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of the house. We soon thought the confinement of Edinburgh quite dreadful, and began to wonder how long it would take us to walk or run some three hundred miles back to Glengarry again. So we measured how often round the battlements would make one mile, and each of us ran so many miles a-day.
For Glengarry Sir Walter Scott wrote the following Lament. It has been in possession of the family ever since:[1]—
Glengarry's Death-Song.
- ↑ Miss Macdonell writes:—
Mavis Bank, Rothesay, 17th April 1893.
"My father died in January 1828, and my mother came to Merchiston Castle, Edinburgh, where she lived from May 1828 to May 1830. It was there I first saw the 'Death-Song,' and was told by mother that Sir Walter Scott had written it and sent it to her. I believe she got it soon after we all came south in May 1828, and it has always been in whatever houses we lived ever since."