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Old and New Edinburgh Vol. III

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Duke of Dmmlanrig ! ? He died in Queensberry House. His daughter, Anne Countess of Wemyss, died z miserable death on the 16th of February, 1700. She set fire accidentally to her apron, ?nightrail, and steinkirk. Her nose was burnt off and the flame throat.? His son his many he fled from Edinburgh, but was elected as one of the peers to represent Scotland. On his return to. London he was met by a cavalcade of noblemen and gentlemen, and was preceded to his house at Kensington by forty coaches and four hundred. horsemen. .Next day he was presented to the: EAST END OF THE CANONGATE. (From Cadon of Rot/z;enmv?s Maj.) 8, the Canongate : 31, the Tennis Court; k, the Water Port. went in and burnt her tongue and James, the second duke, resigned all appointments under James VII., including the command of the Scots Horse Guards, and was received by William of Orange with great cordiality. He made him a captain in his Dutch Guards, and Lord of the Bedchamber and Treasury. He was one of the commissioners for the Treaty of Union, to achieve which the sum of AGIZ,~ZS was paid him by the Earl of Godolphin, and then created him Duke of Dover, Marquis of Beverley,, and Baron Ripon. Connected with his residence in Queensberry House, against which the whole fury and maledictions of the mobs were directed at the time ofthe Union, there is a tale of awful mystery and horror. His eldest son, James Earl of Drumlanrig, is simply stated in the old peerages ?te? have died young.? It is now proved, however, that he was an idiot of the most wretched kind,. rabid and gluttonous as a wild animal, and grew
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Canongate.1 THE EARL OF DRUMLANRIG. 37. -~ to an enormous stature, as his leaden and unornamented coffin in the family vault at Durisdeer attests at this day. This monstrous and unfortunate creature was always confined in a groundfloor room of the western wing of Queensberry House; and ?till within these few years the boards still remained by which the windows of the dreadful receptacle were darkened to prevent the idiot from looking out or being seen.? stripped and spitted him, and he was found devouring the half-roasted body when the duke returned with his train from his political triumph, to find dire horror awaiting him. ?The common. people, among whom the dreadful tale soon spread,. in spite of the duke?s endeavours to suppress it,. said that it was a judgment upon him for his odious, share in the Union. The story runs that the duke,. who had previously regarded his dreadful offspring THE CANNONGATE, LOOKING WEST; SHORING, ON THE IMMEDlATE RIGHT, THE HOUSE IN WHICH GAY RESIDED, AND ON THE LEFT THE GATE OF MILTON HOUSE. (FYOI~ a Drawing by Shphad, @blis&rd in 1829.) On the day the Treaty of Union was passed all Edinburgh crowded to the vicinity of the Parliament House to await the issue of the final debate, and the whole household of the duke-the High Commissioner-went thither en mmse for that purpose, and perhaps to prevent him from being tom to pieces by the exasperated people, and among them went the valet whose duty it was to watch and attend the Earl of Drumlanrig. Hearing all unusually still in the vast house, the latter contrived to break out of his den, and roamed wildly from room to room, till certain savoury odours drew him into the great kitchen, where a little turnspit sat quietly on a stool by the fire. He seized the boy, took the meat from the fire, with no eye of affection, immediately ordered the creature to be smothered. But this is a mistake; the idiot is known to have died in England, and to have survived his father many years, though he did not succeed him upon his death in 1711, when the titles devolved upon Charles, a younger brother.? The latter, who was born in Queensbeny House, had been created Earl of Solway in 1706, says- Douglas, ? when very young, his elder brother being then alive.? He married Catharine IIyde,. the second daughter of Henry Earl of Clarendon and Rochester, and they frequently resided in the old Canongnte mansion. The duchess was alto gether an extraordinary woman, whose eccentricity.
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