INDEX

Act for Staying of Unlawful Conventions within Burgh first applied in Glasgow,  [262.]
Adrian, St., Martyr of the May, [156-8.]
Ailsa Craig, invasion of, [225-35.]
Alexander II, imposes fines for abstention from military service,  [268.]
Amlaiph and Imhar, lay siege to Strathclyde,  [200.]
Archbishops of Glasgow, temporal superiors,  [253.]
Army, the old Scottish,  [267-89.]
 – earliest enactment for organization of,  [267.]
 – statute fixing fines for remaining away from King's host,  [268.]
 – Robert Bruce's statute concerning military service,  [268-9.]
 – James I encourages archery,  [269.]
 – his enactments concerning military equipment,  [270-1.]
 – military training organized,  [273.]
 – hand-guns introduced,  [274-5.]
 – Act concerning,  [276.]
 – army of Scotland to be unhorsed,  [277-8.]
 – military drill organized,  [278.]
 – arms and accoutrement at close of 16th century,  [279-80.]
 – main object of Scottish army,  [282.]
 – expenses of campaign, how defrayed,  [283.]
 – transport service,  [283-4.]
 – foreign service,  [284-5.]
 – military service on the Border,  [285.]
 – Commissariat,  [286.]
 – military service under Charles I,  [287.]
 – Act dealing with desertion,  [289.]
 – Act establishing pensions,  [289.]
Artois, Count Robert of, and English "tailards",  [299-300.]
Augustine, St., and "Longtail" myth,  [325-38,] [341,] [342,] [343.]
Balfour, Andrew, proprietor of May Island,  [178.]
Balfour, Sir Michael, obtains monopoly for supply of arms,  [281-2.]
Barclay, Hugh, Laird of Ladylands,  [225-31.]
 – abandons Presbyterianism,  [225.]
 – excommunicated,  [226.]
 – apprehended by Andrew Knox,  [226-7.]
 – taken to Edinburgh,  [227.]
 – no evidence against him,  [228.]
 – transferred to Glasgow,  [229.]
 – escapes to the Continent,  [229.]
 – reported to be lurking in Glasgow,  [229.]
 – banded with Papists,  [230.]
 – his plot to capture Ailsa Craig,  [230.]
 – lands on the Craig,  [231-2.]
 – his death,  [231.]
Beaueyr, William of, his gift to Monks of May,  [163.]
Beaugué, Jean de, his description of May Island,  [154.]
Becket, his connection with "Longtail" myth,  [339,] [348.]
 – insulted by Robert Broc,  [340.]
Beton, Andrew, romance of his courtship of Mary Seton,  [73-7.]
Beton, Mary,  [61-8.]
 – parentage,  [61.]
 – her portrait,  [62.]
 – Thomas Randolph in love with her,  [62-3.]
 – as Queen of the Bean,  [63.]
 – Buchanan's verses in praise of her,  [64-5.]
 – most scholarly of four Marys,  [65.]
 – Mary Stuart's intended bequest of books to her,  [65.]
 – married to Ogilvie, of Boyne,  [66.]
 – marriage contract,  [66-7.]
 – gifts to her from Queen,  [67.]
Black, David, and James VI,  [212.]
Boece, Hector, his description of May Island,  [156.]
Borders, pacified by James VI,  [213-4.]
Boyd, Robert, of Badinhaith, inhabits Castle on Little Cumbrae,  [248.]
 – projects a harbour,  [248.]
 – inhabitants of Little Cumbrae hostile to him,  [249.]
Bruce, Robert, at Dumbarton Castle,  [201-2.]
 – enactment of, concerning military service,  [268-9.]
 – "testament" of,  [277 n.]
Buccleuch meets Salkeld on a day of truce,  [238.]
 – protests against violation of truce,  [239.]
 – gets his signet ring conveyed to Will Armstrong,  [239.]
 – communicates with Armstrong's friends at a horse-race,  [239.]
 – organizes and heads an attack on Carlisle Castle,  [240-1.]
 – his action popular in Scotland,  [241.]
 – Robert Bowes demands that he should be delivered over to England,  [241.]
 – defends himself at Convention of Estates,  [241.]
 – offers to submit his case to Commissioners,  [242.]
 – commanded to ward by James VI,  [245.]
 – surrenders into English custody,  [246.]
 – presented to Elizabeth,  [246.]
Buchan, Earl of, his donation to Monks of May,  [163.]
Buchanan, reads Livy with Mary Stuart,  [10.]
 – verses in praise of Mary's lettered Court,  [31.]
 – his verses on the Four Marys,  [31,] [32,] [33,] [34.]
 – to Mary Fleming,  [38.]
 – to Mary Beton,  [64,] [65.]
 – tutor to James VI,  [211.]
 – his De Jure Regni apud Scotos,  [211.]
Carlyle, "Jupiter", his account of destruction of Chapel of Loretto,  [152.]
Carstairs and Covenanters imprisoned in Dumbarton Castle,  [208.]
Christening of James VI, practical joke at,  [290.]
Clifford, Lord Robert, devastates Annandale,  [317.]
Colquhoun, stratagem of Laird of, to recover Dumbarton Castle,  [202.]
 – origin of family motto,  [202.]
Colville, Robert, exposes sham miracle at Loretto,  [148-9.]
Commissariat of Scottish Army,  [286.]
Crawfurd, Thomas, of Jordanhill, captures Dumbarton Castle,  [205-7.]
Cumbrae, raid on the Smaller,  [247-52.]
 – Castle built by the Boyds,  [248.]
 – inhabited by Robert Boyd of Badinhaith,  [248.]
 – looted by the Montgomerys,  [249.]
 – inventory of articles in several rooms of Castle,  [250-1.]
 – gifted by Mary Stuart to Mary Livingston,  [55.]
Cunningham, proprietor of May Island, sets up first lighthouse,  [178.]
David, King, founds monastery on May Island,  [160.]
 – said to have granted monastery to monks of Reading,  [160.]
Days of truce on the Border,  [238.]
Desertion, Act dealing with,  [289.]
Douchtie (Duthie) founds the Chapel of Laureit,  [143.]
 – charter confirming grant of land to him,  [143.]
Dryburgh, House of, and Monks of May,  [167.]
Dues for upkeep of May light,  [179-82.]
Dumbarton, rock of,  [199-208.]
 – and Treaty of Union,  [199.]
 – early fort on,  [199-200.]
 – besieged by Norsemen,  [200.]
 – and Edward I,  [200-1.]
 – Wallace's sword kept in Castle,  [201.]
Dumbarton recaptured with the help of Laird of Colquhoun,  [202.]
 – held by the Parson of Kincardine,  [203.]
 – held by Earl of Lennox,  [204.]
 – besieged and taken by Royal forces,  [204.]
 – besieged by Regent Murray,  [205.]
 – captured by Thomas Crawfurd of Jordanhill,  [205-7.]
 – captured for Covenanters by Provost Sempill,  [207.]
 – used as a prison,  [208.]
Dunbar, Castle taken by English,  [316-7.]
Dundemore, Sir John de, and Monks of the May,  [164.]
Dupplin, Battle of,  [318.]
Edinburgh and St. Giles,  [190-7.]
Eggou Ruffus, gives land to Monks of May Island,  [163.]
Elizabeth, Queen, and Mary Stuart,  [1,] [6,] [7,] [20.]
 – writes to Morton concerning burial of Secretary Maitland,  [46-7.]
 – replies to Queen of Scots concerning Maister Randolphe's Fantasie,  [101-2.]
 – writes to James VI demanding the delivery of Buccleuch,  [241.]
Elphinstone, Sir George, nominated Provost of Glasgow by Lennox,  [254.]
 – appeals to the King,  [256.]
 – elected Provost by colleagues,  [256.]
 –attacked by Stewarts of Minto,  [260-2.]
 –warded in Glasgow Castle,  [262.]
 –suit brought against him by Stewarts of Minto,  [265.]
Enactments concerning archery,  [269,] [273,] [274.]
Englishmen as "tailards" (longtails, coués, caudati), references to, at christening of James VI,  [290.]
 –in anonymous medieval poem descriptive of national characteristics,  [293.]
 –in Jacques de Vitry,  [293.]
 –in Etienne de Bourbon,  [294.]
 –in Richard of Devizes,  [295.]
 – in romance of Richard Coer de Leon,  [296-7.]
 – in Monument. Germ.[297 and n.]
 – in Chronicle of Lanercost,  [288-9,] [302.]
 – in Matthew of Paris,  [299-300.]
 – in Rishanger,  [302.]
 – in Henry Knighton,  [302.]
 – in John of Bridlington,  [302-3.]
 – in connection with invasion of France by Henry V,  [304.]
 – in Olivier Basselin,  [304-5,] [312.]
 – in Ballade on Jeanne d'Arc,  [305.]
 – in Monstrelet,  [305.]
 – in Dépucellage de la ville de Tournay,  [306.]
 – in Courroux de la Mort contre les Anglois,  [306,] [307.]
 – in Eustache Deschamps's works,  [307-12.]
 – in Jean Molinet's poems,  [313.]
 – in Crétin,  [313.]
 – in Larivey's Les Tromperies,  [313.]
 – in Saint-Amant's Rome Ridicule,  [314.]
 – in Conrart,  [314.]
 – in Bower,  [315-16.]
 – in Hemingburgh,  [316-17,] [318.]
 – in Bower,  [318.]
 – in anonymous political song,  [319.]
 – in Flyting of Dunbar and Kennedy,  [319-20,] [344.]
 – in Skelton,  [320-1.]
 – in John Oxenedes,  [322.]
 – in Annales Gandenses,  [323.]
Feuds, measures against them taken by James VI,  [214.]
Fitz-Michael, John, his liberality to Monks of May,  [162.]
Fleming, Lord, besieged in Dumbarton Castle,  [205.]
Fleming, Mary,  [35-48.]
 – related to Mary Stuart,  [35.]
 – as Queen of the Bean,  [36-8.]
 – courted by Sir Henry Sidney,  [38.]
 – courtship of, by Secretary Maitland,  [39-41.]
 – marries Maitland,  [42.]
 – with Mary Stuart on morning of Bothwell's trial,  [43.]
 – sends ring to Mary at Lochleven,  [43.]
 – is asked for by Mary at Sheffield,  [44.]
 – death of her husband,  [44.]
 – appeals to Elizabeth for burial of husband's body,  [45-6.]
 – subjected to petty annoyances by Morton,  [47.]
 – obtains reversion of husband's forfeiture,  [48.]
Football and golf cried down to encourage archery,  [273.]
Forret, John, proprietor of May Island,  [178.]
Ghent, looted by English,  [323.]
Gilbert of St. Martin, his gift of land to Monastery on May Island,  [163.]
Giles, St., feast of,  [190.]
 – history of,  [192-3.]
 – parish church of Edinburgh dedicated to,  [193.]
 – relic of,  [193-4.]
 – statue of, destroyed,  [194-6.]
Glasgow, Riotous,  [235-266.]
 – position of, amongst Scottish burghs at beginning of 17th century  [253.]
 – nomination of its Provost and selection of Bailies,  [253-4.]
 – Sir George Elphinstone of Blythswood appointed Provost of,  [254.]
 – Ludovic, Duke of Lennox, and Town Council of,  [254-5.]
 – appeal of Town Council to Privy Council,  [256.]
 – full liberty in election of Magistrates secured,  [256.]
 – Sir George Elphinstone elected Provost by Town Council,  [256.]
 –Stewarts of Minto oppose new system of election,  [257-8.]
 – riotous proceedings of partisans of Stewarts of Minto,  [259.]
 – Sir George Elphinstone attacked,  [260-2.]
 – Act for Staying of Unlawful Conventions within Burgh first applied,  [263.]
 – decision of Privy Council in the matter of issue between Sir George Elphinstone and the Stewarts,  [264-5.]
Golf and football "cried down" to encourage archery,  [273.]
Gospatric, Earl, his liberality to Monks of May,  [161.]
Grames, the, act as Buccleuch's agents,  [239.]
Guernsey, medieval cry of "la Coue" still heard in,  [315.]
Guinegate, Battle of,  [307.]
Hand-guns (hagbuts and culverins) introduced in Scottish army,  [274-6.]
Helena, St., builds church at Nazareth,  [141.]
Henry V, invasion of France by,  [304.]
Hind, as sinister supporter in Edinburgh coat of arms, origin of,  [192.]
"Horners", measures against them taken by James VI,  [213.]
James I and archery,  [269.]
 – and military equipment,  [270-1.]
James IV, visits May Island,  [174-6.]
James V, sanctions foundation of shrine of Loretto,  [143.]
 – his pilgrimages and gifts to the shrine,  [143-4.]
 – introduces "small artillery",  [274.]
James VI, as statesman,  [209-16.]
 – Macaulay's estimate of,  [209.]
 – Professor Masson's,  [209-10.]
 – and Maitland of Thirlstane,  [210.]
 – his idea of kingship,  [210-211.]
 – and Buchanan,  [211.]
 – dexterous management of circumstances and inflexibility of purpose,  [212.]
 – checks lawlessness and rebellion,  [213.]
 – enforces the law against "horners",  [213.]
 – puts down hereditary feuds,  [213.]
 – establishes flying police,  [213.]
 – pacifies the Border,  [213.]
 – as absentee King,  [215.]
 – and the Union of England and Scotland,  [215.]
 – Bacon's estimate of,  [215.]
 – as poet,  [216-24.]
 – Barnfield on,  [216.]
 – Harvey on his Lepanto,  [217.]
 – Vaughan on,  [217.]
 – quoted in Allott's England's Parnassus,  [217.]
 – in Bodenham's Garden of the Muses,  [217.]
 – Jonson's epigram on,  [217.]
 – Sir John Beaumont's estimate of,  [218.]
 – his Reulis and Cautelis to be Observit and Eschewit in Scottis Poesie,  [218.]
 – his first verses,  [219-20.]
 – his Lepanto quoted,  [220-1.]
 – his Dreame on his Mistris my Ladie Glammes quoted,  [221.]
 – his sonnet to his son Henry,  [222.]
 – his sonnet on Sicily,  [223.]
 – his punning rhymes,  [224.]
 – his objection to chess,  [19.]
 – writes to Elizabeth complaining of Will Armstrong's capture,  [242.]
 – complains to Elizabeth of Spenser's reflections on his mother,  [245.]
Jenye, Thomas, author of Maister Randolphe's Fantasie,  [128.]
Ker, George, apprehended by Andrew Knox,  [228.]
Kinmont Willie, story of Ballad of,  [237-46.]
 – taken prisoner by Thomas Salkeld,  [238-9.]
 – rescued by Buccleuch,  [240.]
Knox, Andrew, hunts down "practising Papists",  [226.]
 – apprehends Ladylands,  [226-7.]
 – apprehends George Ker,  [228.]
 – occupies Ailsa Craig,  [231.]
 – incurs ill-will by his action,  [235.]
 – proclamation on his behalf,  [235.]
Knox, John, his reference to Mary Stuart's voice,  [8.]
 – records introduction of Masques at Court,  [17.]
 – his account of Court scandal,  [26-27.]
 – his calumnious charge against Mary Livingston,  [51.]
 – his account of destruction of statue of St. Giles,  [194-6.]
Lamberton, William, purchases priory of May from Abbot of Reading,  [170.]
Lamont, Allan, proprietor of May Island,  [178.]
Learmonth, Patrick, first lay proprietor of May Island,  [177-8.]
Ledes, Alexander de, Governor of Dumbarton Castle,  [200.]
Lepanto, poem by James VI,  [216,] [217,] [220-1]
Lewes, Battle of,  [322.]
Life at Scottish Court,  [17-18.]
Lighthouse on Isle of May,  [187-9.]
Lincoln, epigram on Battle of,  [298-9.]
Livingston, Mary,  [49-60.]
 – parentage,  [49.]
 – Mary Stuart's gifts to her,  [50,] [53.]
 – married to James Sempill of Beltreis,  [50.]
 – Knox's calumnious assertion concerning her,  [51.]
 – wedding,  [53-5.]
 – Queen's wedding gifts to her,  [55.]
 – at Holyrood on night of Rizzio's murder,  [55.]
 – Queen's intended bequests to her,  [55-6.]
 – enters Edinburgh with Mary, after Carberry,  [56-7.]
 – accused by Lennox of having royal jewels in her possession,  [57-8.]
Longsword, William, and "tailard" gibe,  [299-300.]
"Longtail Myth", Story of the,  [290-360.]
 – origin of, as given by Goscelin,  [325-6.]
 – in William of Malmesbury's Gesta Pontificum,  [327.]
 – in Robert Wace's Brut,  [328-9.]
 – in Layamon,  [329-331.]
 – in English prose version of Brut,  [331-2.]
 – in Robert Manning's Story of Inglande,  [332-3.]
 – in Latin satire against inhabitants of Rochester,  [333-4.]
 – in Fazio degli Uberti's Ditta Mondo,  [335.]
 – in Boccaccio,  [335.]
 – in Alexander of Essebye (Ashby),  [336.]
 – in English version of Golden Legende,  [336.]
 – in Walter Bower,  [337-9.]
 – in John Major,  [341-2.]
 – in Nicole Gilles,  [342.]
 – in Bellenden,  [343.]
 – in Dunbar,  [344.]
 – in Génébrard,  [344.]
 – in Wilwolt of Schaumburg,  [344.]
 – in Polydore Vergil's Anglica Historia,  [346-7.]
 – in Guillaume Paradin,  [347-8.]
 – denounced as ridiculous by John Bale,  [349.]
 – by William Lambarde,  [349-352.]
 – by Thomas Fuller,  [354.]
 – explanation of, suggested by Fuller,  [355.]
 – by Fynes Moryson,  [356.]
 – by the author of Mad Pranks and Merry Jests of Robin Goodfellow,  [356-7.]
 – by Du Cange,  [358.]
 – by Professor Wattenbach,  [358.]
 – by the author of England under the Normans,  [358.]
 – further suggestion as to origin of,  [359-60.]
Loreto in Italy,  [141.]
 – Legend and Cult of our Lady of,  [141-2.]
 – origin of name,  [142.]
 – wealth of,  [142.]
 – statue of Our Lady of, carried off by the French,  [142.]
Loretto (Laureto, Laureit), chapel of, founded by Thomas Douchtie,  [143.]
 – patronized by James V,  [143-4.]
 – healing power attributed to,  [145.]
 – alleged imposture at,  [148-52.]
 – destruction of,  [147,] [152.]
Ludovic, Duke of Lennox, heritable right of appointing Provost and Bailies of Glasgow granted to,  [254.]
 – nominates Sir George Elphinstone Provost,  [254.]
 – delegates his authority to Sheriff,  [254.]
 – grants "exercise of the offices" of Glasgow to Stewarts of Minto,  [255.]
Lyndsay, Sir David, his lines on shrine and hermit of Loretto,  [144-5.]
Maister Randolphe's Fantasie,  [91-128.]
 – analysis of poem,  [103-128.]
 – authorship of,  [128.]
Maitland, Secretary, courts and marries Mary Fleming,  [39-42.]
 – death of,  [44.]
Maitland of Thirlstane and James VI,  [210-11.]
Malcolm, the King's Cupbearer, and Monks of May,  [167-8.]
Marie, Ballad of the Queen's, question of its authenticity,  [26-7.]
Mary, Queen of Scots,  [1-23.]
 – her beauty,  [3-4.]
 – her portraits,  [4-5.]
 – her complexion,  [5.]
 – her eyes,  [6.]
 – her hair,  [6-7.]
 – wears wigs,  [7.]
 – her hands,  [7.]
 – her voice,  [7-8,] [19.]
 – her stature,  [7.]
 – her figure,  [8.]
 – a precocious child,  [8.]
 – her Latin discourse,  [9.]
 – her books,  [11,] [14.]
 – her knowledge of Greek,  [11.]
 – of Spanish and Italian,  [12.]
 – of English,  [12-13.]
 – her love of French poetry,  [15.]
 – as a writer of French poetry,  [15-16.]
 – anagrams on her name,  [16.]
 – handwriting,  [16-17.]
 – fond of amusements,  [17-18.]
 – dancing,  [18.]
 – plays the lute and virginals,  [19.]
 – plays chess, tables, and cards,  [19.]
 – her puppets,  [19.]
 – fond of fancy-work,  [19-20.]
 – as a sportswoman,  [20.]
 – fond of dogs,  [20-21.]
 – hawking, archery, pallmall, and golf amongst her pastimes,  [21-2.]
 – her courage,  [22-3.]
 – sails from Dumbarton,  [28-9.]
 – makes her will,  [41,] [55.]
 – bequests to her Marys,  [41-2.]
 – enters Edinburgh after Carberry,  [56-7.]
 – favours Andrew Beton's courtship of Mary Seton,  [73-6.]
 – complains to Queen Elizabeth of a book written against her,  [91-2.]
Marys, the four,  [25-34.]
 – their popularity,  [25.]
 – their family names,  [25-6.]
 – sail from Dumbarton with Mary Stuart,  [28-9.]
 – Leslie's mention of them,  [28,] [30.]
 – figure in masques,  [31-2.]
 – Buchanan's verses to them,  [32-4.]
 – courted for their influence with Mary Stuart,  [34.]
May, the Isle of,  [153-89.]
 – description of,  [153-6.]
 – and St. Adrian,  [156-9.]
 – monastery on,  [160.]
 – grants and donations to monks,  [160-3.]
 – litigations of monks with rival claimants,  [163-7.]
 – plundered by Swein,  [169.]
 – monastery sold to Bishop of St. Andrews,  [170-2.]
 – severance of connection between Scottish "cell" of, and English monastery of Reading,  [172.]
 – Mary of Gueldres at,  [174.]
 – royal visits to,  [174-6.]
 – pirates about,  [176.]
 – used for quarantine,  [177.]
 – lay proprietors of,  [177-8.]
 – first lighthouse on Scottish seaboard,  [178-80.]
 – new lighthouse built in 1816,  [184-5.]
 – visited by Sir Walter Scott,  [185-6.]
 – modern lighthouse,  [187-9.]
Menteith, Sir John, Governor of Dumbarton Castle,  [201.]
Military training organized in Scotland,  [273.]
Montchrestien, Anthoine de, of doubtful nobility,  [129.]
 – his education,  [129.]
 – encounter with Baron de Gouville,  [130.]
 – marries a rich widow,  [130.]
 – publishes tragedy of Sophonisbe,  [130.]
 – publishes his "Stuart" tragedy, l'Escossoise,  [130.]
 – kills his adversary in a duel,  [130.]
 – retires to England,  [131.]
 – presents his tragedy to James VI,  [131.]
 – returns to France,  [131.]
 – writes the first treatise on political economy,  [131.]
 – joins Protestant party,  [131-2.]
 – is shot in encounter with Catholics,  [132.]
Mungo, St., and Glasgow,  [191.]
"Ochtyern", meaning of,  [268.]
 – fine imposed on, for neglect of military service,  [268.]
Œconomie Politique, Traicté de l', published by Montchrestien,  [131.]
Ogilvie, Alexander, of Boyne, marries Mary Beton,  [66-7.]
 – the Jesuit, imprisoned in Dumbarton Castle,  [208.]
Oman, Mr., his estimate of Bruce's "Testament",  [277.]
Origin, traditional, of "Longtail" myth,
   [325-6,] [327,] [328-9,] [329-31,] [331-2,] [332-3,] [333-4,] [335,] [336,]
   [337-9,] [341-2,] [343,] [344,] [345,] [346-7,] [348-9,] [349-52,] [354.]
 –suggested,  [355,] [356,] [356-7,] [358,] [359-60.]
Paris, evacuated by English, in 1436,  [305.]
Patrick, chaplain of Dunbar, action raised against, by Monks of May,  [165.]
Pensions established in Scottish army,  [289.]
Poitiers, Battle of,  [303.]
Preston of Gortoun gives relic of St. Giles to Edinburgh Parish Church,  [193-4.]
Priory of Pittenweem or May,  [173.]
Randolph, Thomas, his description of life at Scottish Court,  [17.]
 – account of Court scandal,  [27.]
 – account of Maitland's courtship of Mary Fleming,  [39-41.]
 – reports intended marriage of Mary Livingston,  [50-51.]
 – in love with Mary Beton,  [62-3.]
 – at Scottish Court,  [92-5.]
 – accused of writing a satire against Queen Mary,  [95.]
 – his denial,  [95-8.]
Reading, monks of, and May Island,  [160,] [166,] [170-2.]
Richard I, his followers jeered at as "tailards",  [295,] [296-7.]
Rochelle, la, epigram against "tailards" on taking of,  [298.]
Rodorcus, King, reigns on the Rock of Clyde,  [200.]
Roland, a carpenter, warns Bruce of Menteith's intended treachery,  [202.]
Ronsard, Mary Stuart's admiration of,  [15.]
Row, reference to shrine of Loretto in his history,  [145.]
 – his account of alleged sham miracle at Loretto,  [148-9.]
Ryderchen, obtains possession of stronghold of Dumbarton,  [200.]
Salkeld, Thomas, takes Willie Armstrong of Kinmont prisoner,  [238-9.]
Santa Casa removed by angels from Nazareth into Dalmatia,  [141.]
Scone, Brethren of Scone and Monks of May,  [166.]
Scott, John, the Fasting Man,  [146-7.]
Scott, Miss, of Scotstarvit, improves May light,  [182.]
Scott, Sir Walter, visits May Island,  [185-6.]
Segrave, Nicholas de, Governor of Dumbarton Castle,  [200.]
Sempill, James, of Beltreis, marries Mary Livingston,  [50.]
 – his parentage,  [52.]
 – imprisoned by Lennox,  [57.]
 – sent to England as hostage,  [58.]
 – incurs enmity of Morton,  [59.]
 – put to the boot,  [59.]
 – death,  [60.]
Sempill, Provost of Dumbarton, gets possession of Castle for Covenanters,  [207.]
Seton, Mary,  [69-78.]
 – finest busker of hair,  [7,] [71.]
 – parentage,  [69.]
 – enters Edinburgh with Mary Stuart after Carberry,  [70.]
 – at Lochleven,  [70.]
 – with Mary Stuart during captivity,  [71-2.]
 – romance of Andrew Beton's courtship of her,  [73-7.]
 – retires to Abbey of St. Peter's, Rheims,  [77.]
 – last memorial of her,  [77-8.]
Sheep, on May Island,  [154.]
Sibbald, his account of May Island,  [154.]
Song of Mary Stuart,  [79-90.]
 – attributed to Mary by Brantôme,  [79-81.]
 – discovery of manuscript copy by Dr. Galy,  [82.]
 – "Song" composed at Court in honour of Mary Stuart,part of the original poem,  [83.]
 – additional stanzas,  [83.]
 – internal evidence of Brantôme's authorship,  [84-6.]
 – the whole poem restored,  [86-90.]
Stevenson, Robert, suggests improvement of May light,  [183.]
Stewarts of Minto and Town Council of Glasgow,  [257.]
 – organize opposition to extension of municipal liberty,  [257-8.]
 – head a tumultuous demonstration,  [259.]
 – attack Sir George Elphinstone,  [260-2.]
 – charged to enter ward in Dumbarton,  [262.]
 – ward changed to Perth and Dundee,  [262.]
 – suit brought against them by Sir George Elphinstone,  [264.]
"Stuart" tragedy, the first,  [129-140.]
 – published in 1601,  [130.]
 – presented to James VI,  [131.]
 – analysis of tragedy,  [132-40.]
Students, English, at Paris university jeered at as "tailards",  [293.]
Swave, Peder, his account of John Scott, the Fasting Man,  [147 n..]
Swein, Asleif, plunders Monastery of May,  [169.]
Thenaw, St., legend of,  [159.]
Tournay, besieged by English in 1513,  [306.]
Transport service in old Scottish army,  [283-4.]
Treason of Dumbarton,  [205.]
Tullibardine, Marquis of, and Jacobites imprisoned in Dumbarton Castle,  [208.]
Twelfth-night or Feast of the Bean at Scottish Court,  [36.]
Ulster, Annals of, record siege of Dumbarton,  [200.]
Union of England and Scotland projected by James VI,  [215.]
University of Paris, students of in 13th century,  [255.]
University of St. Andrews, Mary's intended bequest of books to,  [65.]
Value of furniture in Castle on Little Cumbrae,  [250-2.]
"Victual", meaning of,  [280.]
Vuillequot ("Billy"), name applied by French to Englishmen generally,  [272.]
Walker, Gavin, Chaplain of Loretto, restores ground granted for shrine,  [152.]
Wapenshaws, established,  [267.]
 – James I's enactment concerning,  [270.]
 – during 15th and 16th centuries,  [272.]
 – evidence of their unpopularity,  [272,] [279.]
Wells on May Island,  [155.]
William, King, confirms grants to Monks of May Island,  [160.]
 – and military service,  [268.]
Wreck of frigates Nymphen and Pallas,  [183.]
Wyntoun, Andrew, his account of martyrdom of St. Adrian,  [158-9.]
 – his lines referring to the Parson of Kincardine's seizure of Dumbarton Castle,  [203.]
Yeomen, equipment of in old Scottish army,  [274.]
 – divided into three classes,  [271.]