THE OLD TOWN. I9
Some one (Sir James Mackintosh perhaps) said of George Street, in the
New Town, that the backwardness of the physicians (by their too retiring
Sugeons’ Hall) and the forwardness of the clergy (by their too protuberant
St. Andrew‘s Church) had spoiIed the finest street in Europe; but what
comparison between George Street, with the proud pillar at one end and the
prouder dome at the other, and the main street of the Old Town, which, when
it soars, it is into a CastIe, and when it stoops, it is into a Palace 1 Entering
the Queen’s Park at Holyrood, and passing St. Margaret’s Well, we reach St.
Anthony’s Chapel, situated on a rocky eminence overlooking St. Margaret’s
Loch and St. Anthony’s Well.
Returning to the College, we may be permitted to take it, appropriately
enough, as the starting-point for our brief excursus 02 the celebrities of the.
Scottish Metropolis. Brief and general it must necessarily be. On the