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    Chapter 27

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    Why, now I have Dame Fortune by the Forelock,
    And if she escapes my grasp, the fault is mine;
    He that hath buffeted with stern adversity
    Best knows the shape his course to favouring breezes.

    Old Play.

    OUR travellers reach Edinburgh without any farther adventure, and the
    Master of Ravenswood, as had been previously settled, took up his abode
    with his noble friend.

    In the mean time, the political crisis which had been expected took
    place, and the Tory party obtained in the Scottish, as in the English,
    councils of Queen Anne a short-lived ascendency, of which it is not our
    business to trace either the cause or consequences. Suffice it to say,
    that it affected the different political parties according to the nature
    of their principles. In England, many of the High Church party, with
    Harley, afterwards Earl of Oxford, at their head, affected to separate
    their principles from those of the Jacobites, and, on that account,
    obtained the denomination of Whimsicals. The Scottish High Church party,
    on the contrary, or, as they termed themselves, the Cavaliers, were more
    consistent, if not so prudent, in their politics, and viewed all the
    changes now made as preparatory to calling to the throne, upon the
    queen's demise, her brother the Chevalier de St. George. Those who had
    suffered in his service now entertained the most unreasonable hopes,
    not only of indemnification, but of vengeance upon their political
    adversaries; while families attached to the Whig interest saw nothing
    before them but a renewal of the hardships they had undergone during the
    reigns of Charles the Second and his brother, and a retaliation of the
    confiscation which had been inflicted upon the Jacobites during that of
    King William.

    But the most alarmed at the change of system was that prudential set of
    persons, some of whom are found in all governments, but who abound in a
    provincial administration like that of Scotland during the period,
    and who are what Cromwell called waiters upon Providence, or, in other
    words, uniform adherents to the party who are uppermost. Many of these
    hastened to read their recantation to the Marquis of A----; and, as
    it was easily seen that he took a deep interest in the affairs of

    his kinsman, the Master of Ravenswood, they were the first to suggest
    measures for retrieving at least a part of his property, and for
    restoring him in blood against his father's attainder.

    Old Lord Turntippet professed to be one of the most anxious for the
    success of these measures; for "it grieved him to the very saul," he
    said, "to see so brave a young gentleman, of sic auld and undoubted
    nobility, and, what was mair than a' that, a bluid relation of the
    Marquis of A----, the man whom," he
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