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MAP
OF HIGH STREET
HISTORY
OF THE ST GILES
THE CHURCH OF ST. GILES.
St. Giles's Church--The Patron Saint--Its
Origin and early Norman style--The Renovation of l829 History
of the Structure--Procession of the Saint's Relics--The Preston
Relic--The Chapel of the Duke of Albany--Funeral of the Regent
Murray--The Gude Regent's Aisle" The Assembly AisleDispute
between James Vl. and the Church Party--Departure of James Vl.--Haddo's
Hole--The Napier Tomb -The Spire and Lantern--Clock and Bells--The
Krames--Restoration of 1878.
THE church of St. Giles, or Sanctus Egidius, as he is termed in
Latin, was the first parochial one erected in the city, and its
history can be satisfac-torily deduced from the early part of
the 12th century, when it superseded, or was engrafted on an edifice
of much smaller size and older date, one founded about 100 years
after the death of its patron saint, the abbot and confessor St.
Giles, who was born in Athens, of noble--some say royal --parentage,
and who, while young, sold his patri-mony and left his native
country, to the end that he might serve God in retirement.
In
the year 666 he arrived at Provence, in the south of France, and
chose a retreat near Arles; but afterwards, desiring more perfect
solitude, he withdrew into a forest near Gardo, in the diocese
of Nismes, having with him only one companion, Veredemus, who
lived with him on the fruits of the earth and the milk of a hind.
As Flavius Wamba, King of the Goths, was one day hunting in the
neighbourhood of Nismes, his hounds pursued her to the hermitage
of the saint, where she took refuge.
This
hind has been ever associated with St. Giles, and its figure is
to this day the sinister supporter of the city arms. ("Caledonia,"
ii, p. 773.) St. Giles died in 721, on the 1st of September, which
was always held as his festival in Edinburgh; and to some disciple
of the Benedictine establishment in the south of France we doubtless
owe the dedication of the parish church there. He owes his memory
in the English capital to Matilda of Scotland, queen of Henry
I., who founded there St. Giles's hospital for lepers in 1117.
Hence, the large parish which now lies in the heart of London
took its name from the Greek recluse; and the master and brethren
of that hospital used to present a bowl of ale to every felon
as he passed their gate to Newgate.
Among the places enumerated by Simon Dunel-mensis, of Durham,
as belonging to the see of Lindisfarn in 854, when Earnulph, who
re--moved it to Chester-le-Street, was bishop, he in-cludes that
of Edinburgh. From this it must be distinctly inferred that a
church of some kind existed on the long slope that led to Dun
Edin, but no authentic record of it occurs till the reign of King
Alexander II., when Baldred deacon of Lothian, and John perpetual
vicar of the church of St. Giles at Edinburgh, attached their
seals to copies of certain Papal bills and charters of the church
of Megginche, a dependency of the church of Holyrood; and (according
to the Liber Cartarum Sanctae Crucis) on the Sunday before the
feast of St. Thomas, in the year 1293, Donoca, daughter of John,
son of Herveus, resigned certain lands to the monastery of Holyrood,
in full consis-tory, held in the church of St. Giles.
In
an Act passed in 1319, in the reign of Robert I., the church is
again mentioned, when William the bishop of St. Andrews confirmed
numerous gifts bestowed upon the abbey and its dependencies. In
1359 King David II., by a charter under his great seal, con-firmed
to the chaplain officiating at the altar of St. Catharine in the
church of St. Giles all the lands of Upper Merchiston, the gift
of Roger Hog, burgess of Edinburgh. It is more than probable that
the first church on the site was of wood. St. Paul's Cathedral,
at London, was burned down in 961, and built up again within the
year. Of what must the materials have been ? asks Maitland. Burned
again in 1187~ it was rebuilt on arches of stone--" a wonderful
work," say the authors of the day
A portion of the church of St. Giles was arched with stone in
1380~ as would appear from a con-tract noted by Maitland, who
has also preserved the terms of another contract, made in 1387~
be-tween the provost and community of Edinburgh on one hand, and
two masons on the other, for the construction of five separate
vaulted chapels along the south side of the church, the architectural
features of which prove its existence at a period long before
any of these dates, and when Edin-burgh was merely a cluster of
thatched huts.
The edifice as it now stands is a building including the work
of many different and remote periods. By all men of taste and
letters in Edinburgh others it has been a general subject of regret
that the restoration in 1829 was conducted in a manner so barbarous
and irreverent, that many of its ancient features and its ancient
tombs were swept away. The first stone church was probably of
Norman architecture. A beautiful Norman door-way, which stood
below the third window from the west, was wantonly destroyed towards
the end of the eighteenth century. " This fragment,"
says Wilson, " sufficiently enables us to picture the little
parish church of St. Giles in the reign of David I. Built in the
massive style of the early Norman period, it would consist simply
of a nave and chancel, united by a rich Norman chancel arch, altogether
occupying only a portion of the centre of the present nave. Small
circular-headed windows decorated with zig-zag mouldings, would
admit the light to its sombre interior; while its west front was
in all probability surmounted by a simple belfry, from whence
the bell would sum-mon the natives of the hamlet to matins and
vespers, and with slow measured sounds toll their knell, as they
were laid in the neighbouring church-yard. This ancient church
was never entirely de-molished. Its solid masonry was probably
very partially affected by the ravages of the invading forces
of Edward II. in 1322 when Holyrood was. spoiled, or by those
of his son in 1335 when the whole country was wasted with fire
and sword. The town was again subjected to the like violence,
probably with results little more lasting, by the conflagration
of 1385 when the English army under Richard II. occupied the town
for five days, and then laid it and the abbey of Holyrood in ashes.
The Norman architecture disappeared piecemeal, as chapels and
aisles were added to -the original fabric by the piety of private
donors, or by the zeal of its own clergy to adapt it to the wants
of the rising town. In all the changes that it underwent for above
seven centuries, the original north door, with its beautifully
recessed Norman arches and grotesque decorations, always. commanded
the veneration of the innovators, and remained as a precious relic
of the past, until the tasteless improvers of the eighteenth century
de-molished it without a cause, and probably for no better reason
than to evade the cost of its repair !"
In the year 1462 great additions and repairs appear to have been
in progress, for the Town Council then passed a law that all persons
selling corn before it was entered should forfeit one chal-der
to church work. In the year 1466 it was erected into a collegiate
church by James III., the foundation consisting ( according to
Keith and others of a provost, curate, sixteen prebendaries, sacristan,
beadle, minister of the choir and four- choristers. Various sums
of money, lands, tithes,. &c., were appropriated for the support
of the new establishment, and Maitland gives us a roll of the
forty chaplaincies and altarages therein.
An Act of. Council dated. twelve years before this event commemorates
the gratitude of the citizens to one .who had brought-from France
a relic of St. Giles,; and, modernised,-it runs thus:-- "Be
it kenned to all men by these present letters, we, the- provost,
Bailie, counselle and commu-nitie of. the burgh of Edynburgh,
to be bound and- obliged to William Prestoune of Gourton, son
and heir to somewhile William Prestoune of Gourton, and to the
friends and sir-name of them, that for so much that William Prestoune
the father, whom ;God assoile, made diligent labour, by a high
and mighty prince, the King of France (Charles VN.), and many
other lords of France, for getting the arm-bone of St. Gile, th'e
which bone he freely left to our mother kirk of-St. Gile of Edinburgh,'without
making any condition.' We, considering the great labour and costs
that he made for getting thereof, promise that within six or seven
years, in all the possible and goodly haste we may, that we shall
build an aisle forth from our Ladye aisle, where the said Wil-liam
hes, the said aisle to be begun within a year, in which aisle
there shall be brass for his lair in bost (i.e., for his grave
in embossed) work, and above the brass a writ, specifying the
bringing of that Rylik by him into Scotlarid, with his arms, and
his arms to be put in hewn work, in three other parts of the aisle,
with book and chalice and all other furniture belonging thereto.
A!so, that we shall assign the chaplain of whilome Sir William
of Prestoune, to sing at the altar from that time forth. . . .
. Item, that as often as the said Rylik is borne in the year,
that the sirname and nearest of blood of the said William shall
bear the said Rylik, before all others, &c. In witness of
which things we have set to our common seal at Edinburgh the 11th
day of the month of January, in the year of our Lord 1454.4
The other arm of St. Giles is preserved in the church of his name
in the Scottish quarter of ·Bruges, and on the 1st of September
is yearly borne through the streets, preceded by all the drums
in the garrison.
To this hour the arms of Preston still remain in the roof of the
aisle, as executed by the engage-ment in the charter quoted; and
the Prestons continued annually to exercise their right of bear-ing
the arm of the patron saint of the city until the eventful year
1558, when the clergy issued forth for the last time in solemn
procession on the day of his feast the 1st, September, bearing
with them a statue of St. Giles--" a mar-mouset idol,"
Knox calls it-- borrowed from the Grey Friars, because the great
image of the saint, which was as large as life, had been stolen
from its place, and after being "drowned" in the North
Loch as an encourager of idolatry, was burned as a heretic by
some earnest Reformers. Only two years before this event the Dean
of Guild had paid 6s. for paint-ing the image, and 12d. for polishing
the silver arm contain-ing the relic. To give dignity to this
last procession the queen regent attended it in person; but the
moment she left it the spirit of the mob broke forth. Some pressed
close to the image; as if to join in its support, while endeavouring
to shake it down; but this proved impossible, so firmly was it
secured to its supporters; and the struggle. rivalry, and triumph
of the mob were delightful to Knox, who described the event with
the inevitable glee in which he indulged on such occasions.
Only four years after all this the saint's silver-work, ring and
jewels, and all the rich vestments wherewith his image and his
arm-bone were wont to be decorated on high festivals, were sold
by the authority of the magistrates, and the proceeds employed
in the repair of the church.
In his "Monarchie," finished in 1553 the pun-gent Sir
David Lindesay of the Mount writes thus of the processionists:--
" Fy on you fostereris of idolatrie !
That till ane deid stok does sik reverence
In presens of the pepill publickhe;
Feir ye nocht God, to commit sik offence,
I counsall you do yit your diligence,
To gar suppresse sik greit abusion;
Do ye nocht sa, I dreid your recompense,
Sall be nocht else, bot clene confusion."
The Lady aisle, where Preston's grave lay and the altar stood,
was part of what forms now the south aisle of the choir called
the High Church, and on that altar many of the earliest recorded
gifts were bestowed.
The constant additions made to St. Giles's church, from the exchequer
of the city, or by con-tributions of wealthy burgesses, cannot
but be regarded as a singular evidence of the great elasticity
which the nation displayed in its endless wars with England, showing
how the general and local government vied with each other in the
erection of ornate ecclesiastical edifices, the mo-ment the invaders--few
of whom ever equalled Edward III. in wanton ferocity--had re-crossed
the Tweed. Among these we may specially mention the chapel of
Robert Duke of Albany, now the most beautiful and interesting
portion of this sadly defaced and misused old edifice. The ornamental
sculptures of this portion are of a peculiarly striking character---
heraldic devices forming the most prominent features on the capital
of the great clustered pillar. On the south side are the arms
of Robert Duke of Albany, son of King Robert II., and on the north
are those of Archi-bald fourth Earl of Douglas, Duke of Touraine
and Marshal of France, who was slain at the battle of Verneuil
by the English.
In
1401 David Duke of Rothesay, the luckless son of Robert II., was
made a prisoner by his uncle, the designing Duke of Albany, with
the full consent of the aged king his father, who had grown weary
of the daily com-plaints that were made against the prince. In
the "Fair Maid of Perth," Scott has depicted with thrilling
effect the actual death of David, by the slow process of starvation,
notwithstanding the intervention of a maiden and nurse, who met
a very different fate from that he assigns to them in the novel,
while in his history he expresses a doubt whether they ever supplied
the wants of the prince in any way. According to the " Black
Book" of Scone, the Earl of Douglas was with Albany when
the prince was trepanned to Falkland, and having probably been
exasperated against the latter, who was his own brother-in-law
(having married his sister Marjorie Douglas), for his licentious
course of life, must have joined in the projected assassi-nation.
" Such are the two Scottish nobles whose armorial bearings
still grace the capital of the pillar in the old chapel. It is
the only other case in which they are found acting in concert
besides the dark deed already referred to; and it seems no unreasonable
inference to draw from such a coincidence, that this chapel had
been founded and endowed by them as an expiatory offering for
that deed of blood, and its chaplain probably appointed to say
masses for their victim's soul " (Wilson)
The comparative wealth of the Scottish Church in those days and
for long after was considerable, and an idea may be formed of
it from the amount of the tenth of the benefices paid by the three
countries as a tax to Rome, and in the Acts of Par-liament of
James III. in 1471, and of James IV. in 1473. the account is from
a "Codex Membranaceus," in the Harleian Collection in
the British Museum
De terra Scotia £3,947 19 8
,, Hiberni £1,647 16 3
,, Angliae et Wallae £20,872 2 4
Thus we see that the Scottish Church paid more than double what
was paid by Ireland, and a fifth of the amount that was paid by
England.
The transepts of St. Giles, as they existed before the so-called
repairs of 1829, afforded distinct evidence of the gradual progress
of the edifice Beyond the Preston aisle the roof differed from
the older portion, exhibiting undoubted evidence of being the
work of a subsequent time; and from its associations with the
eminent men of other days it is perhaps the most interesting portion
of the whole fabric. Here it was that Walter Chapman, of Ewirland,
a burgess of Edinburgh, famous as the introducer of the printing-press
into Scotland, and who was nobly patronised by the heroic king
who fell at Flodden, founded and endowed a chaplaincy at the altar
of St. John the Evangelist " in honour of God, the Blessed
Virgin Mary, St John the Apostle and Evangelist, and all the saints,
for the healthful estate and prosperity of the most excellent
lord the King of Scotland, and of his most serene consort Margaret
Queen of Scotland, and of their children and also for the health
of my soul, and of Agnes Cockburne, my present wife, and of the
soul of Mariot Kerkettill, my former spouse," &c.
"This charter," says a historian, "is dated, 1st
August, 15I3, an era of peculiar interest. Scot-land was then
rejoicing in all the prosperity and happiness consequent on the
wise and beneficent reign of James IV: Learning was visited with
the highest favour of the Court, and literature was rapidly extending
its influence under the zealous co-operation of Dunbar, Douglas,
Kennedy, and others, with the royal master-printer. Only one month
thereafter Scotland lay at the mercy of her southern rival. Her
king was slain the chief of her nobles and warriors had perished
on Flodden Field, and adversity and ignorance again replaced the
advantages that had followed in the train of the gallant James's
rule. Thenceforth, the altars of St. Giles received few and rare
additions to their endowments."
From the preface to " Gologras and Gawane," we learn
that in 1528 Walter Chapman the printer founded a chaplaincy at
the altar of Jesus Christ, in St. Giles, and endowed it with a
tenement in the Cowgate; and there is good reason for believing
that the pious old printer lies buried in the south transept of
the church, close by the spot where the Regent Murray, the Regent
Morton, and his great rival, John Stewart Earl of Athole, are
buried; and adjoining the aisle where the sorely mangled remains
of the great Marquis of Montrose were so royally interred on the
7th of January, 1661.
The Regent's tomb, now fully restored, stands on the west side
of the south transept, and on many accounts is an object of peculiar
interest. Erected to the memory of one who played so con-spicuous
a part in one of the most momentous periods of Scottish history,
it is well calculated to rouse many a stirring association. All
readers of history know how the Regent fell under the bullet of
Bothwellhaugh, at Linlithgow, in avenging the wrongs inflicted
on his wife, the heiress of Wood-houselee. As the "Cadyow
Ballad" has it ~
" Midpennoned spears astately grove,
Proud Murray's plumage floated high
Scarce could his trampling charger move
So close the minions crow ded nigh.
From the raised vizor's shade, his eye,
Dark rolling, glanced the ranks along;
And his steel truncheon waved on high
Seemed marshalling the iron throng
But yet his saddened brow confessed,
A passing shadc of doubt and awe; .
Some fiend was whispering in his breast,
Beware of injured Bothwellhaugh !
The death-shot parts--the charger springs--
Wild rises tumullt'~ starthng roar !
And Murray's plumy helmet rings--
Rings on the ground to rise no more ! "
When his remains were committed to the tomb in which they still
lie, the thousands who crowded the church were moved to tears
by the burning eloquence of Knox. "Upoun the xnij day of
the moneth of Februar, 1570, says the "Diurnal of Occurrents"
"my lord Regentis corpis, being brocht in ane bote be sey,
fra Stirling to Leith, quhair it was keipit in Johne Wairdlaw
his hous, and there-after cary it to the Palace of Holyrudhous,
wes transportit fra the said Palace to the College Kirk of Sanctgeill,
in this manner; that is to say, William Kirkaldie of Grange, Knycilt,
raid fra the said palace in dule weid, bearing ane pensall quherin
was contenit ane Reid Lyon; after him followit Colvill of Cleishe,
Maister (of the) Hous-hold to the said Regent, with ane quherin
was contenit my lords regentis armes and bage." The Earls
of Mar, Athole, Glencaim, the Lords Ruthven, Methven, and Lindsay,
the Master of Graham, and many other nobles, bore the body through
the church to the grave, where it " was buryit in Sanct Anthonies
yle." On the front of the restored tomb is the an-cient brass
plate, bearing an inscription composed by George Buchanan :
" Iacobo Stovarto, Moraviae Comiti, Scotie Proregi;
Viro AEtatis seye, longe optimo; ab inimicus,
Omnis memoriae determinis, ex insidns extincto,
Cev patri coomvni, patria marens posuit. "
Opposite, on the north side of the west transept, was the tomb
in which the Earl of Athole, Chancellor of Scotland, who died
suddenly at Stirling, not without suspicion of poison, was interred
with great solemnity on the 4th of July, 1579 A cross was used
on this occasion, and as flambeaux were borne, according to Calderwood,
the funeral probably occurred at night; these paraphernalia led
to the usual interference of the General Assembly, and a riot
ensued.
The portion of the church which contained these monuments was
entered by a door adjoining the Parliament Close, and, as it was
never shut, " the gude regent's aisle," as it was named,
became a common place for appointments and loungers Thus French
Paris--Queen Mary's servant--in his confession respecting the
murder of King Henry, stated that during the communings; which
took place before that dark deed was re-solved on, he one day
"took his mantle and sword and went to promenr (walk) in
the high church " Probably in consequence of the veneration
enter-tained for the memory of the Regent, his tomb was a place.
frequently assigned in bills for the payment of money.
The transept, called at times the Assembly aisle, was the scene
of Jenny Geddes' famous onslaught with her faldstule, on the reader
of the liturgy in 1637. The erection of Edinburgh into an epis-copal
see in 1633 ,under Bishop William Forbes (who died the same year),
and the appointment of St. Giles to be the cathedral of the diocese,
led--in its temporary restoration internally--to something like
what it had been of old; but ere the orders of Charles I. for
the demolition of its hideous gal-leries and subdivisions could
be carried out, all Scotland was in arms, and the entire system
of Church polity for which these changes were designed, had come
to a violent and a terrible end. This transept was peculiarly
rich in lettered gravestones, all of which were swept away by
the ruthless im-provers of 1829, and some of those were used as
pavement around the Fountain Well.
In 1596 St. Giles's was the scene of a tumultuous dispute between
James VI. and the leaders of the Church party. The king was sitting
in that part of it which the Reformers named the Tolbooth Kirk,
together with the Octavians, as they were styled, a body of eight
statesmen into whose hands he had committed all his financial
affairs and patronage. The disturbance from which the king felt
himself to be in peril, arose from an address by Balcanqual, a
popular preacher, who called on the Protestant barons and his
other chance auditors to meet the ministers in " the little
kirk," where they, amidst great uproar, came to a resolution
to urge upon James the necessity for changing his policy and dismissing
his present councillors. The progress of the deputation towards
the place where the king was to be found brought with it the noisy
mob who had created the tumult, and when the bold expressions
of the deputation were seconded by the rush of a rude crowd--armed,
of course-into the royal presence, the king became alarmed, and
retired into the Tolbooth, amid shouts of "Fly ! " "
Save yourself ! " " Armour ! Armour ! " When the
deputation returned to the portion of St. Giles's absurdly named
the little kirk, they found another multitude listening to the
harangue of a clergyman named Michael Cranston, on the text of
" Haman and Mordecai." The auditors, on hearing that
the king had retired without any explanation, now rushed forth,
and with shouts of " Bring out the wicked Haman !" endeavoured
to batter down the doors of the Tolbooth, from which James was
glad to make his escape to Holyrood, swearing he would uproot
Edinburgh, and salt its site !
This disturbance, which Tytler details in his History, was one
which had no definite or decided purpose--one of the few in Scottish
annals where there was a frenzied excitement without any distinct
aim. When James succeeded to the crown of England in 1603 he attended
service in St. Giles s, and heard a sermon by the Rev. Mr.Hall,
upon the great mercy of heaven in having thus accomplished his
peaceful accession to a kingdom so long hostile to his own without
stroke of sword or shedding one drop of blood.. He exhorted the
monarch to show his gratitude by attention to the cause of religion,
and his care of the new subjects committed to his care.
The king now rose, and addressed the people from whom he was about
to part in a very warm ;and affectionate strain. He bade them
a long adieu with much tenderness, promised to keep them and their
best interests in fond memory during his absence, " and often
to visit them and -communicate to them marks of his bounty when
in foreign parts, as ample as any which he had been used to bestow
when present with them. ~ mixture of approbation and weeping,"
says Scott in his History, "followed this speech; and the
good-natured king wept plentifully himself at taking leave of
his native subjects."
The north transept of the church long bore the queer name of Haddo's
Hole, because a famous cavalier, Sir John Gordon of Hadd, who
de-fended his castle of Kelly against the Covenanters, and loyally
served King Charles I.--was imprisoned there for some time before
his execution at the adjacent cross in 1644.
On the north side of the choir the monument of the Napier family
forms a conspicuous and interest-ing feature to passers-by. This
tomb--long called by tradition that of the great inventor of logarithms
--is supposed to indicate the site of St. Salvator's altar, to
the chaplain of which Archibald Napier of Merchiston, in 1499,
~ mortified" an annual rent of 20 merks out of a tenement
near the church of the Holy Trinity. The tomb is surmounted by
the arms of the Napiers of Merchiston, and of Wright's House,
and bears the following inscription, showing plainly that it is
a family burial-place:--
" S. E.P. Fam de Neporum interius hic situm est "
The species of spire or lantern formed by groined ribs of stone,
which forms the most remarkable feature in the venerable church,
seems to be pecu-liar to Scotland, as it does not occur in ancient
times farther south than Newcastle; but its date is as recent
as 1648~ when it was rebuilt, and closely modelled on the ancient
one, which had become ruinous and decayed .Of the four bells which
hung in the tower in the olden time, one which bore the name of
St. Mary was taken down at the Reformation, and (with the four
great brazen pillars of the high altar was ordered to be cast
into cannon for the town walls, instead of which they were sold
for £220. Maitland further records that two of the remaining
bells were re-cast at Campvere in 1621; one of these was again
re-cast at London in 1846-
In 1585 the Town Council purchased the clock belonging to the
abbey church of Lindores in Fifeshire, and placed it in the tower
of St. Giles's " previous to which time," says Wilson,
" the citizens probably regulated time chiefly by the bells
for matins and vespers, and the other daily services of the Roman
Catholic Church."
In 1681 we first find mention of the musical bells in the spire.
Fountainhall records, with reference to the legacy left to the
city by Thomas Moodie, the Council propose " to buy with
it a peal of bells, to hang in St. Giles's steeple, to ring musically,
and to build a Tolbooth above the West Port of Edinburgh, and
put Thomas Moodie's name and arms thereon."
When the precincts of St. Giles's church were secularised, the
edifice became degraded, about 1628, by numerous wooden booths
being stuck up all around it, chiefly between the buttresses,
some of which were actually cut away for this ignoble purpose,
while the lower tracery of the windows was destroyed by their
lean-to roofs, just as we may see still in the instance of many
churches in Belgium. These wretched edifices were called the Krames,
yet, as if to show that some reverence was still paid to the sanctity
of the place, the Town Council decreed, " that no tradesman
should be admitted to these shops except bookbinders, mortmakers
(i.e. watchmakers), jewellers, and gold-smiths." "Bookbinders,"
says Robert Chambers, " must be in this instance meant to
signify book-sellers, the latter term being then unknown in Scotland
;" but within the memory of many still living, these booths,
which were swept away in 1829 were occupied by dealers in toys,
sweetstuff, old clothes, and shoes. In the centre of this narrow
alley the Earl of Errol, as Lord High Constable of Scotland ,
used to sit on a chair during the riding of Parliament receiving
the members as they alighted .At the entrance to these krames
there formerly existed a flight of steps, known by the name of
"Our Lady's Steps, from a statue of the Virgin which once
occupied a Gothic niche in the north-east angle of the church.
Another account says they were named from the infamous Lady March,
wife of the Earl of Arran, the profligate chancellor of James
VI., from whom the nine o'clock bell was also named "The
Lady Bell," as it was rung an hour later to suit herself.
An old gentlewoman mentioned in the " Traditions of Edinburgh,"
who died in 1802 was wont to own that she had, in her youth, seen
both the statue and the steps; but it is extremely unlikely that
the former would escape the iconoclasts of 1559, who left the
church almost a ruin.
But time has accomplished a change that John Knox and "Jenny
Geddes" could little foresee !
Sanction was given in the early part of 1878 by the municipal
authorities for extensive restorations, to be conducted in a spirit
and taste unknown to the barbarous " improvers " of
1829. At the head of the restoration committee was placed Dr.
William Chambers, the well-known publisher and author. According
to the plans laid before it, the last of the temporary partitions
were to be removed, the rich-shaped pillars embedded therein to
be uncovered and restored; the-galleries and pews swept away,
when the church will assume its old cruciform aspect. "By
these operations the Montrose aisle will be uncovered, and form
an interesting historical object. Provision is made for the Knights
of the Thistle, if they should desire it, erecting their- stalls,
as is done by the Knights of the Garter in Westminster, and by
the Knights of St. Patrick in St. Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin.
There has been no chapel for the Knights of the Thistle since
the one in Holyrood, now in ruins and ceased to be used; and the
committee hope that the knights will favourably consider the proposal
now being made according to which they may have their stalls erected
in the ancient cathedral of the capital of Scotland.
And--shade of John Knox !--in 1878 an organ was ordered for the
church. "The instrument," says the Scotman, "consists
of two full manuals and a pedal organ of full compass. The great
organ contains eleven stops, and one of sixteen feet in metal.
There are eleven stops in the swell organ, and one of sixteen
feet in wood. The pedal organ contains five stops, including two
of sixteen feet in wood, and one of sixteen feet in metal. In
the great organ there is to be a silver clarionet of eight feet;
a patent pneumatic action is fitted to the keys, and the organ
will be blown by a double cylinder hydraulic engine."
In its most palmy days old St. Giles's could never boast of such
" a kist o' whistles " as this !
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