Mr. George and Rollo made some excursions
together after this, but I have not time to give a
full account of them. Among others, they went
to see Linlithgow, where stands the ruin of an ancient
palace, which was the one in which Queen Mary was
born. Linlithgow itself is a town. Near
it is a pretty little loch. The ruins stand on
a smooth and beautiful lawn, between the town and
the shore of the loch. The people who lived in
the palace had delightful views from their windows,
both of the water of the loch itself and of the opposite
shores.
At this ruin people can go up by the
old staircases to various rooms in the upper stories,
and even to the top of the walls. The floors,
wherever the floors remain, are covered with grass
and weeds.
There was a very curious story about
the castle. It was taken at one time by means
of a load of hay. The enemy engaged a farmer who
lived near, and who was accustomed to supply the people
of the castle with hay, to join them in their plot.
So they put some armed men on his cart, and covered
them all over with hay. They also concealed some
more armed men near the gateway. The gateway
had what is called a portcullis; that is, a heavy
iron gate suspended by chains, so as to rise and fall.
Of course, when the portcullis was down, nobody could
get in or out.
The people of the castle hoisted the
portcullis, to let the load of hay come in, and the
farmer, as soon as he had got the wagon in the middle
of the gateway, stopped it there, and cut the traces,
so that it could not be drawn any farther. At
the same instant the men who were hid under the hay
jumped out, killed the guard at the gates, called out
to the other men who were in ambush, and they all
poured into the castle together, crowding by at the
sides of the wagon. The wagon, being directly
in the way, prevented the portcullis from being shut
down. Thus the castle was taken.
Mr. George and Rollo also went to
visit Melrose Abbey, which is a very beautiful ruin
in the south part of Scotland. While they were
there they visited Abbotsford, too, which is the house
that Walter Scott lived in. Walter Scott amused
himself, during his lifetime, in collecting a great
many objects of interest connected with Scottish history,
and putting them up in his house; and now the place
is a perfect museum of Scottish antiquities and curiosities.
Melrose and Abbotsford are in the
southern part of Scotland, not very far from the English
frontier. After visiting them, Mr. George and
Rollo proceeded by the railway to Berwick, which stands
on the boundary line; and there they bade Scotland
farewell.