Black Colin Campbell, general Campbell, in the army of George III., introduced by sir W. Scott in Redgauntlet.
Black Douglas, William Douglas, lord of Nithsdale, who died 1390.
He was tall, strong, and well made, of a swarthy
complexion, with dark hair, from which he was
called "The Black Douglas."—Sir Walter Scott,
Tales of a Grandfather
, xi.
Black Dwarf (The), of sir Walter Scott, is meant for David Ritchie, whose cottage was and still is on Manor Water, in the county of Peebles.
Black-eyed Susan, one of Dibdin's sea-songs.
Black George, the gamekeeper in Fielding's novel, called The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling (1750).