Restalrig, Lady (Logan’s wife), [189]; her agitation on the knowledge of the Logan conspiracy, [204]; blames Bower for the selling of Fastcastle, [204]; her postscript to Logan’s letter to Bower after his death, [215]; distressed at Logan’s conduct, [220]; her daughter by Logan, [220]

Restalrig Loch, [149], [150]

Restalrig village, [148], [149], [150], [151]

‘Return from Parnassus,’ the, quoted, [126]

Rhynd, Mr. (Gowrie’s tutor), at Padua with Gowrie, [126]; at Gowrie House when the Ruthvens were killed, [32]; tells of the ride to Falkland, [45], [46]; gives the key of the gallery to the Master, [66]; on Gowrie’s views as to secrecy in plots, [144]

Robertson, Rev. Mr. (Edinburgh preacher), accepts James’s narrative, [102]

Robertson, William (notary of Perth), his evidence of what he saw near the death chamber, [60], [61], [97]

Roll of Scottish scholars at Padua, [126]

Rollock, Mr. (tutor to Gowrie and the Master), [56], [124]

Ruthven, Alexander, the Master of (Gowrie’s brother), attributed relations with the Queen, [3]; plot to seize the King, [7]; Lennox’s version of events, [13] et seq.; interviews James before the hunt in Falkland Park, [13]; induces the King to visit Perth, to see the pot of gold coins, [14]; his actions at Gowrie House after the King’s arrival, [19]; observers’ accounts of the transactions which led to his death, [24]–34; stabbed by Ramsay, [26]; James’s own narrative of the affair, [35] et seq.; the King’s interview with the Master, [39]; the cloaked man and the lure of the pot of gold pieces, [39]–42; his suggested project of kidnapping James, [42]; was accompanied by Henderson in his mission to James at Falkland, [43], [44]; alleged differences with his brother over the Abbey of Scone, [48], [49]; enjoins on James to keep the treasure a secret from Gowrie, [49]; conducts the King alone to view it, [50]; duplicity in securing this privacy, [51]; suspicious conduct in locking doors of rooms passed through, [51], [52], [53]; threatens the King with a dagger, [55]; James harangues him and promises forgiveness, [56]; goes to consult Gowrie, leaving James in the custody of the man in the turret, [56]; returns and essays to bind the King’s hands with a garter, [58]; struggles with the King, [58]; Ramsay enters and stabs him, [59]; he is driven down stairs, and killed by Erskine and Herries, [59]; further details given by Henderson, [62] et seq.; his message to Gowrie by Henderson from Falkland, [65]; locks Henderson in the turret, [66]; Henderson’s narrative of the struggle with the King, [66]; words exchanged with James in the turret chamber, [68]; the ‘promise,’ [68]; question of his disarming, [69]; romantic story of the King’s discovery of the Queen’s ribbon round his neck, [132]; gossip about his relations with the Queen, [133]