"Oh, bring to me a pint o' wine, That I may drink to my Ladie." She took the cup intill her hand, But her bonnie heart, it burst in three.
[ [48] Collegiate Churches of Midlothian. Bannatyne Club, 1861.
Sanct Tredwell als thare may be sene, Quhilk on ane prik hes baith her ene.
Sir David Lindsay—"The Monarchie."
[ [50] See Chambers's Traditions of Edinburgh.
[ [51] The Logans of Restalrig quartered the arms of Ramsay of Dalhousie with their own. They bore 1st and 4th, or, three piles issuing from a chief, and conjoined in base, sable, for Logan; 2nd and 3rd, argent, an eagle displayed with two heads sable, beaked and membered gules, for Ramsay.
[ [52] There is a poem in the Bannatyne MS. termed "Rowll's Cursing." Whether written by him, or only in his name, is not known. "The following passage in it," writes the learned Lord Hailes, "determines the era at which he lived:—
----and now of Rome that beiris the rod, Undir the hevin to lowse and bind, Paip Alexander.
The Pontiff here meant must have been the virtuous Alexander VI., who was Divine Vicegerent, from 1492 to 1503." In Select Remains of the Ancient Popular Poetry of Scotland, printed by Dr. Laing in 1822, the poem is given, and entitled