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Memorials of Edinburgh in the Olden Time

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42 MEMORIALS OF EDINBURGH. magnificence, and such displays of loyal attachment, as testified the hearty welcome of the people. The young Queen was of R most tender and affectionate disposition; she seems to have given ‘(Her hand with her heart in it ” to her royal lover, with a gentle spirit of resignation. So soon a8 she stepped on the Scottish shore, she knelt and kissed the ground, praying for all happiness to her adopted country and people ; but ere six weeks had elapsed, the pomp of worldly honour that had greeted her arrival, was called to follow the young bride to the tomb. She was buried with the greatest mourning Scotland ever, till that time, was participant of, in the church of Holyrood House, near King James 11.’ Buchanan, who was an eye-witness, says it was the f i s t instance of mourning-dresses being worn by the Scots ; and triumph and mirrinea was all turned into deregies and soul1 massis, verrie lamentable to behold.” Sir David Lindsay, in a poem of singular inequality, has expressed his Deploratioun of the Deith of Quene Magdalene. He thus apostrophises (Crewel1 Deith) : - Theif ! raw thow nocht the p i t preparatyvis Of Edinburgh, the nobill famous toun, Thow saw the pepill, lauboring for thair lyvis, To mak tryumphe, with trump, and clarioun ; Sic plesour waa never into this regioun, A8 suld haif bene the day of hir entrsce, With greit propynis,‘ gevin till hir Grace.‘ Thow saw makand right costlie scaffalding, Depaintit weill, with gold, and &sure fyne, Reddye preparit for the upsetting, With fontanis, flowing water cleir, and wyne, Disagysit folks: lyke creaturis divyne, On ilk scaffold, to play ane syndrie storie, Bot, all in greiting turnit thow that glorie. Provest, baillies, and lordis of the toun, And princis of the preistis venerabill, Full plesandlye in thair processioun, With all the cunnyng clerkis honorabill ; The herauldis, with their awful vestimentis, With maseris upon ather of thair handis, To rewle the press, with burneist silver wandis. Syne, last of all, in ordour-tl-gumphall, That maist illuster Princee honorabill, With hir the lustye ladyis of Scotland, Quhilk sulde haif bene ane sicht maist delectabil : Hir rayment to rehers, I am nocht habill, Of gold, and perle, and precious stonis brycht, Twinklyog lyke aterris in ane fostie nycht. Under ane pale of golde scho suld haif paat, Be burgeis borne, clothit in silkie fyne, ; 1 Hawthornden, p, 104. Ibid. a Pitacottie, vol. ii. p 374. 4 Presents. Disguised folk or &ora. a Macer.
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BATTLE OF FLODDEN TO DEATH OF YAMES V. 43 The greit maister of housholde, all thair last, With him, in ordour, all the kingis tryne, Quhais ordinance war langsum to defyne ; On this maner, scho passing throw the toun, Suld haif resavit mony benisoun. . Thou sulde haif hard the ornate oratouris, Makand her Hynes salutatioun, Baith of the clergy, toun, and counsalouris, With niony notabill narratioun, Thow sdde haif sene hir Coronatioun, In the fair abbay of the Haly Rode, In presence of ane myrthfull multitude. Sic bankettiog, sic awfiill tournaments, On how and fute, that tyme quhilk suld haif belie, Sic chapell royal& with sic instrumenta, And craftye musick, singing from the splene, In this cuntre w a ~ne ver hard, nor sene : Bot, all this greit solempnitie, and gam, Turnit thow hes in requiem eternam. James, though without doubt sincerely attached to his Queen, very speedily after his bereavement, for reasons of state policy, began to look about him for another to supply her place. And while his ambassadors were negotiating his alliance with Mary of Lorraine, daughter of t,he Duke of Guise, the Scottish capital became the scene of tragical events, little in harmony with the general character of this gallant Monarch. Groundless charges of treason were concocted, seemingly by the malice of private enmity, iu consequence of which, John, son of Lord Forbes, and chief of his name, was convicted of having conspired the King’s death. He was beheaded and quartered on the Castle Hill, and his quarters exposed on the principal gates of the city. This execution was followed in a few days by a‘still more barbarous deed of like nature. The Lady Glamis, sister of the Earl of Angus, convicted, as it would seem, by the perjury of a disappointed suitor, on the charge of a design to poison the King, and of the equally hateful crime of being of the blood of the Douglasses, was condemned to be burned alive. The .sentence waa immediately put in execution on the Castle Hill, and in sight of her husband, then a prisoner in the Castle, who, either in desperation at the cruel deed or in seeking to effect his escape, was killed in falling over the Castle rock. The horror of such barbarous events is somewhat relieved by an ordeal of a different nature, which immediately followed them, and which, aB it is related by Dnunmond, seems a grave satire on the knightlyprowess of the age. Upon the like suspicion,” says he, “ Drumlanrig and Hempsfield, ancient barons, having challenged others, had leave to try the verity by combat. The lists were designed by the King (who was a spectator and umpire of their valour) at the Court of the Palace of Holyrood House. They appeared upon the day, armed from head to foot, like ancient Paladines, and after many interchanged blows, to the disadvantage of their casks, corslets, and vantbraces, when the one was become breathless, by the weight of his arms and thunder of blows, and the other, who was short-sighted, had broken his ponderous sword, the King, by heraulds, caused separate them, with disadvantage to neither of these
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