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Memorials of Edinburgh in the Olden Time

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ECCLESIA S TICA L ANTIQUITIES. 419 rials of the olden time. An unpicturesque fragment of the ruins of the Convent of St Katherine de Sienna still remains, and serves as a sheep-fold for the flocks that pasture in the neighbouring meadow ; and the name of the Sciennes, by which the ancient Mure-burgh is now known, preserves some slight remembrance of the abode of I‘ the Sisters of the Schenis,” where Chastitie found hospitable welcome, at a time when the bold Scottish satirist represents her as spurned from every other door. A few notes, in reference to more recent ecclesiastical erections, are reserved for the Appendix ; but there is something in the flimsy and superficial character of our modern religious edifices, which, altogether apart from the sacred or historical associations attached to them, deprives them of that interest with which we view the architectural remains of the Middle Ages. Instead of stuccoed ceilings and plaster walls, we h d , in the old fabrics, solid ribs of stone, and the arched vaulting adorned with intricate mouldings and richly sculptured bosses. The clustered piers below, that range along the solemn aisles, are like the huge oaks of the forest, and their fan-like groinings like the spreading boughs, from whence their old builders have been supposed to have drawn the first idea of these massive columns and the o’erarching roof. After all, the olden time with which we have dealt is a comparatively modern one. ‘She relics even of St Margaret’s Chapel, and St David‘a Monastery, and the Maiden Castle, which Chalmera ranks only as “ first of modern antiques,” mould possess but poor claims to our interest, as mere antiquities, beside the temples of Egypt or the marble columns of the Acropolis. The Castle, indeed, is found to have been occupied as a stronghold as far back as any trustworthy record extends ; and beyond this our older British chroniclers relate, as authentic, traditions which assip to it an origin nearly coeval with the Temple of Solomon, and centuries before the founding of Rome I Wyntoun records of the renowned Kyng Ebrawce,” who flourished 989 years before the Christian era :- “ He byggsd EDYNBWBwGyEth t-alle, And gert thaim Allynclowd it calle, The Maydyn castell, in Bum place The sorowful Hil it callyd waa.” Coming down a little nearer our own day, we arrive at the era of Fergus the First, the famed progenitor of one hundred and eighteen sovereigns, ‘( of the same unspotted blood and royal line,” who began his reign 330 years before Christ. Fergus, however, was no plebeian upstart. He again traced his descent from Mileaius, who reigned in Ireland 1300 years before. the Christian era, and “ who makes the twenty-sixth degree inclusively from Noe ; the twenty-first from Niul, a son of Fenius-farsa, king of Scythia, a prince very knowing in all the languages then spoken ; the twentieth from Gaedhal-Glass, a contemporary with Moses and Pharaoh ; the seventeenth inclusively from Heber-Scot, an excellent bow-man I ” a Upon the whole, we are put in the fair way of tracing King Fergus’s genealogy back to Adam,-a very satisfactory and credible beginning, in case anyeof its more recent steps should be thought to stand in need of additional proof. Leaving such famous worthies of the olden time, we come thereafter to Edwin, king of Northumbria, of whom we possess trustworthy historic account, and who, there seems no reason to doubt, gave his Caledonia, vol. ii. p. 669. ’ Dr Matthew Remedy, Ahercromby’a Martial Achievements, voL i p. 4.
Volume 10 Page 459
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