Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: ated to the use of the Earl of Breadalbane, and furnished very much like lodgings for a guinea a week in London. " And which was Queen Mary's chamber?" " Ech ! sir ! It's t'ither side. I dinna show that." " And what am I brought here for?" " Ye cam' yoursell!" With this wholesome truth, I paid my shilling again, and was handed over to another woman, who took me into a large hall containing portraits of Eobert Bruce, Baliol, Macbeth, Queen Mary, and some forty other men and women famous in Scotch story ; and nothing is clearer than that one patient person sat to the painter for the whole. After " doing" these, I was led with extreme deliberativeness through a suite of unfurnished rooms, twelve, I think, the only interest of which was their having been tenanted of late by the royal exile of France. As if anybody would give a shilling to see where Charles the Tenth slept and breakfasted ! I thanked Heaven that I stumbled next upon the right person, and was introduced into an ill-lighted room, with one deep window looking upon the court, and a fireplace like that of a country innthe state chamber of the unfortunate Mary. Here was a chair she embroideredthere was a seat of tarnished velvet, where she sat in state with Darnleythe very grate in the chimney that she had sat beforethe mirror in which hdr fairest face had been imagedthe table at which she had workedthe walls on which her eyes had rested in her gay and her melancholy hoursall, save the touch and mould of time, as she lived in it and left it. It was a place for a thousand thoughts. The woman led on. We entered another roomher chamber. A small, low bed, with tattered hangings of red and figured silk, tall, ill-shapen posts, and altogether a paltry look, stood in a room of irregular shape ; and here...