[236] Culloden Papers, pp. 211, 372.
[237] Anderson, p. 150.
[238] Culloden Papers, p. 230.
[239] Chambers"s Traditions of Edinburgh, p. 9.
[240] Explained in the trial, by Chevis, one of the witnesses, to be in allusion to the royal arms.
[241] Quarterly Review, vol. xiv. p. 327.
[242] Edinburgh Review, 1816, vol. xxvi. p. 131.
[243] State Trials, vol. xviii.
[244] Maxwell of Kirkconnel, p. 167.
[245] Id.
[246] Lord Elcho"s MSS.
[247] Quarterly Review, vol. xiv. p. 328.
[248] Arbuthnot, p. 270.
[249] State Trials, vol. xviii. p. 734.
[250] Arbuthnot, p. 279.
[251] Chambers"s Biography. Art. _Fraser_.
[252] State Trials.
[253] Anderson, p. 153.
[254] Laing"s History of Scotland, p. 299.
[255] State Trials, vol. xviii. p. 846.
[256] Chambers"s Traditions of Edinburgh, p. 12.
[257] Gentleman"s Magazine, vol. xvii. p. 184. These letters were afterwards collected and sold for a guinea.
[258] In allusion to the expression of agony and dismay used some time before by Lord Kilmarnock.
[259] Somerville"s Reign of Queen Anne, p. 175, 4to edition; from Lockhart and Macpherson.
[260] State Trials.
[261] Edinburgh Review, vol. xxvi. p 132.
[262] Horace Walpole.
[263] State Trials, vol. xviii. p. 326.
[264] Free Examination of the Life of Lord Lovat; London 1746.
[265] Mrs. Grant"s MS.
[266] Anderson, p. 187.
END OF THE SECOND VOLUME.