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Old and New Edinburgh Vol. V

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Braid.] THE LANDS OF BRAID. 41 the city on the south, and directly overlook Morningside. Their greatest altitude is 700 feet According to one traditional legend, these hills were the scene of ? Johnnie 0? Braidislee?s ? woeful hunting, as related in the old ballad. exposed to more than one military visitation from the garrison in Edinburgh Castle. Knox?s secretary records that on the 25th May twelve soldiers came to Braid, when the laird was at supper, and rifled the house of the miller. Braid appeared, but was treated with contempt, and was told that they would bum the house about his ears if he did not surrender to Captain Melville, who was one of the eight sons of Sir lames Melville of Raith, and his lady Helen Napier of Merchiston. Though called ? a quiet man,? the wrath of the laird was roused, and he rushed forth at the head of his domestics, the north bank of the latter stream, which meanders close to it, and which takes its rise in the bosom of the Pentlands, near the Roman camp above Bonally. It is a two-storeyed villa, with a pavilion roof CHRIST. CHURCH, MORNINGSIDE. armed with an enormous two-handed sword, and cut down one of the soldiers, who fired their hackbuts without effect, and were eventually put to flight. In the early part of the eighteenth century Braid belonged to a family named Brown, and a great portion of it in the present century had passed into the possession of Gordon of Cluny. between the Braid Hills and Blackford, stands the beautiful retreat called the Hermitage of Braid, on In a romantic, sequestered, and woody dell, 102 and little corner turrets, in that grotesque style of castellated architecture adopted at Gillespie?s Hospital, and is evidently designed by the same architect, though built about the year 1780. It was the property of Charles Gordon of Cluny, father of the ill-fated Countess of Stair, the once beautiful ?Jacky Gordon,? whose marriage was annulled in 1804, after which it frequently formed her solitary residence. It afterwards became the property of the widow of the late John Gordon of
Volume 5 Page 41
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