FOOTNOTES:
[1] When honest William Penderel subsequently waited on Mr. Staunton, and acknowledged the abstraction of the sheep, offering, at the same time, to pay for it, that loyal gentleman laughed heartily at the incident, and said, "He was glad to hear that his majesty had tasted his mutton, and much good might it do him."
[2] "Lives of the Queens of Scotland, and English Princesses connected with the regal succession of Great Britain."
[3] See many dispatches from the English envoys resident in Scotland. State Paper Office, from 1534 to 1536.
[4] "Life of Lord Herries," edited by Pitcairne, Abbotsford Club, p. 101.
[5] "Life of James Earl of Morton," in the "Lives of the Douglases," p. 302.
[6] Continuation of the "History of the Houses of Seytoun, by Alexander, Viscount Kingston. Printed for the Maitland Club."
[7] Time is regulated on board a king's ship by a half-hour glass, which is placed in the binnacle, in charge of the quarter-master of the watch on deck, and who when he turns the glass, passes the word forward to strike the bell, which, in a man-of-war, is hung to the main-bitts, just over the main-hatchway, and where it is consequently heard with facility all over the ship.
[8] Burgoo, or skilligalee, is the sea-term for what in Scotland is called "parritch," and in Ireland "stirabout," namely, oatmeal boiled in water.