting rooms, the erection of the sixteenth century,
when it became destined to support decayed
burgesses of Edinburgh, their wives and unmarried
children, above fifty years of age. ?Five men
and two women were first admitted into it,? says
h o t , ? and, the number gradually increasing,
amounted AD. 1700 to fifty-four persons. It was
found, however, that the funds of the hospital
could not then support so many, and the number
of persons maintained in it,has frequently varied.
At present (?779) there are within the hospital
forty men and women, and, there are besides twentysix
out-pensioners. The latter have E 6 a year,
the former are maintained in a very comfortable
manner. Each person has a convenient room.
The men are each allowed a hat, a pair of breeches,
a pair of shoes, a pair of stackings, two shirts, and
two neckcloths, yearly; and every other year a
coat?and waistcoat The women have yearly, a
pair of shoes, pair of stockings, two shifts; and
every other year a gown and petticoat. For buying
petty necessaries the men are allowed 6s. Sd.,
the women 6s. 6d., yearly. Of food, each person
has a daily allowance of twelve ounces of household
bread; and of ale, the men a Scots pint each,
the women two-thirds of a pint. For breakfast
they have oatmeal-porridge, and for dinner, four
days in the week, broth and boiled meat, two days
roast meat, and each Monday, in lieu of flesh, the
men are allowed zd., the women rid. apiece.?
Such was this old charity towards the close of
the eighteenth century. The inmates were of a
class above the common, and whom a poor-house
life would have degraded, yet quarrels, even riots,
among them were 80 frequent, that the attention of
the governors had more than once to be called
to the subject, though they met only at meals
and evening worship. Yet, occasionally, some
belonged to the better classes of society. Lord
Cockburn, writing in 1840, says:-?One of the
present female pensioners is ninety-six. She was
sitting beside her own fire. The chaplain shook her
kindly by the hand, and asked her how she was.
? Very weel-just in my creeping ordinary.? There
is one Catholic here, a merry little woman, obviously
with some gentle blood in her veins, and delighted
to allude to it. This book she got from Sir John
Something ; her great friend had been Lady something
Cunningham ; and her spinet was the oldest
that had ever been made ; to convince me of which
she opened it, and pointed exultingly to the year
I 776. Neither she nor the ninety-six-year-old
was in an ark, but in a small room. On overhearing
my name, she said she was once at Miss Brandon?s
boarding-school, in Bristo Street, with a Miss
Matilda Cockburn, ? a pretty little girl.? I told her
that I remembered that school quite well, and that
the little girl was my sister ; and then I added as a
joke, that all the girls at that school were said
to have been pretty, and all light-headed, and given
to flirtation ; the tumult revived in the vestal?s veins.
Delighted with the imputation, she rubbed her
hands together, and giggled till she wept.? The
octogenarian he refers to was a Miss Gibb, and
the last nearly of the old original inmates.
By 1850 the revenues amounted to about
#,ooo per annum.
At its demolition, in 1845, forty-two persons
were maintained within the hospital, who then
received pensions of A26 each. Those elected
since that period receive L20 yearly each; one
hundred and twenty others have an annual allowance ... Wynd.] THE TRINITY HOSPITAL. 307 was abandoned. At length, as stated, Robert Pont, in. 1585, resigned all ...

Book 2  p. 307
(Score 0.73)

INDEX TO THE PORTRAITS, ETC. 433
No. Page
Hind, Captain, of the 55th Rcgiment of
Foot ....................................... IXX 166
Hog, Roger, Esq. of Newliston .........x vii 45
Hog, Roger, Esq. of Newliston ......... lxvi 160
Home, Henry, Lord Kames .................Y. 14
Home, Francis, M.D., Professor of Materia
Medica in the Universitg ......... ci 249
Hope, Sir Archibald, Bart. of Pinkie ... cxxvi 311
Hopetoun, Earl of, with a distant view
of the Hopetoun Fencibles ......... lxxxi 196
Hopetoun Fencibles, Three Officers of
the .......................................... clx 404
Hunter, Alexander, Esq. of Polmood ... xvii 44
Hunter, Colonel, brother of Sir James
Hunter, Rev. Dr. Andrew, of the Tron
Hunter, Dr. Andrew, Professor of Divinity
in the University, and minister
of the Tron Kirk ..............c. xxi 298
Huntly, the Marquis of, afterwards Duke
of Gordon ............................. .Ixxviii 185
Hutton, Dr. James ........................ xxiv 55
Hutton, Dr. Jarnes ........................... xcix 247
Hutton, Miss Sibilla ....................... .clviii 400
J
Jamieson, Mr. William .................... .xciii 223
Johnston, Rev. Dr. David, of North
Leith ................................
Johnston, Mr. Robert ...............
Justice, Captain James, of Justice
Hunter Blair, Bart. .. .XI 92
............................... -xxx 67
andaLadyinthecostumeof 1790 ... cxxx 317
E
...................... cxxxii 323
1
Church .................................... cxv 282
Kay, Mr. John, caricaturist, etc ................ i
Kemp, Rev. John, D.D., of the Tolbooth
Ken-, James, Esq. of Blackshiels ......... clxii 413
Kyd, Bailie John .............................. iv 12
L
Laing, Dr. William ........................ clxvii 425
Laird, the Daft Highland ..................... ii 4
Laird, the Daft Highland ..................... ix 27
Lawson, Rev. James, of Belvidere-
‘‘ The Job of present timea ” .........l xv 154
Lennox, the Right Hon. Colonel, afterwards
Duke of Richmond and
Lennox ................................. xxxix 90
Leslie, Professor John, King’s College,
Aberdeen ................................. xxxv 78
Leven and Melville, the Right Hon.
David Earl of ...................... ..lxxxvii 211
Lothian, Bailie John ........................ xvi 43
3
No. Page
afterwards Earl of Rosslyn ............e li 378
Loughborough, Lord High Chancellor,
Lunardi, Vincent, aeronaut .......... ..xxxvi 79
Lunardi, Vincent, aeronaut ........... .xxxviii 86
If
Nacdougal, Ensign, of the Hopetoun
Fencibles ................................ .clxvi 423
Macgregor, Rev. Joseph Robertson, first
minister of the Edinburgh Gaelic
Chapel ............
Macpherson, Mr. William .................. lxvi 157
Yacrae, James, Esq., the fortnnate duellist
......................................... xiii 37
Marshall, James, Esq., W.S ...............c xi 272
Marriage, before and after ............... xxxvii 85
Martin, William, bookseller and RUCtioneer
............... ................ Ixi 140
Mealmaker, Georw author of the
“Moral and P”fitica1 Catechism of
Man ” ................................ .clxviii 426
Meikle, Mr. -Robe&, Grand Clerk .........x cv 229
Melville, Henry Viscount ...............x lviii 100
Mingay, Captain, with a porter carrying
George Cranstonn in his creel ... xix 49
Mitchell, Mr. John ...................... ..xxxviii 89
Moncrief, David Stuart, Esq. of Moredun
....................................... lxxix 193
Monro, Dr. Alexander, Secunduq Professor
of Anatomy .................... .cxiv 280
Montgomery, Sir James, of Stanhope..lxxix 190
Moodie, Rev. William, D.D., Professor
of Oriental Languages, and minister
of St. Andrew’s Church ............ cxliii 357
Moss, Mr., in the character of “Ca1eb”xciv 227
Moyes, Dr. Henry,lecturer on Chemistry,
etc .......................................... lxxv 177
Muir, Thomas, Esq., younger of Hunters-
* hill ...................................... cxxv 306
M‘Bain, Lauchlan, a well-known vendor
of Roasting-jacks ........................ liii 110
M‘Bain Lauchlan, after his dismissal
from the Charity Work-House ......... liv 112
M‘Donald, Samuel .............................. xx 50
M‘Dougall, Allan, Esq ..................... clxv 418
M‘Dowall, Mr. Archibald .................. xciii 225
M‘Kenzie, Captain, of Redcastle ......... cxx 294
M‘Leod, Mr. Roderick, Sub-Principal of
King’s College, Aberdeen ........... .xxxv 77
WLure, Rev. John, Chaplain to the
Grand Lodge ........................... lxvii 160
M‘Nab, Francis, Esq. of MNab ............ iu 9
M‘Nab, Laird of .............................. cxx 297
M‘Phaill, Myles, the caddy ............ xxxviii 89
M‘Queen, Robert, of Braxfield, Lord
Justice-clerk ........................ ...lxxi 167
Monboddo, Lord ............................. xcix 247
M‘Gowan, Mr. John ........
... ... TO THE PORTRAITS, ETC. 433 No. Page Hind, Captain, of the 55th Rcgiment of Foot ...

Book 8  p. 606
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64 EDJNBUKGH PAST AND PRESENT.
~
Armadale’s retirement from the Bench, he was made a Baronet, and he sold
his house to Mr. Selkrig, a well-known accountant, who shortly afterwards
died in it. It was then purchased by Mr. Archibald Constable,’ the great
publisher, who resided in it till his death in 1827.
No. I and No. z remained, until they were about to be demolished, in
the respective families of their first proprietors ; but No. z was the only one
of the four houses which continued to the last in the possession of, and
inhabited by, the family of the original proprietors. In it, on the z 1st December
181 I, Archibald Campbell Tait, the future Archbishop of Canterbury,
was born. He was the seventh son of Craufurd Tait and Susan Campbell.
From this house he went for a year to the High School, and for the subsequent
three years he went daily to the ‘Edinburgh Academy.’ He was
accompanied every morning by Thomas Constable, his immediate neighbour
and dear friend through life, and by his cousin from No. I, Ramsay Campbell,
who in after life became Rector of Aston in Yorkshire, and died a few years
ago in his cousin’s arms at the Archiepiscopal country residence of Addington.
In those days there was no George IV. Bridge, and the first part of the
nearly two miles walk, or rather run, was (as a short cut) through dirty lanes or
‘ closes,’ till the Mound was reached. Whenever in after life the Archbishop
came to Edinburgh, his home was in No. 2 Park Place, and his elder surviving
brothers continued to live in it till they were persuaded to migrate, and
forward the views of the University. The Leaving Park Place ’ has become
almost a matter of history from the touching lines of a modem Scotch poet
and distinguished Judge, Lord Neaves.
‘Ross House,’ among its other changes, was for above thirty years
a Lying-in Hospital, under the special care of Dr. James Hamilton, of
European celebrity, and within its walls-for good or for evil-many
thousands of the human race came into existence. The situation of Park
Piacc may perhaps be best known in future by the Univcsiiy Music Hair,
which about twelve years ago the proprietors of that private street allowed to
- be erected in the park immediately to the east of them, and over which they
had a servitude.
The &e of the convent of St. Catherine of Sienna, a little to the south
of the East Meadows, is marked by a suitable inscription on an iron tablet
placed there by Mr. George Seton, ddvocate, an accomplished scholar and
antiquary, who has preserved some of the stones of the ancient edifice in the -
1 Before coming to Park Place, Mr. Constable resided at the beautiful and interesting mansion
of Craigcrook. ... EDJNBUKGH PAST AND PRESENT. ~ Armadale’s retirement from the Bench, he was made a Baronet, and he sold his ...

Book 11  p. 103
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INDEX TO THE PORTRAITS, ETC. 487
G
No. Page
GEORGE1 11.-Appendix ....... ... .. .. .. cccxxx 477
George IIL, Profile ...................... cccxxxi 477
Gilchrist, David, one of the City Tronmen.
... . . . ... ... . . . .. . .. . . . , .. . .. . . .. .. .ccxxiv 155
Gillespie, James, Esq. of Spylaw. ... ... ccxliv 218
Gillespie, Mr. John ...... ... .. . . . . . . . ... .. .ccxliv 218
Gillies, Adam, Lord Gillies.. ... .. . . . . . . .cccxii 418
Gillies, Adam, Lord Gillies ... ... .. , . , .cccxxvi 462
Gould, Sergeant-Major Patrick .. . .. .. .clxxxv 43
“ Government, Petticoat ”. . . . ... ... , . .ccxlviii 232
Grant,General James,of Ballindalloch clxxviii 22
Grant, Dr. Gregory. ........................ ccviii 109
Grant, Isaac, Esq., of Hilton. ............ ccxxi 149
Grant, Hon. Francis William, of Grant,
Colonel of the Inverness-shire
Militia . . . . . . . . ... . , . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .cccxviii 433
Grant, Rev. J. Francis, of St. George’s
Chapel. , .. .. . ... , . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . ... cccxxi 447
Gregory, Dr. James ...................... cccxxii 450
Grey, Rev. Henry, A.M., of St. Mary’s
Church.. ... .. . .. . .. . . .. . . . .. . . . . . . . . . .cccxxiv 157
Grieve, Mrs ... . , . . , . . . . . . .. .. . . . . . . . , .. . .. . . .clxxiii 15
Grieve, Dr. Henry. ........................... ccxi 119
Grinly, Mr. William, merchant and
ship-broker .. .. . ... .. . .. . .. . . .. . , . ... , . .cxcvi 76
Grose, Hon. Sir Rash, one of the Judges
of the Court of King’s Bench. ... cclxvii 290
Guest, Quarter-Master. ,. . ,. . . . . .. . ... ... cccxliv 479
Guthrie, Mr. John, bookseller . ..... . ... clxxxii 31
H
HAGARJTo,h n, Esq., of Glendelvine ...c ccxx 442
Haldane, James Alexander, Esq., minister
of the Tabernacle, Leith
Walk. ... .. . . .. .., . .. . . . .. . . . . .. . . . . . . .clxxxiv 37
Hall, Mr. William, merchant ......-..c. lxxiii 13
Hall, Rev. Dr. James, of the Secession
Church, Broughton Place. .. . .. . . ..cclxiii 278
Hamilton, Dr. James, senior.. .. . ... ... cxcviii 79
Hamilton, Dr. James .. ... ... ...........c cxxvi 158
Hardie, bfr. Andrew, baker ...........c. lxxiii 11
Hardie, Rev. Dr. Thomas,‘Professor of
Divinity and Ecclesiastical History.
... ... . . . ... .. , .. . . . . . . . . .. . .. .. .clxxxviii 48
Hardy, Thomas ... ... ... .. . . .. . .. .. . .. . . . ... ccclx 482
Hay, Dr. Thomas, City Chamberlain cclviii 262
Hay, Captain, or the “Daft Captain ” cclxxx 329
Hay, Charles, Lord Newton ................ ccc 380
Henderson, Mr. Tholllas, City Chamberlain
...................................... ccxcvi 375
Hermand, Lord .. ... ........_..... .,......... ..c cc 380
Hieroglyphic Letter from the Devil to
Sir Laurence Dundas .... _.... ..... .ccclvii 480
Doudaa’ Answer.. . .. . ... . . . .. . .. , . .. ... ccclviii 480
No. Pagg
Home, John, Esq., of Ninewells ......... CXCP 72
Honyman, Sir Wm., Bart., Lord Armadale
... ... ......... ...... ... ... ......... ccxxvii 162
Honyman, Sir Wm., Bart., Lord Armadale
.......................................... ccc 380
Honyman, Sir Wm., Bart., Lord Armadale.
,. . . . . . . . . . . . . , . . . , . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . .cccxu 417
Hope, Right Hon. Charles, of Granton,
when Lord Advocate of Scotland
....................................... ccliii 246
Hope, Right Hon. Charles, Lieut..
Colonel, commanding the E d i -
burgh Volunteers ... . . . . ... .. . ... . .. ... ccliv 254
Hope, Right Hon. Charles, Lord Justice-
Clerk. ......... ...... ...... ... ... ... .., ... ... ccc 380
Hope, Dr. John, Professor of Botany ... cccxi 415
Hope, Dr. Thomas Charlea, Professor of
Chemistry ............................ cccxxii 450
Hunter, Rev. Dr. Andrew ............ clxxxvii 46
Hunter, Mr. James, hardware merchant ccli 242
Hunter, Mr. George, hardware merchant
....................................... ccli 242
Huntingdon, Right Hon. SelinaCountesa
Dowager of. ........................... clxxiv 16
Hutton, Miss Sibby.. ..................... clxxiii 15
Hutton, Mr. John.. ................ .. ... ... accvii 402
I
INNES, Mr. Edward ......................... cclxv 284
Irving, Alexander (afterwards Lord
Newton) . .. . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . .cccxxvi 462
J
JAMFSORNo,b ert, Professor of Natural
History . .. . . . . . , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .cccxxii 452
Jamieson, Rev, John, D.D., of the AssociateCongregation,
Nicolson Street ;
fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh,
etc. .. ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... cclxxvu 317
Jardiie, Sir Henry ........................ cclxxx 327
Jardine, John, Esq., Sheriff of Ross and
Cromarty ............................ cccxxvi 465
Jefferson, Thomaa, Esq., President of
the United States of America ... ccxxxix 193
Jeffrey, Francis, Esq., advocate, one of
the Senators of the College of
Justice . .. . . . .. . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... cccu 388
Another Portrait of the same ...... cccxxvi 465
Johnston, E. Henry, in the character
of “ Hamlet” ...... ... ............ ... cclxxvi 315
Johnstone, Major Charles, when an Ensign
in the Hopetoan Fenciblea ccxlvi 225
Johnston, Robert, Eq ................... cccxxii 454
Jones, Dr. Thomas Snell, minister of
Lady Glenorchy’s Chapel. ....... .. ... ccvi 102 ... TO THE PORTRAITS, ETC. 487 G No. Page GEORGE1 11.-Appendix ....... ... .. .. .. cccxxx 477 George IIL, ...

Book 9  p. 678
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10 BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES.
he was for binding down to a day for the completion of the work, “will you
send me the hair ‘1 ”-“ The hair, sir ! ” replied M‘Nab fiercely ; ‘‘ Py Cot, sir
you must give me the hair to the pargain I ”
In cases, however, where the Laird is exhibited in the exercise of his own
native wit, he by no means cuts the ridiculous figure he is made to do in such
stories as the above. The Laird was a regular attendant on the Leith races,
at which he bsually appeared in a rather flashy-looking gig. On one of these
occasions he had the misfortune to lose his horse, which suddenly dropped
down dead. At the races in the following year, a wag who had witnessed the
catastrophe rode up to him and said, ‘I M‘Nab, is that the same horse you had
last year 1 ”
‘‘ No, py Cot ! ” replied the Laird, (‘ but this is the same whip ;” and he was
about to apply it to the shoulders of the querist, when he saved himself by a
speedy retreat.
On the formation of the Local Militia in 1808, M‘Nab being in Edinburgh,
applied for arms for the Breadalbane corps of that force, but which he ought to
have called the 4th Perthshire Local Militia. The storekeeper not recognising
them by the name given by M‘Nab, replied to his application that he did
not know such a corps.
“My fine little storekeeper,” rejoined the Laid, highly offended at the contempt
implied in this answer, “that may be; but, take my word for it, we do
not think a bit the less of ourselves by you^ not knowing us.”
This original character, but kind, single-minded man, died unmarried I at Callander,
in Perthshire, on the 25th June 1816, in the eighty-second year of his age.
THREE GIANTS, WITH A GROUP OF SPECTATORS.
THIS Print exhibits Charles Byrne, the Irish giant, and two other giants,
also Irishmen, who, although not in Edinburgh at the same time, have been
placed by the artist in one group.
The spectators are-Lord Monboddo, whose head appears in the background
; William Richardson, solicitor-at-law, on the left behind ; and Mr.
Bell, engraver, in front ; on the right, Bailie Kyd, a lady, and a dwarf.
Byme, the central of the three principal figures, was eight feet two inches in
height, and proportionably thick. He was born in Ireland, of which oountry
On one occasion when the opposite counsel, in one of his many causes in the Court of Session, was
nnimadvertingon the immoral character of the Laird, he obsemed that it was currently reported that he
had no less than twenty-seven natural children in the quarter where he lived. The Laird, being in Court,
rose up and said, “ It is a pig lee, my Lord, for I have only four-and-twenty,” One evening, being at a
party, a number of young ladies very jocularly asked him why he neyer took a wife. He good-humouredly
replied, “ MJ tears, I love you a11 so well that I .Can’t think of marrying any one of you.“ ... BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES. he was for binding down to a day for the completion of the work, “will you send me ...

Book 8  p. 12
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24 MEMORIALS OF EDINBURGH.
horsis under the Castle wall, in the barrace,” the Scottish knight’s horse having failed
him in the first onset, they encountered on foot, continuing the contest for a full hour, till
the Dutchman being struck to the ground, the King cast his hat over the Castle wall a8 a
signal to stay the combat, while the heralds and trumpeters proclaimed Sir Patrick the
victor.
A royal experiment, of a more subtle nature, may be worth recording, as a sample of
the manners of the age. The King caused a dumb woman to be transported to the neighbouring
island of Inchkeith, and there being properly lodged and provisioned, two infants
were entrusted to her care, in order to discover by the language they should adopt, what
was the original human tongue. The result seems to have been very satisfactory, as, after
allowing them a suficient time,
it was found that ‘‘ they spak very
guid Ebrew I ”
But it is not alone by knightly
feats of arms, and the rude chivalry
of the Middle Ages, that
the court of James IV. is distinguished.
The Scottish capital,
during his reign, was the residence
of men high in every department
of learning and the arts.
Gawin Douglas, afterwards
Bishop of Dunkeld, the wellknown
author of “ The Palice of
Honour,” and the translator of
Virgil’s Bneid into Scottish
verse, was at this time Provost
of St Giles’s,’ and dedicated his
poem to the
“ Maist gracious Prince ouir Souerain Jamea the Feird,
Supreme honour renoun of cheualrie.”
Dunbar, “ the greatest poet that Scotland has produced,” ’ was in close and familiar
attendance on the court, and with him Kennedy, “ his kindly foe,” and Sir John Ross, and
“ Gentill Roull of Corstorphine,” as well as others afterwards enumerated by Dunbar, in his
“ Lament for the Makaris.” Many characteristic and very graphic allusions to the manners
of the age have been preserved in the poems that still exist, by them affording a curious
insight into the Scottish city and capital of the James’s. Indeed, the local and temporary
allusions that occur in their most serious pieces, are often quaint and amusing, in the highest
degree, as in Kennedy’s “ Passioun of Grist :”-
“ In the Tolbuth then Pilot enterit in,
Callit on Chrid, and sperit gif He wea King I ”
Keith’a Bishops, 8v0, 1824;~. 468. ’ Ellis’ Specimens, Svo, 1845, vol. i. p. 304.
VIGNETTE-North-e118t pillar, St Qiles’s choir. ... MEMORIALS OF EDINBURGH. horsis under the Castle wall, in the barrace,” the Scottish knight’s horse having ...

Book 10  p. 26
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BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES. 193
Church (founded by Dame Margaret Her, Lady Yester, in 1647), it was found
necessary to rebuild it. While the work was in progress, an arrangement was
entered into, by which Mr. Black obtained permission to officiate every Sabbath
forenoon in the Chapel of Ease belonging to St. Cuthbert’s parish.
The new church having been completed with as little delay as possible, was
opened for worship on the 8th December 1805. This was a consummation to
which Rlr. Black had no doubt anxiously looked forward ; but he was permitted
little more than to witness its accomplishment. About the middle of February
following, he was seized with a fever, and died on the 25th of the same month.
On the evening previous, a large body of the congregation and other friends
assembled in Lady Yester’s Church, and offered up prayer for his recovery-a
circumstance strongly indicative of the peculiar estimation in which he was held.
His habits of life were simple, his temper mild, and his manners gentle.
In compliance with a reiterated desire on the part of the public, a volume
of his sermons, with a brief memoir of the author, was given to the public a
short time after his demise. A second edition
was published in 1812 ; and the work is now, we believe, seldom to be met with.
Mr. Black married, in 1795, Miss Agnes Wood, daughter of George Wood
of Warriston, Esq., and left six children.
These were much esteemed.
No. CCXXXIX.
THOMAS JEFFERSON, ESQ.,
PRESIDENT OX THE UNITED STATES OF AVERICA.
THISP ortrait of PRESIDENJTE FFERSOwNho, died on the 4th July 1826, was
etched by the artist from an original miniature forwarded to him from America.
Mr. Jefferson, descended from a family of consideration in Virginia, was born
in 1743. He received an excellent classical education-studied law-was well
acquainted with geography; natural history, and astronomy-and devotedly
attached to literature and the fine arts. Elected in his twenty-fifth year a
member of the Virginia Assembly, he was early distinguished by his abilities,
and for the decided tone of hostility he assumed towards the mother country.
He next became a member of the Old Congress, and was an active promoter of
those measures which led to the Revolution. From 1777 till 1779 he was
engaged with Mr. Pendleton and Mr. White in the construction of a code of laws
abridged from the English statutes; and, in 1780, he was chosen Governor of
Virginia, which office he held during the remainder of the War of Independence.
VOL. 11. 2 c ... SKETCHES. 193 Church (founded by Dame Margaret Her, Lady Yester, in 1647), it was found necessary to ...

Book 9  p. 261
(Score 0.71)

and play, the students went into the fields around
the Burgh loch, or elsewhere, and returned at four,
for examination at six.
In summer they held their conferences concerning
the lectures till three. From three to four
they were examined by the regent, and from four
to six were again permitted to ramble in the fields.
Even on Saturdays each of the professors held a
disputation in his own class-in winter from seven
till nine a.m., and in summer from six till nine,
and was similarly occupied from ten till twelve.
?That is,? says a writer on this subject, ??a
few tourists who came to Edinburgh in those days.
?? What is called the college,? wrote an Italian
traveller in 1788, ? is nothing else than a mass of
ruined buildings of very ancient construction.
One of them is said to be the house which was
partly blown up with gunpowder at the time it was
inhabited by Lord Darnley, whose body was found
at some distance, naked, and without any signs of
violence. The college serves only for the habitation
of some of the professors, for lecture rooms,
and for the library. Here resides, with his family,
the celebrated Dr. William Robertson, who is head
THE ORIGINAL DESIGN FOR THE EAST FRONT OF THE XEW BUILDING FOR THE UNIVERSITY OF EDINBUKGH.
From the Plde in ? I The Work in Architecture of Robw&madJmes ddatn,? London, 1789-1821.)
regent in those times taught as many hours on a
Saturday as his successors at the present devote to
their students in the course of a whole week.
In short, the saving of human labour in teaching
seems to be the great glory and improvement of
the age.?
The examination on the students? notes had
become that which the commissioners of 1695
regarded it-the most useful and instructive part
of a professor?s duties.
On the aznd November, 1753, one of the most
shining lights of the old university-Dugald
Stewart-was born within its walls, his father, and
predecessor in the chair of mathematics, being Dr.
Matthew Stewart, who was appointed thereto in
=747.
The poverty and dilapidation of the old university
buildings excited the coninlent of all the
of the university, with the title of principal. The
students, who amount annually to some seven or
eight hundred, do not live in the college, but
board in private houses, and attend the lectures
according as they please. Dr. Robertson thinks
this method more advantageous to youth than
keeping them shut up in colleges, as at Oxford
and Cambridge. He says that when young men
are not kept from intercourse with society, besides
that they do not acquire that rude and savage air
which retired study gives, the continual examples
which they meet with in the world, of honour and
riches acquired by learning and merit, stimulate
them more strongly to the attainment of these;
and that they acquire, besides, easy and insinuating
manners, which render them better fitted in
the sequel for public employments.?J
Elsewhere the tourist says, ?The results are such, ... play, the students went into the fields around the Burgh loch, or elsewhere, and returned at four, for ...

Book 5  p. 20
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Calton HilL] THE NATIONAL MONUMENT. 109
~
Grand Master of Scotland, the various loQges
proceeded in procession from the Parliament Square,
accompanied by the commissioners for the King,
and a brilliant concourse. The foundation-stone
of the edifice (which was to be 228 feet long, by
IOZ broad) weighed six tons, and amid salutes of
cannon from the Castle, Salisbury Craigs, Leith
Majesty, the patron of the undertaking. The celebrated
Parthenon of Athens being model of the edifice.?
The Scots Greys and 3rd Dragoons formed
the escorts. Notwithstanding the enthusiasm displayed
when the undertaking was originated, and
though a vast amount of money was subscribed, the
former subsided, and the western peristyle alone
THE NATICNAL MORUMEST, CALTON HILL.
Fort, and the royal squadron in the roads, the
inscription plates were deposited therein, One is
inscribed thus, and somewhat fulsomely :-
?? To the glory of God, in honour of the King, for
the good of the people, this monument, the tribute
of a gratefur country to her gallant and illustrious
sms, as a memorial of the past and incentive to the
future heroism of the men of Scotland, was founded
on the 27th day of August in the year of our Lord
1822, and in the third year of the glorious reign of
George IV., under his immediate auspices, and in
commemoration of his most gracious and welcome
visit to his ancient capital, and the palace of his
royal ancestors; John Duke of Atholl, James Duke
of Montrose, Archibald Earl of Rosebery, John
Earl of Hopetoun, Robert Viscount Melville, and
Thomas Lord Lynedoch, officiating as commissioners,
by the special appointment of his august
was partially erected. In consequence of this
*emarkable end to an entefprise that was begun
mder the most favourable auspices, the national
monument is often referred to as ?Scotland?s
pride and poverty.? The pillars are of gigantic
proportions, formed of beautiful Craigleith stone ;
each block weighed from ten to fifteen tons, and
each column as it stands, with the base and frieze,
cost upwards of LI,OOO. As a ruin it gives a
classic aspect to the whole city. According to the
original idea, part of the edifice was to be used as
a Scottish Valhalla
On the face of the hill overlooking Waterloo
Place is the monument of one of Scotland?s gredtest
philosophers. It is simply inscribed :-
DUGALD STEWART.
BORN NOVEMBER 22ND, 1753;
DIED JUKE KITH, 1828. ... HilL] THE NATIONAL MONUMENT. 109 ~ Grand Master of Scotland, the various loQges proceeded in procession ...

Book 3  p. 109
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BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES. 279
confined for some trifling instance of improper conduct, an attempt was made
by a few of his comrades to effect a rescue ; but they failed in the endeavour,
and the ringleader was taken prisoner. A court-martial having been immediately
held, the prisoners were remanded back to the guard-room ; but on the way the
escort was attacked by fifty or sixty of the soldiers, with fixed bayonets, and
the prisoners rescued. By great exertions on the part of the Lieut.-Colonel and
officers, most of the parties were afterwards secured, when they expressed deep
regret for their improper conduct, and peaceably submitted to their fate. Sir
James was not with the regiment at this period, and arrived too late to interfere
with propriety and effect. At a general court-martial, held at Musselburgh
soon after, five of the mutineers were found guilty-four were adjudged to
suffer death, and one to receive corporal punishment. The melancholy spectacle
of the military execution took place in consequence at the Links of Gullane, on
the 19th July 1795, in presence of all the regular and volunteer troops in the
neighbourhood. When the prisoners had been marched to the scene, the sentence
was restricted to two individuals, who suffered accordingly. The Strathspey
Fencibles,along with most of the other similar regiments, was disbanded in
1799.
Sir James was one of the original office-bearers of the Highland Society of
Edinburgh, instituted in 1784; and continued to be one of the most zealous
members of that society. In 1794 he was appointed Lord-Lieutenant of the
county of Inverness-which office he filled till he was compelled to resign, in
consequence of ill health, in 1809, when his son was nominated his successor.
In 1795 he was preferred as Cashier to the Excise, when his seat in Parliament
became vacated, in consequence of which Mr. M'Dougal Grant succeeded him
in the representation of Banffshire.
After a lingering illness, Sir James died at Castle Grant, on the 18th
February 1811, deeply regretted. He married, in 1763, Jane, only child of
Alexander Duff of Hatton, Esq., by whom he had seven sons and six daughters,
The eldest, Lewis Alexander Grant, succeeded to the estates and earldom of
Seafield on the death of his cousin, James Earl of Findlater' and Seafield, in
1811. The second son, Colonel Francis Grant, was some time member of Parliament
for Nairn. '
The earldom of Findlate?, which was destined to heirs male, was claimed by S i William
Ogilvie, Bart., but he failed to substantiate his right to it. ... SKETCHES. 279 confined for some trifling instance of improper conduct, an attempt was made by a few ...

Book 8  p. 391
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secluded character of the place inust have been
destroyed. ?? Queen Mary granted the gardens of
-the Greyfriars? monastery to the citizens in the
year 1566, to be used as a cemetery, and from
that period the old burial-place seems to have
and are now said to be among the miscellaneous
collections at Holyrood. Begun in 1632, the hall
with its adjacent buildings took seven years to
erect; but subsequently the external portions of
the edifice were almost totally renewed. Howell,
the citizens forgot that their Exchange was built
over their fathers? graves.? Yet within six years
after Queen Mary?s gr.ant, Knox was interred in
the old burial-ground. ?Before the generation
had passed away that witnessed and joined in his
funeral service,? says the author of ? Memorials of
Edinburgh,? ?the churchyard in which they laid
him had been converted into a public thoroughfare !
We fear this want of veneration must be regarded
as a national Characteristic which Knox assisted
to call into existence, and to which we owe much
of the reckless demolition of those time-honoured
monuments of the past which it is sow thought a
weakness to deplore.?
As a churchyard in name it last figures in 1596
as the scene of a tumult in which John Earl of
Mar, John Bothwell, Lord Holyroodhouse, the
Lord Lindsay, and others, met in their armour,
and occasioned some trouble ere they could be
pacified. It was the scene of all manner of rows,
when club-law prevailed ; where exasperated litigants,
sick of ?the law?s delays,? ended the matter
by appeal to sword and dagger ; and craftsmen and
apprentices quarrelled with the bailies and deacons.
It has been traditionally said that many of the
tombstones were removed to the Greyfriars? churchyard;
if such was the case no inscriptions remain
built here lately,? and regretting that Charles I. did
not inaugurate it in person, he adds that ?they
did ill who advised him otherwise.? The time
had come when old Scottish raids were nearly past,
and when revolutions had their first impulse, not
in the battle-field, but in deliberative assemblies ;
thus the Parliament that transferred its meetings
from the old Tolbooth to the new House in 1639
had to vote ?? the sinews of war ? for an aymy
against England, under Sir Alexander Leslie, and
was no less unprecedented in its constitution and
powers than the place in which it assembled was a
new edifice. Outside of a wooden partition in the
hall was an oak pulpit, where a sermon was preached
at the opening of parliament; and behind was a
small gallery, where the public heard the debates
of the House.
To thousands who never saw or could have
seen it the external aspect of the old Parliament
House has been rendered familiar by Gordon?s
engravings, and more particularly by the view of it
on the bank notes of Sir William Forbes and Co.
Tradition names Inigo Jones as the architect, bit
of this there is not a vestige of proof. It was
highly picturesque, and possessed an individuality
that should have preserved it from the iconoclastic
?improvers? of 1829. ?There was a quaint
The Parliament Hall, which was finished in
1639, at the expense of the citizens, costing
A11,600 of the money of that time, occupies a
considerable portion of the old churchyard, and
possesses a kind of simple grandeur ? belonging
to an anterior age. Its noblest feature is the roof,
sixty feet in height, which rests on ornamental
brackets consisting of boldly sculptured heads,
and is formed of dark oak tie-and-hammer beams
with cross braces, producing a general effect suggestive
of the date of Westminster or of Crosby
Hall. Modern corridors that branch out from it
are in harmony with the old hall, and lead to the
various court rooms and the extensive libraries of
the Faculty of Advocates and the Society of
Writers to the Signet. The hall measures 122 feet
in length by 49 in breadth, and was hung of old
with tapestry and portraits of the kings of Scotland,
some by Sir Godfrey Kneller. These were bestowed,
in 1707, by Queen Anne, on the Earl of Mar,
?
we are told, ?and the rude elaborateness of its
decorations, that seemed to link it with the courtiers
I of Holyrood in the times of the Charleses, and its
last gala days under the Duke of York?s viceregency.
Nothing can possibly be conceived more
meaningless and utterly absurd than the thing that
superseded it ?-a square of semi-classic buildings,
supported by a narrow arcade, and surmounted by
stone sphinxes.
Above the old main entrance, which faced the
east, and is now completely blocked up and hidden,
were the royal arms of Scotland, beautifully
sculptured, supported on the right by Mercy holding
a crown wreathed with laurel, and on the
left by Justice, with a palm branch and balance,
with the inscription, Stant his feZiciin r p a , and
underneath the national arms, the motto, Uni
unionurn. Over the smaller doorway, which forms
the present access to the lofty lobby of the House,
were the arms of the city, between sculptured ... character of the place inust have been destroyed. ?? Queen Mary granted the gardens of -the Greyfriars? ...

Book 1  p. 158
(Score 0.7)

The Mound.] GEORGE WATSON, P.R.S.A. 91
of John Watson of Overmains, in Berwickshire,
his mother being Frances Veitch, of the Elliock
fimily. He was a cousin of Sir Walter Scott?s, and
was born in I 767. He studied art under Nasmyth
and Sir Joshua Reynolds, and before the time of
his election had won a high reputation as a portrait
painter. From 1808 to 1812 he was President of
the Associated Artists of Scotland. His brother,
Captain Watson, R.N., was the, father of Sir John
Watson-Gordon, also a president of the Academy ;
and his nephew, William Stewart Watson, was an
artist of some repute, whose chief work is the
?? Inauguration of Burns as Poet Laureate or Grand
Bard,? now in the Masonic Hall, George Street, and,
as a collection of portraits, is historically curious.
George Watson?s son, W. Smellie Watson, was
also R.S.A., and died in No. 10 Forth Street in
1874, the same house in which his father had held
some early exhibitions about the close of the last
century or beginning of the present. ?
The President and Council resolved that the first
exhibition of their infant Academy should take
place early in February, 1827, in two large galleries
which they rented, in 24 Waterloo Place, for three
months at eighty guineas, and subsequently at
one hundred and thirty pounds per annum.
Opposed by those who should have aided it, the
Academy had a hard struggle for a time in the first
years of its existence. Application was made to
the Home Secretary, the future Sir Robert Peel, for
. a charter of incorporation, and it was favourably
viewed by those in office, and submitted to the
Lord Advocate. Eut though the application was
generously and warmly seconded by Sir Thomas
Lawrence, then President of the Royal Academy of
London, it was put off for two years, ?and
ultimately refused,? says Sir George Harvey ?? on
grounds which the Academy could never learn;
and though they applied for permission to do so,
they were never allowed to peruse the document
which induced his lordship to decide against their
claim. . . . Curiously enough, although the
request of the Academy for a charter of incorporation
was at this time denied, the Institution had
that distinction conferred upon it, and henceforth
came to be designated the Royal Institution.?
The first general exhibition of the Scottish
Academy being advertised for February, 1827,
? the Royal Institution, under the immediatepatronage
of His Mq>siY,?? was, in a spirit of genuine
opposition, advertised to open at the same time ; but
by the time of the third Exhibition, ? the Royal
Institution,? says Sir George, ?? was fairly driven
out of the field ; ? and among the contributors were
the future Sir Francis Grant, John Linnell, and
John Martin, and one of Etty?s magnificent works,
now the property of the Academy, was for the first
time hung upon its walls, while many Scottish
artists in London or elsewhere, watched with patriotic
interest the progress of art in their native land,
and the Institution rapidly began to take a
subordinate position ; and by a minute of the 10th
July, 1829, twenty-four of its artists, weary of its
rule, were admitted as members of the Scottish
Academy, thus raising the numerical force of the
latter to thirty-nine. Eventually the number of
Academicians became forty-two. In the rank of
Associate Engravers was the well-known William
Lizars, for as the law stood then he could not
be elected an Academician, engravers being then
limited to the position of Associate, but after a
time they were rendered eligible to occupy any
rank in the Academy.
George Watson, the first President of the Scottish
Academy, died on the 24th of August, 1837, at
No. 10 Forth Street, in his seventieth year. For
a long time previously his occupation of the chair
had been nominal, his age and declining health
precluding his attendance at council meetings-
A white marble slab in the west .wall of the West
Kirkyard marks his grave and that of ? Rebecca.
Smellie, his spouse, who died 5th May, 1839, aged
74 years.?
In the subsequent November William Allan,
RA. (afterwards knighted), was elected president,
and during his term .of office the long-desired
object was accomplished, and the Academy came
to be designated at last ?The Royal Scottish
Academy,? incorporated by royal charter on the
13th of August, 1838, consisting now of thirty
Academicians and twenty Associates-a consummation
of their wishes for which they were greatly
indebted to the warm and earnest interest of Lord
Cockburn.
By its charter the Academy is to consist of artists
by profession, being men of fair moral character and
of high repute in art, settled and resident in Scotland
at the dates of their elections. It ordains that,
there shall be an annual exhibition of paintings,
sculptures, and designs, in which all artists.of distinguished
merit may be permitted to exhibit their
works, to continue open six weeks or longer. It
likewise ordains that so soon as the funds of the
Academy will allow it, there shall be in the Royal
Scottish Academy professors of painting, sculpture,,
architecture, perspective, and anatomy, elected
according to the laws framed for the Royal Academy
of London; and that there shall be schools to
provide the means of studying the human form with
respect both to anatomical knowledge and taste of ... Mound.] GEORGE WATSON, P.R.S.A. 91 of John Watson of Overmains, in Berwickshire, his mother being Frances ...

Book 3  p. 91
(Score 0.7)

Univmity,] THE MUSEUMS. 27
brated cavalier-poet, bequeathed his entire library
to the University, and the gift is deemed a valuable
one, from the rare specimens of our early literature
which enriches the collection. Among the chief
donors whose gifts are extensive and valuable
may be named Principal Adamson, Dr. Robert
Johnston, the Rev. James Nairne of Wemyss, Dr.
John Stevenson, who held the chair of Logic and
Metaphysics from 1730 till 1774, Dr. William
Thomson, Professor of Anatomy at Oxford ; and
in 1872 the library received a very valuable
donation from J. 0. Halliwell, the eminent Shaksperian
critic, a collection of works relating to
Shakspere, and formed by him at great cost.
The average collection of the university extends
to about 150,000 volumes, and 700 volumes of
MSS. The university possesses above seventy
valuable portraits and busts of ancient and modern
alumni, most of which are kept in the Senate Hall
and librar).. The latter possesses a fine copy of
Fordun?s Sotichronicon (on vellum) in folio, from
which Goodall?s edition of 1775 was printed.
The Museum of Natural History was established
in 1812, in connection Kith the university, and
contains a most valuable zoological, geological,
and mineralogical collection, the greater portion of
which was formed by the exertions of Professor
Robert Jamieson, who was fifty years Professor of
Natural History (from 1804 to 1854) and Regius
keeper of the museum. In 1854 it was transferred
by the Town Council (at that time patrons of the
university) to Government, under whose control it
has since remained. The whole of the collections
have been now removed to the Natural History
department of the adjoining museum of Science
and Art ; but are available for the educational purposes
of the university, and are freely accessible to
the students of the natural history class.
The Anatomical Museum was founded in 1800
by Dr. Alexander Monro secz~~zdus, who presented
his own anatomical collection and that of his
father to the University, ? to be used by his future
successors in office, for the purpose of demonstrating
and explaining the structure, physiology,
and diseases of the human body.?
In 1859 Sir David Monro, M.D., presented a
considerable collection of anatomical preparations,
formed by his talented father, Dr. Alexander
Monro teyfiw. Many valuable additions have been
made since then ; among them, some by the late
John Goodsir, Professor of Anatomy, 1846-1867,
more especially iii the comparative department ;
and since his death the Senatus purchased from his
representatives his private museum and added it
to the collection, which now contains many thousand
specimens illustrative of human anatomy,
both normal and pathological, and of comparative
anatomy.
There are minor museums in connection with
the classes of natural philosophy, midwifery, materia
medica and botany, and one was recently constructed
by Professor Geikie for the use of the
geological class.
In October, 1881, nearly the whole of the great
anatomical collection referred to here, including
the skeletons of the infamous Burke and one of
his victims known as ?? Daft Jamie,? was removed
from the old to the new University buildings at
huriston.
REFERENCES TO THE PLAN ON PAGE 21.
A, Entrance ; B E, Passages ; c c, Stairs to Divinity Class and Janitors?
Houses ; D D, Porters? Lodges ; E, Faculty Room or Senatus Academicus
; F, Professor?s House ; c, Principal?s House ; H, Professo<s How :
J, Professor?s House : K, Chemistry Class: L, Preparation Room:
H, Professor of Chemistry?s House; N, Stairs to Gallery and Upper
Preparation Room of Chemistry Class ; 0, Royal Society ; P, Lobby to
Royal Society : Q, Camage-way to Great Court : R, Arcades for footpassengers
: s s s s, Corridors of Communication : T T, Lobby and
Class for Practice of Physick : U, Civil Law Class Room ; w, Preparation
Room or Anatomical Museum; xx, Anatomical Theatre and
Lobby ; Y Y U, Painting Rooms and private m m : z, Great Hall for
Graduations, Lc., with Loggia and two staircases to the Galleries above;
a, Class for the Theory of Physick ; b, Mathematical Class, Professor?s
Room, Instrument Room, Lobby, &c. ; c, Universal History and Antiquity
Class, with the Professor?s Room: d, Class and Lobby for the
Professor of Humanity ; e, Museum for Natural History ; f, Class for
Natural History ; g, Guard Hall and Lobby : h, Librarian?s House ;
i, Professor?s How; k, Profe.swr df Divinity?s House. The Houses
marked F, H, J, and i arc to be possessed by the Professors of Humanity,
Greek, Hebrew, and Mathematics
CHAPTER 111.
THE DISTRICT OF THE BURGHMUIR.
The Muster by James 111.-Burghmuir feued by James lV.-Muster before Flodden-Relics thereof-The Pest-The Skirmish of Lowsie Low-
A Duel in 17zz-Valleyfield House and Leven Lodge-Barclay Free Church-Bruntsfield Links and the Golf Clubs.
THE tract of the Burghmuir, of which the name
alone remains, and which extended from the water
of the South loch on the north, to the foot of the
almost unchanged Braid Hills on the south ; from
Dalry on the west, to St. Leonard?s Craigs on the
east, formed no inconsiderable portion of the ... THE MUSEUMS. 27 brated cavalier-poet, bequeathed his entire library to the University, and the gift is ...

Book 5  p. 27
(Score 0.7)

I 62 MEMORIALS OF EDINBURGH.
and when in the company of the ablest men in this country, his whole desigu was to show
them how little he thought of them.”’
It is told of Johnson, that being on one occasion in a company where Hume was
present, a mutual friend offered to introduce him to the philosopher, when the intolerant
moralist roared out, “No, sir!” It is not therefore without reason that Mr Burton
questions if Johnson would have been able to “sleep 0’ nights,” had he learned that
he had been entrapped into the arch-infidel’s very mansion ! ’
In Hume’s day the North Loch lay directly below the windows of his house, with gardens
extending to its margin, aud a fine open country beyond, diversified with woodland
and moor, where now the modern streets of the Scottish capital cover a space vastly exceeding
its whole ancient boundaries for many centuries. Hume appears to have derived
great pleasure from the magnificent prospect which his elevated residence secured to him ;
yet although he writes to Dr Robertson in 1759, ((1h ave the strangest reluctance to
change places,” he was, nevertheless, one of the earliest to emigrate beyond the North Loch.
In 1770 he commenced building his new house, which was the -first erected in South St
David Street, and in which he died. The old dwelling, however, was not immediately
abandoned to the plebeian population ; Boswell, as we have seen, succeeded him, and he
was followed in its occupancy by the Lady Wallace, Dowager, relict of Sir Thomas Wallace
of Cragie.’ The floor below Hume’s house was the property of Andrew Macdowal,
Esq., advocate, author of the “ Institutional Law of Scotland,” a ponderous mass of legal
learning in three folio volumes. On his elevation to the bench in 1755, under the title of
Lord Bankton, his lordship,-in order to adapt the flat in the Lawnmarket to his increased
dignity and rank,-purchased the one below it, on a level with the court, and united
the two by an elegant internal stair of carved mahogany, which has since been displaced
by a more homely substitute, on the conversion of the old judge’s dwelling into a printing
office.
Immediately to the east of the lofty range of buildings fronting James’s Court, houses
of an early date, and of considerable variety of character, again occur. The fist of these,
represented at‘the head of the chapter, is a tall and narrow stone land, of a marked character,
and highly adorned, according to the style prevailing at the close of the sixteenth
century. The house belonged of old to Sir Robert Bannatyne, chaplain, and after passing
through several hands, was purchased in 1631 by Thomas Gladstone, merchant burgess, who
appears to have built the present stone front. On a shield below the crow-steps of the west
1 Topham’s Letters, London, 1776, p. 139.
a We kpve adhered ia thia to the biographer of Hume, who assigns the same house to both. It is certain that Hume
had a ten& of the name of Boswell ; and as the house below waa a large residence, consisting of two flats, the probability
of Boswell occupying the single flat seems confirmed by the fact that he “regretted sincerely that he had not also a room
for Mr Scott,” afterwards Lord Stowell, who had accompanied the doctor from Newcastle to the White Horse Inn,
Edinburgb. “ Boswell,” he writea, “ has very handsome and
spacious rooms, lever with the ground at one side of the house, and on the other four stories high,”+ remark only
explicable, on this idea, by supposing him to refer to the peculiar character of the building, as deacribed above. ’ 80 late aa 1771, his brother, Joseph Hume, Esq. of Ninewells, occupied a fashionable residence in the Mth flat of
an old house that stood at the junction of the Lawnmarket with Melbourne Place. The following notice of the residence
of Lady Ninewells, the grandmother, a8 we presume, of Hume, occum in a series of accounts of B judicial sale of property
in Parliament Close, in the year 1680 :-“ The house presently possest be the Lady Ninewells, being the fourth
storie above the entrie from the long transa of the tenement upon the east aide of the kirk-heugh, consisting of four fire
rowmea, with ane sellar, at a yearly rent of ane hundred fourtie and four pounds Scotts.”
Dr fohnaon’s evidence, however, contradicts this. ... 62 MEMORIALS OF EDINBURGH. and when in the company of the ablest men in this country, his whole desigu was to ...

Book 10  p. 176
(Score 0.7)

164 BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES.
may just as well gie him some pease meal.” “he young Lord, after he became
a distinguished and venerable Earl, used to tell this anecdote of his old friend, and
always added that he remembered the whole scene as well as if it had happened
yesterday.
No. LXIX.
THIS Plate represents MR, WOOD in the full possession of all that activity and
fire for which he was distinguished in the hey-day of middle age. The cane is
thrown smartly over his shoulder, while the whole bearing of the portrait is
admirably illustrative of the bold and original character of the man.
In addition to the foregoing reminiscences, there are a few other characteristic
anecdotes of Mr. Wood, which may with propriety be given here. The
following humorous one has been related to us by a citizen of Edinburgh, now
in his eighty-third year. This gentleman was at the time an apprentice to
Deacon Thomson, a glover and breeches-maker by profession. The Deacon was
a guzzling hypochondriacal sort of a genius, and, like many others of similar
habits, was subject to much imaginary misery. One night he took it into his
head that he was dying. Impressed with this belief, he despatched a messenger
for Mr. Wood ; but, being very impatient, and terrified that the “grim king”
should seize him before the Doctor could come to his rescue, and suspecting
that the messenger might dally with his mission, the dying breeches-maker
started from the couch of anticipated dissolution, and went himself to the house
of Mr. Wood. He knocked violently at the door, and, in a state of great
perturbation, told the servant to burr1 his master to his house, “For,”
continued he, ‘‘ Deacon Thomson is just dying ! ” Having thus delivered his
doleful mission, away hobbled the epicurean hypochondriac, anxious, from
certain unpleasant suggestions which instinctively occurred to him, to get again
into bed before the Doctor should arrive. In this wise resolution he was
however baulked: Mr. Wood, although half undressed when he received the
summons, lost no time in hastening off, and pushed past the Deacon just as he
was threading his way up his own turnpike.--“ Oh, Doctor, it is me,” said the
hypochondriac. “ You ! ” exclaimed the justly-indignant Sandy Wood, at the
same time applying the cane to the back of his patient with the utmost goodwill.
He then left him to ascend the remainder of the stair with the accelerated
motion which the application of this wholesome regimen inspired, and so effectual
proved the cure that our informant has frequently heard the Deacon mention
the circumstance in presence of the Doctor.
The Honourable Mrs. * * *
had taken a fancy to sit upon hens’ eggs, in order that she might hatch chickens.
Her relations, becoming alarmed for her health, went to consult the Doctor on
the subject, who, promising a perfect cure, desired them to make his compliments
to their friend (with whom he was well acquainted), and tell her that
Another ridiculous story is told of Mr. Wood ... BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCHES. may just as well gie him some pease meal.” “he young Lord, after he became a ...

Book 8  p. 231
(Score 0.7)

t 48 EDINBURGH PAST AND PRESENT.
~~
glomerates and sandstones of the Old Red Sandstone system were elaborated.
They seem to have covered a large part of Western Europe, and to have
extended. eastwards over much of the north of Russia. At the beginning’of
the Old Red Sandstone perid, what is now the northern. half of Britain may
have bekn connected with some large continental mass of land, but was certainly
covered by wide sheets of water, out of which the high grounds rose as scattered
groups of islands. This land too was slowly sinking down, so that the waters
encroached more and more’ upon its shores, from which enormous quantities
of gravel and sand were swept away to form the vast piles of conglomerate and
sandstone. Some idea may be formed of the extent of this depression, and
of the amount of detritus which must have been worn off the land, from the
fact that the Old Red Sandstone, even now, after the lapse of so many ages of
subsequent decay, is still often 15,000 feet thick, and in the east of Strathmore
exceeds even 20,ooo feet.
As a rule,’ the waters in which those deposits were laid down seem to have
been rather unfavourable to life, at least organic remains are for the most part
scarce, though here and there fishes occur abundantly. In the immediate
neighbourhood of Edinburgh no fossils have yet been met with in the Old
Red Sandstone except some traces of plants towards the top. In this district,
however, considerable interest belongs to that system, owing to the large masses
of volcanic rocks which are imbedded in it. The conglomerates and sandstones
constitute the southern end of the Pentland Hills and stretch thhnce
into the counties of Peebles and Idnark. But the main mass of these hills,
including also the Braid Hills near Edinburgh, consists of various lavas and
tuffs ekpted from volcanic vents which continued to be active during a long
part of the Lower Old Red Sandstone period, The curious tuKlike masses
of .the Braid Hills, as well as the thickening of the bvas towards the north,
seem to point to one or more chief craters of emission having existed somewhere
about the site of the Braid Hills. Owing to the deposit of later formations
upon them; we cannot tell bow thick these piles of volcanic material may
originally have been. But even now, the part which is seen would, if placed
in its original position, make a mountain-ridge considerably higher than Beb
Nevis, During the time when these Pentland volcanoes were at work there
was a prodigious amount of volcanic activity over Scotland. From the
ridge of the Highlands pormous streams of lava and showers of dust and
stones were thrown into the waters which then spread over the centre of the
country. From the high land of the southern uplands there would seem 10
hatre been a similar outpouring. Many thousands of feet of volcanic rock ... 48 EDINBURGH PAST AND PRESENT. ~~ glomerates and sandstones of the Old Red Sandstone system were ...

Book 11  p. 207
(Score 0.7)

High Street.] THE ROYAL MINT. 267
Fortune?s tavern, removed from Skinner?s Close to
a house at the north-west corner of Nicolson
Square, and latterly at No. 2, St. Andrew Square
(now the London Hotel), where he died, in his
eightieth year, in ISOZ.
In his lordship?s time the office of Commissioner
to the Church, which he held from 1783 to 1801, was
attended with more ?pomp and circumstance?
Treasurer, under date February, 1562-3 :-
? Item, allowit to the carpenter, be payment maid
to Johne Achesoun, Maister Congreave, to Maister
William M?Dowgale, Maister of Werk, for expensis
maide be him vpon the bigging of the Cwnge-house,
within the castell of Edinburgh, and beting of the
qvnge-hous within the Palice of Halierud-house,
fra the xi. day of Februar, 1559, zens, to the
Comniissioner proceeded on foot, escorted by his
guard of honour.
South Gray?s, or the Mint Close, was one of the
stateliest alleys in the old city, and herein stood the
Cunzie flous, as the Scottish Mint was named
(after its removal from near Holyrood in Queen
Mary?s time) till the Union in 1707, and until lately
its sombre and massive tower of finely polished
ashlar projecting into the narrow thoroughfare of
Cowgate, for three hundred and four years formed
one of the leading features of the latter, and to the
last the old edifice retained many traces of the important
operations that once went on within its
walls.
The first Mint House had been originally erected
in the outer court of the palace of Holyrood, somewhere
near the Horse Wynd, fromwhence, for greater
safety, it was removed to the castle, in which a new
Mint House had been built in 1559, as shown by
edifices of the period,? says Wilson, describing
the edifice prior to its removal. ?The whole
building was probably intended, when completed,
to form a quadrangle, surrounded on every side by
the same substantial walls, well suited for defence
against any ordinary assault, while its halls were
lighted from the enclosed court. The small windows
in this part of the building remain in their
original state, being divided by an oaken transom,
and the under part closed by a pair of folding
shutters. The massive ashlar walls are relieved
by ornamental stringcourses, and surmounted by
crowsteps of the earliest form and elegant proportions.
. . . . The internal marks of former
magnificence are more interesting than their external
ones, notwithstanding the humble uses to
which the buildings have latterly been applied ;
in particular some portions of a very fine oak
ceiling still remain, wrought in Gothic panelling, ... Street.] THE ROYAL MINT. 267 Fortune?s tavern, removed from Skinner?s Close to a house at the north-west ...

Book 2  p. 267
(Score 0.7)

278 BI 0 G R A P HI C AL SI< ET CHES.
alluding to his inferior office, when holding a higher one, and not unfrequently
prefaced his decisions by saying, “When I was Shirra’ of Fife,” a peculiarity
noticed in the celebrated Diamond-Beetle Case. He spoke with a strong Scotch
accent. He was fond of his joke, and sometimes indulged in it even on the
bench. On one occasion a young counsel was addressing him on some not very
important point that had arisen in the division of a common, or commonty (according
to law phraseology), when having made some bold averment, Balmuto
exclaimed-“ That’s a lee, Jemmie.” ‘( My lord ! ” ejaculated the amazed
barrister. “ Ay, ay, Jemmie : I see by your face you’re leeing.” (‘ Indeed,
my lord, I am not.” “Dinna tell me that ; it’s no in your memorial (brief)-
awa wi’ you ;” and, overcome with astonishment and vexation, the discomfited
barrister left the bar. Balmuto thereupon chuckled with infinite delight ; and,
beckoning to the clerk who attended on the occasion, he said, “Are ye no
Rabbie H-’s man 1” “Yes, my lord,” ‘(Was na Jemmie -l eeing 2”
“ 0 no, my lord.” “Ye’re quite sure 1” “ 0 yes.” Then just write out
what you want, and I’ll sign it ; my faith, but I made Jemmie stare.” So the
decision was dictated by the clerk, and duly signed by the judge, who left the
bench highly diverted with the fright he had given his young friend.
No. CCLXIII.
REV. JAMES HALL, D.D.,
OF TIlE SECESSION CHURCH, EROUGHTON PLACE, EDINBURGH.
THROUGHOtUhTe long period of his ministry in this city, few men enjoyed a
greater degree of popularity, or were more highly and generally esteemed, than
the Rev. gentleman whose Portrait is prefixed. He was born at Cathcart Mill,
a few miles west of Glasgow, on the 6th January 1756.’ His ancestors were
millers, and had occupied the mill for several generations. His father, James
Hall, a man of education and intelligence greatly superior to his rank, was one
of the original seceders from the Church of Scotland, and feued the site of the
first Secession Church in Glasgow ; and his mother, Isabella Bulloch, whose
paternal property lay in the vicinity of Kirkintilloch, presented the Seceders
of that place with the ground on which their church is erected.
DR. HALL had the misfortune to lose his father at a very early age ; but the
pious deportment and acquaintance with Scripture which Characterised his
1 He had three sisters and two brothers, four of whom were older thar. himself. The Rev.
Robert Hall, his younger brother, was long a minister in Kelso. His sisters were all married to
clergymen of the Secession-Mary, to the Rev. John Lindsay, of Johostoue ; Helen, Rev. Jam-
Illoir, of Tarboltoil ; and Isobel, to the llev. Dwid Walker, of Pollockshaws. ... BI 0 G R A P HI C AL SI< ET CHES. alluding to his inferior office, when holding a higher one, and not ...

Book 9  p. 369
(Score 0.69)

460 , MEMORIALS UP- EDINBURGH.
Balcarras, Lord, 208
Baldredus, Deacon of Lothian, 377
.Balfour, Sir James, 78
Baliol, 7
Ballantine, James, 253
Ballantyne, Abbot, 307, 313, 365, 406
Balmain, Miss, 123
Balmerinoch, Lord, 94,353
James, the Printer, 288
House of, Netherbow, 259
House of, Leith, 94, 161
Bane, Donald, 3
Bankton, Lord, 162
Bannatine, Thomai3, 256
Bannatyne, Sir William Macleod, 303 .
Sir Robert, 162
Barns, The, 136
Barrie, Thomas, 278
Barringer‘s Close, 254
Baseandyne, Thomas, the Printer, 258, 270
The House of, 270
Aleson, 258
Bassandyne’s Close, 271
Bath, Queen Mary’s, 76,308
Baxter’s Clmg, 165
Hall, 113
Beacon Fires, 51
Bearford‘s Parks, 191, 232
Beaton, Jamea, Archbishop, 37,40, 267,317
Cardinal, 45, 48, 49, 51, 56
Arms, 318
Portraits of Cardinal, 410
of Creich, 75 ‘
House of, 36, 317
House of, 266,317,452
Bedemen, 188, 394
Begbie’s Murder, 274
Belhaven, Lord, 316
Bell’s Millg Village of, 373
Bellenden, Lord, 303
Sir Lewia, 373
ESir William, 373
Bellevne, 274
House, 260
Bemard Street, Leith, 363, 367
Bernard’s Nook, 364, 368
Bertraham, William, Provost, 19
Berwick, 64
Beth’s or Bess Wynd, 84, 181, 182, 188, 233
Big Jack’s Close, Canongate, 290
Binnie’s Close, 363
Binning, Sir William, 208
Binny, Sir William, 352
Bishop’s Close, 253
Land, 253
Black, Dr, 323, 347
Turnpike, 79,246
Blackadder, Captain William, 81
Black Bull Inn, Old, 312
Blackfriars, Monastery of the, 31,37, 69,62, 63, 82,410
Wynd, 36, 40, 78, 101, 139,176, 191, 263-
Yards, 279
267, 317, 453
Blacklock, Dr, 165
Blair, Dr, 239
Hugh, 178
Street, 321
Blair’s Close, 138, 139
Blue Blanket, or Craftmen’e Banner, 1
402
Blue Gowns. 188
21, 79, 387,
Blyth’s Close, Castlehill, 77, 139, 146-167
Boisland, James, 136
Bombie, M‘Lellan of, 40, 130
Bore Stane, 124
Boreland, Thomas, 137
Borough Loch, 348
Borthwick, Lord, 266
Robert, 32
Castle, 176
Borthwick‘a Close, 243
Boswell, Dr, 140
Moor, 55, 86, 99,124, 165, 350
James, 241
his Residence, 160
is visited by Dr JohnBon, Id1
Mrs, 161
Boswell’s Court, 140
Bothwell, Patrick Hepburn, 1st Earl of, 26
Adam Hepbum, Earl of, 416
Patrick, 3d Earl of, 51
James, 4th Earl of, 73, 78,79, 226, 296, 341,
Francis Stewart, Earl of, 176, 222
Adam. See Orkney, Bishop of
Ann, daughter of the Bishop of Orkney, 227
Janet Kennedy, Lady, 321
375
433
Bowes, Marjorie, wife of John Knox, 257
Boyd’s Close, Canongate, 161, 312
Branding, the Punishment of, 454
Brechin, White Kirk of, 15
Breda, Town Clerk sent to Charles 11. at, 98
Brest, Queen Mary arrives safely at, 53
Bride’s Plenishing, Scottish, 213
Bristo Port, 331
British Linen Company, 274,296, 376
Broad Wynd, Leith, 363
Brodie, Deacon, 171, 237
Brodie’s Close, 169, 431
Broghall, Lord, 206
Brougham, Lord, the Birth-Place of, 329,’ 376
Broughton, Burgh of, 354, 372
Brown, A. of Greenbank, 140
Thomas, 144
Square, 145,331
Henry, 328
Brawn’s Close, Castlehill, 132, 138, 264
High Street, 225
Bruce, Robert the. See Rob& I.
Mr Fbbert, 87,203
of Binning, 231
Sir William, the Architect, 405, 408
Buccleuch, Laird of, 67,222, 230
Place, 348
Buchan, David Stuart, Earl of, 376 ... , MEMORIALS UP- EDINBURGH. Balcarras, Lord, 208 Baldredus, Deacon of Lothian, 377 .Balfour, Sir James, ...

Book 10  p. 499
(Score 0.69)

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