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them. --_Aubrey_. 4.3: 'beane.' The 'a' was inserted by Aubrey after writing 'bene.' 6.1: 'no brader than a thread.' Written by Aubrey as here printed over the second half of the line. Probably it indicates a lost stanza. See Appendix. 8.3: 'bane' might be read 'bene.'] THE BONNY EARL OF MURRAY +The Text+ is given from Allan Ramsay's _Tea-Table Miscellany_, where it first appeared in the tenth edition (1740) in vol. iv. pp. 356-7. Child had not seen this, and gave his text from the eleventh edition of 1750. There is, however, scarcely any difference. +The Story+ of the murder of the Earl of Murray by the Earl of Huntly in February 1592 is found in several histories and other accounts:-- _The History of the Church of Scotland_ (1655) by John Spottiswoode, Archbishop of Glasgow and of St. Andrews: _History of the Western Highlands and Isles of Scotland_ (1836) by Donald Gregory: _The History and Life of King James_ (the Sixth), ed. T. Thomson, Bannatyne Club, (1825): _Extracts from the Diarey of R[obert] B[irrel], Burges of Edinburgh_ (? 1820): and Sir Walter Scott's _Tales of a Grandfather_. The following condensed account may suffice:--James Stewart, son of Sir James Stewart of Doune ('Down,' 6.2), Earl of Murray by his marriage with the heiress of the Regent Murray, 'was a comely personage, of a great stature, and strong of body like a kemp,' whence he was generally known as the Bonny Earl of Murray. In the last months of 1591, a rumour reached the King's ears that the Earl of Murray had assisted in, or at least countenanced, the attack recently made on Holyrood House by Stewart, Earl of Bothwell; and Huntly was commissioned to arrest Murray and bring him to trial. Murray, apprehended at Donibristle (or Dunnibirsel), his mother the Lady Doune's house, refused to surrender to his feudal enemy the Earl of Huntly, and the house was fired. Murray, after remaining behind the rest of his party, rushed out and broke through the enemy, but was subsequently discovered (by the plumes on his headpiece, which had caught fire) and mortally wounded. Tradition says that Huntly was compelled by his followers to incriminate himself in the deed, and struck the dying Murray in the face, whereat the bonny Earl said, 'You have spoiled a better face than your own.' THE BONNY EARL OF MURRAY 1. Ye Highlands and ye Lawlands, Oh! where have you been? They have slain the Earl of Murray,
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