"Laced linen there would be a dangerous thing;
It might perhaps a new rebellion bring—
The Scot who wore it would be chosen king."
The Highlander, however, when in full dress, did not disdain to adopt the falling band and ruffles of guipure or Flanders lace.
The advertisements and inventories of the first years of the eighteenth century give us little reason to imagine any change had been effected in the homely habits of the people.
At the marriage of a daughter of Thomas Smythe, of Methuen, in 1701, to Sir Thomas Moncrieffe, the bride had a head-suit and ruffles of cut-work which cost nearly six pounds ten shillings.[[1198]] Few and scanty advertisements of roups of "white thread lace" appear in the journals of the day.[[1199]]
And in such a state matters continued till the Jacobites, going and coming from St. Germains, introduced French fashions and luxuries as yet unheard of in the then aristocratic Canongate.
It sounds strange to a traveller, as he wanders among these now deserted closes of Edinburgh, to read of the gay doings and of the grand people who, in the last century, dwelt within these poor-looking abodes. A difficult matter it must have been to the Jacobite beauties, whose hoop (from 1725-8) measured nine yards in circumference, to mount the narrow winding staircases of their dwellings; and this very difficulty gave rise to a luxury of underclothing almost unknown in England or elsewhere. Every lady wore a petticoat trimmed with the richest point lace. Nor was it only the jupe that was lace-trimmed. Besides
"Twa lappets at her head, that flaunted gallantlie,"
ladies extended the luxury to finely-laced garters.