[218] Ardhullary.
[225a] This is none other than the well-known Scottish word ‘gey,’—indifferently, tolerable, considerable.—Ed.
[225b] See Appendix F.
[246] See Lockhart’s Life of Scott for an account of this visit, vol. i. pp. 402–7. Mr. L. says, ‘I have drawn up the account of this meeting from my recollection, partly of Mr. W.’s conversation, partly from that of his sister’s charming “Diary,” which he was so kind as to read to me on the 16th May 1836.’—Ed.
[254] See Appendix G.
[266] W. Laidlaw. See Scott’s Life, vol. i.
[295] On the banks of the River Nid, near Knaresborough.
[314] If this is not a misprint, the Lady had antedated her tour by two years, as she made it in 1796 and published it in 1799.