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"Dear Sir,
"I am favoured with yours of the thirteenth from Scarborough, and had the honour of one letter from Lord Boyd since his father's execution, and sorry to tell you, it was not wrote in such terms as I could show or make any use of. If you had seen him, I dare say it would have been otherwise. However, I took the liberty of writing with plainness to him, in hopes of drawing from him, what may be shown to his honour and to his own immediate advantage.
"I put him in mind of writing to his cousin, Duke of Hamilton, and Mr. Home; an omission, which, with submission, is unpardonable, as he was apprised of their goodness to his father; and I gave him some hints with relation to himself, by authority of the ministry, which, if he continue in the army, may be improved upon. Those things I think proper to mention to you, as I know your friendship for Boyd, that you may take an opportunity of mentioning them to him, when you are with him, which I hope will be soon. He is appointed deputy Captain-Lieutenant; but that I look upon as a step to higher preferment. I should like to hear from you; direct to (Crawfurdland) Kilmarnock, and I am, dear sir, your most obedient, humble servant.
"GEO. ROSSE."
Leicesterfield, September 8th, 1746.
Notwithstanding these seeming acts of negligence, which may possibly have been explained, Lord Boyd became, in every way, worthy of being the representative of an ancient race. He was an improved resemblance of his amiable, unhappy father. Possessing his father's personal attributes, he added, to the courtesy and kindliness of his father's character, strength of principle, a perfect consistency of conduct, and sincere religious connections, both in the early and latter period of his life. His deportment is said to have combined both the sublime and the graceful; his form, six feet four inches in height, to have been the most elegant; his manners the most polished and popular of his time. In his domestic relations he was exemplary, systematic, yet with the due liberality of a n.o.bleman, in his affairs; sagacious and conscientious as a magistrate; generous to his friends. "He puts me in mind," said one who knew him, "of an ancient hero; and I remember Dr. Johnson was positive that he resembled Homer's character of Jaspedon."[396] "His agreeable look and address," observes that adorer of rank, Boswell, "prevented that restraint, which the idea of his being Lord High Constable of Scotland might otherwise have occasioned."[397]
At the time of his father's execution, Lord Boyd was only twenty years of age. He claimed and obtained the maternal estate, and obtained it in 1751. In 1758 he succeeded Mary, Countess of Errol in her own right, his mother's aunt, as Earl of Errol, and left the army in which he had continued to serve. He retired to Slains Castle, where he pa.s.sed his days in the exercise of those virtues which become a man who is conscious, by rank and fortune, of a deep responsibility, and who regards those rather as trusts, than possessions. He died at Calendar-house, in 1778, universally lamented, and honoured.
The Countess of Kilmarnock survived her husband only one year; and died at Kilmarnock in 1747. Two sons were, however, left, in addition to Lord Boyd, to encounter, for some years, considerable difficulties. Of these, the second, Charles, who was in the insurrection of 1745, escaped to the Isle of Arran, where he lay concealed, in that, the ancient territory of the Boyds, for a year. He amused himself, having found an old chest of medical books, with the study of medicine and surgery, which he afterwards practised with some degree of skill among the poor. He then escaped to France, and married there a French lady; but eventually he found a home at Slains Castle, where he was residing when Dr. Johnson and Boswell visited Scotland. He was a man of considerable accomplishment; but, as Boswell observed, "with a pompousness or formal plenitude in his conversation," or as Dr. Johnson expressively remarked, "with too much elaboration in his talk." "It gave me pleasure," adds Boswell, "to see him, a steady branch of the family, setting forth all its advantages with much zeal."
William Boyd, the fourth son of Lord Kilmarnock, was in the Royal Navy, and on board Commodore Burnet's ship at the time of his father's execution. He was eventually promoted to a company of the 14th foot, in 1761.
Lord Balmerino left no descendants to recall the remembrance of his honest, manly character. His wife, Margaret Chalmers, survived him nearly twenty years, and died at Restalrig, on the 24th of August, 1765, aged fifty-six.
The remains of these two unfortunate n.o.blemen were deposited under the gallery, at the west end of the chapel in the Tower. Beside them repose those of Simon, Lord Lovat. "As they were a.s.sociates in crime, so they were companions in sepulchre," observes a modern writer, "being buried in the same grave."[398] But the more discriminative judge of the human heart will spurn so rash, and undiscerning a remark; and marvel that, in the course of one contest, characters so differing in principle, so unlike in every attribute of the heart, and viewed, even by their enemies, with sentiments so totally opposite, should thus be mingled together in their last home.
FOOTNOTES:
[316] Wood's Peerage.
[317] Who, adds the same authority, carried azure, a fess cheque, argent and gules: and for their crest, a hand issuing out of a wreath, pointing with the thumb and two fingers: motto, _confido_; supporters, two squirrels collared or.
[318] Reay, 203.
[319] Reay, 203.
[320] Wood's Peerage. The defect of the t.i.tle is the failure of issue male. The t.i.tle of Livingstone was considered by the same authority as untouched.
[321] Ibid.
[322] Lockhart Papers, i. 138. Note. Calendar.
[323] Memoirs of Lord Kilmarnock. London, 1746, p. 19.
[324] Memoirs of the Earl of Kilmarnock, p. 20.
[325] MS. Letter presented to me by Mrs. Howison Craufurd, of Craufurdland Castle, Ayrshire.
[326] Memoirs of Lord Kilmarnock, p. 21.
[327] Horace Walpole's Letters, ii. p. 113.
[328] Foster's Account, p. 11.
[329] Grose, 214.
[330] Memoirs of Lord Kilmarnock, p. 23.
[331] Life of Colonel Gardiner, by Dr. Doddridge, _pa.s.sim_.
[332] Doddridge. Life of Colonel Gardiner, p. 155.
[333] Henderson, p. 130.
[334] State Trials of George II.
[335] Maxwell, p. 60.
[336] Forbes's Account, p. 20.
[337] Maxwell, p. 50. This n.o.bleman was at the battle of Culloden.
[338] Henderson, p. 332.
[339] Henderson, p. 130.
[340] Note in Chambers, p. 89.
[341] History of the Rebellion, from the Scots' Magazine, p. 198.
[342] Chambers, p. 89. Henderson, p. 334.
[343] Observations on the Account of the Behaviour of Lords Kilmarnock and Balmerino, 1746.
[344] Ibid.
[345] Nesbitt, Heraldry, vol. i. p. 154.
[346] "Elphingstone, in the shire of Hadington, and in the parish of Tranent, a village at the distance of three miles S.S.W. from Tranent."--Edinburgh Gazetteer.
[347] Nesbitt, p. 154.
[348] Memoirs of Lord Balmerino. London, 1764.
[349] Wood's Peerage.
[350] Life of Lord Balmerino, p. 51. Buchan's Account of the Earls of Keith, p. 149.
[351] Scots' Magazine for 1746.
[352] Scots' Magazine for 1746.