-326 MEMORIALS OF EDINBURGH.
formed of its original appearance. Not long after its erection, it became the scene of very
important movements preparatory to the great civil war. On the 27th February 1638,
between two and three hundred ministers met there to prepare for the renewal of the Covenant,
which was received with such striking demonstrations of popular sympathy on its
presentation to the public in the Greyfriars’ Church on the following day. We are informed
by the Earl of Rothes, who took a prominent share in these proceedings, that he
. and the Earl of Loudoun were appointed by the nobles to meet with the assembled clergy
in the Tailors’ Hall, and on that occasion the Commissioners of Presbgteries were first
taken aside into a summer-house in the garden, and there dealt with effectually on the
necessity of all obstacles to the renewal of the Covenant being withdrawn.l The same
means were afterwards successfully resorted to for removing the doubts of all scrupulous
brethren.’ The garden, which was the scene of these momentous discussions, retained till
very recently its early character ; but now, divested of its shrubs and forma3 Dutch parterres,
it is degraded into a depositary fof brewers’ barrels. The same Corporation Hall
was used in 1656 as the court-house of the Scottish Commissioners appointed by Cromwell
for the administration of the forfeited estates.’ We have already referred to the very
different purposes to which it was devoted in more recent times, as the refuge of the Scottish
drama. Ramsay prints, in the Tea-Ta6Ze Miscellany, ‘‘ Part of an Epilogue sung
after the acting of the ORPHANa nd GENTLES HEPHERinD T ailors’ Hall, by a set of young
1 Lord Rothes’ Relation of Proceedings concerning the affairs of the Kirk, p. 72.
S Ibid, p. 79. “ Upon Thursday the first of March, Rothes, Lindsay, and Loudoun, and sum of them, went down
to Tailyom Hall, wher the ministers mett ; and becaus sum wer come to touoe since Tupsday last who had sum
aoubta, efter that they who had bein formerlie resolved wer entered to subscryve, the noblemen went with these others
to the yaird, and resolved their doubts ; so that towarde thrie hundred ministers subacryved that night That day the
commissioners of burrowes subscryved also.”
a Nicoll’a Diary, p. 180.
VIGNETTE-TailorS’ Hall.