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Old and New Edinburgh Vol. IV

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242 OLD AND NEW EDINBURGH. [Cowgate. mentioned as residents in it in 1501. He was Provost in 1425, and was succeeded in 1434 by Sir Henry Preston of Craigmillar. Other alleys are mentioned as having existed in the sixteenth century : Swift?s Wynd, Aikman?s Close, and ?the Eirle of Irgyllis Close,? in the Dean of Guild?s Accounts in 1554, and Blacklock?s Close, where the unfortunate Earl of Northumberland was lodged in the house of Alexander Clarke, when he was betrayed into the hands of the Regent Moray in December, 1569. ,In a list of citizens, adherents of Queen Mary, in ?1571, are two glassier-wnghts, one of them named Steven Loch, probably the person commemorated in Stevenlaw?s Close, in the High Street. From Palfrey?s bustling inrrj at the Cowgate-head, the Dunse fly was wont to take its departure twice weekly at 8 a.m in the beginning of the century; and in 1780 some thirty carriers? wains arrived there and departed weekly. Wilson says that ?Palfrey?s, or the King?s Head Inn, is a fine antique stone land of the time of Charles I. An inner court is enclosed by the buildings behind, and it long remained one of the best frequented inns in old Edinburgh, being situated at the junktion of two of the principal approaches to the town from the south and west.? In this quarter MacLellan?s Land, No. 8, a lofty tenement which forms the last in the range of houses on the north side of the street, has peculiar interest from its several associations. Towards the middle of the last century this edifice-the windows of which look straight up the Candlemaker-rowhad as the occupant of its third floor Mrs. Syme, a clergyman?s widow, with whom the father of Lord Brougham came to lodge, and whose daughter became his wife and the lady of Brougham Hall. He died in 1810, and is buried in Restalrig churchyard. Mrs. Broughain?s maiden aunt continued to reside in this house at the Cowgate-head till a period subsequent to 1794. In his father?s house, one of the flats in Mac- Lellan?s Land, Henry Mackenzie, ?the Man of Feeling,? resided at one time with his Wife and family. In the flat immediately below Mrs. Syme dwelt Bailie John Kyd, a wealthy wine merchant, who made no small noise in the city, and who figures among Kay?s etchings. He was a Bailie of 1769, and Dean of Guild in 1774. So lately as 1824 the principal apartments in No. 8 were occupied by an aged journeyman printer, the father of John Nimmo, who became conspicuous as the nominal editor of the Beacon, as his name appeared to many of the obnoxious articles therein. This paper soon made itself notorious by its unscrupulous and scurrilous nature, and its attacks on the private character of the leading Whig nobles and gentlemen in Scotland, which ended in Stuart of Dunearn horsewhipping Mr. Stevenson in the Parliament Square. The paper was eventually suppressed, and John Nimmo, hearing of the issue of a Speaker?s warrant against him, after appearing openly at the printing office near the old back stairs to the Parliament House, fled the same day from Leith in a smack, and did not revisit Edinburgh for thirty-one years. He worked long as a journeyman printer in the service of the great Parisian house of M. Didot, and for forty years he formed one of the staff of Ga&- nanr?s Messenger, from which he retired with a pension to Asni?eres, where he died in his eightysixth year in February, 1879. In this quarter of the Cowgate was born, in 1745, Dr. James Graham (the son of a saddler), who was a man of some note in his time as a lecturer and writer on medical subjects, and whose brother William married Catharine Macaulay, authoress of a ?? History of England? and other works forgotten now. In London Dr. Graham started an extraordinary establishment, known as the Temple of Health, in Pall Mall, where he delivered what were termed Hyineneal Lectures, which in 1783 he redelivered in st. Andrew?s Chapel, in Carrubber?s Close. In his latter years he became seized with a species of religious frenzy, and died suddenly in his house, opposite the Archer?s Hall, in 1794. In Bailie?s Court, in this quarter, lived Robert Bruce, Lord Kennet, 4th July, 1764, successor on the bench to Lord Prestongrange, and who died in 1786. This court-latterly a broker?s yard for burning bones-and Allison?s Close, which adjoins it-a damp and inconveniently filthy place, though but a few years ago one of the most picturesque alleys in the Cowgate-are decorated at their entrances with passages from the Psalms, a custom that superseded the Latin and older legends towards the end of the seventeenth century. In Allison?s Close a door-head bears, but sorely defaced, in Roman letters, the lines from the 120th Psalm :-?? In my distress I cried unto the Lord, and he heard me. Deliver my soul, 0 Lord, from lying lips and from a deceitful tongue.? In Fisher?s Close, which led directly up to the Lawnmarket, there is a well of considerable antiquity, more than seventy feet deep, in which a man was nearly drowned in 1823 by the flagstone that covered it suddenly giving way. The fragment of a house, abutting close to the northern pier of the centre arch of George IV. .
Volume 4 Page 242
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