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Memorials of Edinburgh in the Olden Time

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THE CAiVONGA TE ANB ABBE Y SANCTUAR Y. Earl, who took an active share in promoting the Union. He was soon after elevated to a dukedom in the British Peerage, and successively filled the offices of Keeper of the Privy Seal and Secretary of State for Scotland. At the head of Reid’s Close stands the ancient and picturesque stone tenement, designated in the accompanying engraving Nisbet of Dirleton’s House, which appears by the date on it to have been erected in the year 1624. Its basement story is substantially arched with stone, in accordance with the fashion of that age, when a citizen’s mansion had occasionally to be made his castle, in a very different sense from that which is now maintained as the theory of Britis& law. This edifice, which was probably reared by eome courtier of note and influence at that period, afterwards became the residence of Sir John Nisbet, who waa promoted to the Bench in 1664, under the title of Lord Dirleton, and was the last who held the office of Lord Advocate conjointly with that of a Judge. He was the predecessor of Sir George Mackenzie as Lord Advocate, and is accused, both by Kirkton and Wodrow, of making himself the tool of the Bishops. The latter relates a curious instance of his zeal in persecuting the unfortunate Covenanters. Robert Gray having been brought before the Council, and examined a8 to his knowledge of the hiding places of some of the leaders of that party, withvut their succeeding in obtaining from him the desired information, Sir John took a ring from the man’s finger and sent it to Mrs Gray by a trusty messenger, who informed her that her husband had told all he knew of the Whigs, and that he sent this ring to her in token that she might do the same. Deceived by this ingenious fraud, the poor woman revealed their places of concealment; but her husband was so affected that he sickened and died a few days after. The south front of the house &ppears in the engraving of Reid’s Close, and is singularly A little further to the eastward, on the same side, is the huge mansion erected by William, first Duke of Qneensberry, the builder of Drumlanrig Castle, who exercised almost absolute power in Scotland during the latter years of the reign of Charles II., and presided as High Commissioner in the first Parliament of James VII. He afterwards took an active share in the revolution that placed the Prince of Orange on the throne ; a step which did not prove sufficient to redeem him from the hatred of the Presbyterian party, against whom his power had been used in a very cruel and arbitrary manner. Ee died in the Canongate in 1695. His character was made up of the strangest contradictions ; a great miser, yet magnificent in buildings and pleasure grounds ; illiterate, yet a collector of books, and commanding in his letters-which he dictated to a secretarya style that is admirable.‘ Hia son, the active promoter of the union, and the Lord High Commissioner under whose auspices it was accomplished, kept court here during that stormy period, and frequently found his huge mansion surrounded by the infuriated mob who so pertinaciously pursued every abettor of that hated measure.’ But the most - picturesque, and somewhat unique in its character. - , A collection of his lettem now in the possassion of C. E. Sharpe, Esq., would form a curious and valuable acquisition to the liter.ary world if published. ’ A myaterioua and horrible story is related in the “ Traditions of Edinburgh,” comerning the Duke’s eldest son, Lord Drumlanrig, an idiot, who, being deaerted by his keeper on the day the union was passed-the whole household having gone off, with the exception ol a little kitehen boy-escaped from his confinement, murdered the boy, and was found roasting him at the fire when the domestics returned in triumph b o r n the Parliament Close. The dreadful tale soon became known, and it waa universally regarded as a judgment on the Duke for hia ahare in the union.
Volume 10 Page 326
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