[33] The Pourtrait of True Loyalty exposed in the Family of Gordon without interruption to this present year 1691, with a relation of the Siege of the Castle of Edinburgh in the year 1689. MS. in Advocates’ Library. It is partially quoted in De Rebus Albanicis.
[34] Iona Club Transactions, pp. 37, 38.
[35] Origines Parochiales Scotiæ, Vol. II., i. 156.
[36] The Montgomery Manuscripts, containing Accounts of the Colonization of the Ardes in the County of Down in the Reigns of Elizabeth and James. Printed from the Original Manuscripts and Transcripts of MSS., composed by William Montgomery, Esq., second son of Sir James Montgomery, between the years 1698 and 1704. Belfast, 1830, pp. 53, 54.
[37] Camden’s Britannia (Gough’s Edition, 1789), Vol. III., p. 389.
[38] The Pennyless Pilgrimage, or the Moneylesse Perumbulation of John Taylor, alias the Kings Majesties Water-Poet: How he travelled on Foot from London to Edenborough in Scotland, not carrying any money to or fro, neither Begging, Borrowing or asking Meate, Drinke, or Lodging. Hume Brown’s Edition. Edinburgh: David Douglas, 1892, pp. 120, 121.
[39] History of Scots Affairs from 1637 to 1641, by James Gordon, Parson of Rothiemay. Spalding Club, Vol. III., Appendix to Preface, pp. xliii., xliv.
[40] Defoe’s Works: Memoirs of a Cavalier, Vol. II., pp. 112, 113. Bohn, London, 1854. As to the genuine authorship of this work, see Lee’s Bibliography in his edition of Defoe’s Works.
[41] Acts of the Parliament of Scotland, 1661, Vol. VII., p. 186.
[42] Brome’s Travels, Second Edition, London, 1707, pp. 179, 180.