A history of the family of Seton during eight centuries[With plates, including portraits, illustrations, facsimiles, a bibliography and genealogical tables.] . Mary Marie Arsquin Sonderland et a toutes les filles. Setons Necklace, the editor of Golf (March In a testamentary document executed by the 1894) endeavours to establish the fact that the Queen in Edinburgh Castle, in June 1566, in the Queens faithful follower occasionally indulged event of death in childbirth, she bequeaths to in the popular pastime to whose interests his Mary Seton—A piece of embroidery ; an em- journal is devoted. As


A history of the family of Seton during eight centuries[With plates, including portraits, illustrations, facsimiles, a bibliography and genealogical tables.] . Mary Marie Arsquin Sonderland et a toutes les filles. Setons Necklace, the editor of Golf (March In a testamentary document executed by the 1894) endeavours to establish the fact that the Queen in Edinburgh Castle, in June 1566, in the Queens faithful follower occasionally indulged event of death in childbirth, she bequeaths to in the popular pastime to whose interests his Mary Seton—A piece of embroidery ; an em- journal is devoted. As an instance of Mary broidered douillette (quilted silk gown); and a Stuarts indifference to Darnleys fate, her girdle enriched with gold. adversaries affirmed that few dayes eftir the murthir remaning at Halyrudehous, she past 2 Jamieson in his Scottish Dictionary defines to Setoun, exercing hir one day richt oppenliethe word Maries as the name given to the at the feildis with the palmall and golf.—maids of honour in Scotland, and quotes a pas- Robertsons Inventories of Mary Quee?i of Scots,sage from Pitscottie relative to the time of lxxi, note HER REMOVAL TO LOCHLEVEN 137 episode (22 x 14 inches) is preserved in the Record Office,1 inwhich the Queen wears a black riding hat and jacket, and a redand yellow skirt—the royal colours of Scotland—while MarySeton is attired in a similar garb, with the addition of a whiteveil. The sketch shows the position of the Queens camp, thetroops of Lords Morton and Home, and Kirkaldy of Grange, andthe manner of the Queens surrender—as well as the position ofMusselburgh and other places in the vicinity. In the summer of 1567, immediately before Queen Marysremoval to Lochleven, the Confederate Lords appear to havetreated her with great indignity; and a contemporary chronicler(the Captain of Inchkeith) informs us that, as she was harshlyled along the High Street of Edinburgh by the Earls of Mortonand Athole, pressing very close to


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, bookidhistoryoffam, bookyear1896