1 (return)
[ One of Scott's (on vi. 47)
has suffered badly in Lockhart's edition. In a quotation from Lord
Berners's Froissart (which I omit) a whole page seems to have dropped out,
and the last sentence, as it now stands, is made up of pans of the one
preceding and the one following the lost matter. It reads thus (I mark the
gap): "There all the companyons made them[... ] breke no poynt of that ye
have ordayned and commanded.,' This is palpable nonsense, but it has been
repeated without correction in every reprint of Lockhart's edition for the
last fifty years.]
2 (return)
[ Lockhart says: "The lady
with whom Sir Walter Scott held this conversation was, no doubt, his aunt,
Miss Christian Rutherford; there was no other female relation DEAD when
this Introduction was written, whom I can suppose him to have consulted on
literary questions. Lady Capulet, on seeing the corpse of Tybalt,
exclaims,—
'Tybalt, my cousin! O my brother's child!'"]
3 (return)
[ Lockhart quotes Byron, Don
Juan, xi. 55:
"In twice five years the 'greatest living poet,' Like to the champion in the fisty ring, Is called on to support his claim, or show it, Although 't is an imaginary thing," etc.]
4 (return)
[ "Sir Walter reigned before
me," etc. (Don Juan, xi. 57).]
5 (return)
[ The Spenserian stanza,
first used by Spenser in his Faerie Queene, consists of eight lines of ten
syllables, followed by a line of twelve syllables, the accents throughout
being on the even syllables (the so-called iambic measure). There are
three sets of rhymes: one for the first and third lines; another for the
second, fourth, fifth, and seventh; and a third for the sixth, eighth, and
ninth.]
6 (return)
[ Vide Certayne Matters
concerning the Realme of Scotland, etc., as they were Anno Domini 1597.
London, 1603.]
7 (return)
[ See on ii. 319 above.]
8 (return)
[ Hallowe'en.]
9 (return)
[ To the raven that sat on
the forked tree he gave his gifts.]
10 (return)
[ "This story is still
current in the moors of Staffordshire, and adapted by the peasantry to
their own meridian. I have repeatedly heard it told, exactly as here, by
rustics who could not read. My last authority was a nailer near Cheadle"
(R. Jamieson).]
11 (return)
[ See Scottish Historical
and Romantic Ballads, Glasgow, 1808, vol. ii. p. 117.]
12 (return)
[ A champion of popular
romance; see Ellis's Romances, vol. iii.]
13 (return)
[ "That at the eastern
extremity of Loch Katrine, so often mentioned in the text."]
14 (return)
[ "Beallach an duine."]
15 (return)
[ "The reader will find
this story told at greater length, and with the addition in particular of
the King being recognized, like the Fitz-James of the Lady of the Lake, by
being the only person covered, in the First Series of Tales of a
Grandfather, vol. iii, p. 37. The heir of Braehead discharged his duty at
the banquet given to King George IV. in the Parliament House at Edinburgh,
in 1822" (Lockhart).]
All books are sourced from Project Gutenberg