Meanwhile, Edward, the King's son, arrived from across the seas, and garrisoned Windsor Castle with an armed band of aliens, whom he had brought with him a short time before. The King, however, fearing to be imprisoned in the Tower by the army of the Barons, agreed while there was yet time, through the mediation of timorous men, to the conditions of peace proposed by the Barons, and promised to observe the Provisions of Oxford. But the Queen, impelled by woman's malice, opposed the Barons as far as she could. Consequently, when she had embarked in a boat on the Thames for the purpose of proceeding by water to the castle at Windsor, a mob of townspeople gathered at the bridge under which she had to pass, loaded her with abuse and execrations, and, by throwing stones and mud, compelled her to return to the Tower.

THE BATTLE OF LARGS (1263).

Source.Androw of Wyntoun's Orygynale Cronykil of Scotland, book vii., ll. 3267-3306.

A thowsand twa hundyr sexty and thre

Yheris efftyr the Natyvyté,

Haco, Kyng than off Norway,

Come wyth hys ost and gret array

In Scotland on the West Se.

In Cwnyngame[21] at the Largis he

Arryẅyd wyth a gret multitud