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    Chapter 21

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    Could valour aught avail or people's love,
    France had not wept Navarre's brave Henry slain;
    If wit or beauty could compassion move,
    The rose of Scotland had not wept in vain.
    Elegy in a Royal Mausoleum. LEWIS.

    At the gate of the court-yard of Lochleven appeared the stately form
    of the Lady Lochleven, a female whose early charms had captivated
    James V., by whom she became mother of the celebrated Regent Murray.
    As she was of noble birth (being a daughter of the house of Mar) and
    of great beauty, her intimacy with James did not prevent her being
    afterwards sought in honourable marriage by many gallants of the time,
    among whom she had preferred Sir William Douglas of Lochleven. But
    well has it been said

    ----"Our pleasant vices
    Are made the whips to scourge us"---

    The station which the Lady of Lochleven now held as the wife of a man
    of high rank and interest, and the mother of a lawful family, did not
    prevent her nourishing a painful sense of degradation, even while she
    was proud of the talents, the power, and the station of her son, now
    prime ruler of the state, but still a pledge of her illicit
    intercourse. "Had James done to her," she said, in her secret heart,
    "the justice he owed her, she had seen in her son, as a source of
    unmixed delight and of unchastened pride, the lawful monarch of
    Scotland, and one of the ablest who ever swayed the sceptre." The
    House of Mar, not inferior in antiquity or grandeur to that of
    Drummond, would then have also boasted a Queen among its daughters,
    and escaped the stain attached to female frailty, even when it has a
    royal lover for its apology. While such feelings preyed on a bosom
    naturally proud and severe, they had a corresponding effect on her
    countenance, where, with the remains of great beauty, were mingled
    traits of inward discontent and peevish melancholy. It perhaps
    contributed to increase this habitual temperament, that the Lady
    Lochleven had adopted uncommonly rigid and severe views of religion,
    imitating in her ideas of reformed faith the very worst errors of the
    Catholics, in limiting the benefit of the gospel to those who profess
    their own speculative tenets.

    In every respect, the unfortunate Queen Mary, now the compulsory

    guest, or rather prisoner, of this sullen lady, was obnoxious to her
    hostess. Lady Lochleven disliked her as the daughter of Mary of
    Guise, the legal possessor of those rights over James's heart and
    hand, of which she conceived herself to have been injuriously
    deprived; and yet more so as the professor of a religion which she
    detested worse than Paganism.

    Such was the dame, who, with stately mien, and sharp yet handsome
    features, shrouded by her black velvet
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