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Memorials of Edinburgh in the Olden Time

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412 MEMORIALS OF EDINBURGH. to a vow on his receiving a signal mercy from God.” The hospital was placed under the control of the Town Council, who drew up a series of most gtringent statutes to secure the good conduct and above all the perfect isolation of the wretched inmates. A gallows was erected at the end of the hospital to enforce obedience, and eveu the opening of the gate between sunset and sunrise was declared punishable with the halter. The grassy vale, within whose natural amphitheatre the earliest exhibitions of the regular drama were witnessed by the Court of the Queen Regent, Mary of Guise, and where the crowds of the neighbouring capital were attracted at one time by the pastimes that accompanied a Wupinschaw, and at another by the terrors of judicial vengeance, retained till near the close of last century nearly the same features that led to its selection for such displays in the reign of James 11. Pennant, writing in 1769, remarks :-‘( In my walk this evening I passed by a deep and wide hollow beneath the Caltoun Hill, the place where those imaginary criminals, witches, and sorcerers, in less enlightened times, were burnt ; and where at festive Bemons the gay and gallant held their tilts and tournaments.” l The locality still retains its ancient name of Greenside; but the grassy slope, fromwhence it derived its name, ia now one of the most densely-populated districts of the New Town. Beyond the Monastery of, the Carmelites, on the outskirts of Leith, at the south-west corner of St Anthony’s Wynd, stood the Preceptory of St Anthony, founded by Sir Robert Logan of Restalrig in 1435. This was the only establishment of the order in Scotland. They followed the rule of St Augustine, and appear to have been a sort of religious knights, though not Knight Templars, as they are erroneously styled by Maitland, who has been misled in this by a charter of James VI. The “Rentale Buke,” containing a list of the benefactors to the preceptory, written on vellum, in the year 1526, with a few additions in a later hand, is preserved in the Advocates’ Library, wherein ‘‘ It is statuit and ordanit in our Scheptour for sindri resonabil causis that the saulis of thaim that has gevin zeirlye perpetual1 rent to this Abbay and Hospital1 of Sanct Antonis besyd Leith, or has augmentit Goddis seruice be fundacion, or ony vther vays has gevyn substanciusly of thair gudis to the byggyn reperacion and vphaldyng of the forsaid Abbay and place, that thai be prayit for euerylk sunday till the day of dome.” a The list of benefactors which follows exhibits a pretty numerous array, though in the majority of cases the benefactions are of no great value. The obituary closes in 1499, and in little more than half a century thereafter, the prayers for the dead, which the chapter of the preceptory had ordained to last till the day of doom, were abruptly brought to a close, and the church or preceptory reduced nearly to a heap of ruins, during the siege of Leith in 1560.’ No other Scottish foundation appears to have been dedicated to this saint, notwithstanding his celebrity by means of the picturesque legends which the Romish calender associates with his name. The ancient Hermitage and Chapel of St Anthony, which occupies a site of such singular beauty underneath the overhanging crags of Arthur’s Seat, are believed to have formed a dependency of the preceptory at Leith, and to have been placed there to catch the seaman’s eye as he entered the Firth, or departed on some long and perilous voyage ; when his vows and offerings wouId be most freely made to the patron saint, and the hermit who ministered at his altar. No record, however, now remains to add to the 1 Pennant’s Tour, voL i. p. 69, Lit of Benefadora, &c. Bann. Misc., vol. i i p. 299. Ante, p. 66.
Volume 10 Page 451
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