line 190. Begun has always been a possible past tense in poetry, and living poets continue its use. There is an example in Mr. Browning’s ’Waring’:—
’Give me my so-long
promised son,
Let Waring end
what I begun;
and Lord Tennyson writes:—
’The light of days when life begun!
in the memorial verses prefixed to his brother’s ‘Collected Sonnets’ (1879).
line 205. Robert Lindsay of Pittscottie (a Fife estate, eastward of Cupar) lived in the first half of the sixteenth century, and wrote ‘Chronicles of Scotland’ from James ii to Mary. Nothing further of him is known with certainty. Like the Lion King he was a cadet of the noble family of Lindsay, including Crawford and Lindsay and Lindsay of the Byres.
line 207. See above, iv. xiv.
line 212. John of Fordun (a village in Kincardineshire) about the end of the fourteenth century wrote the first five of the sixteen books of the ‘Scotochronicon,’ the work being completed by Walter Bower, appointed Abbot of St. Colm’s, 1418.
line 220. Gripple, tenacious, narrow. See ‘Waverley,’ chap. lxvii. — -’Naebody wad be sae gripple as to take his gear’; and cp. ’Faerie Queene,’ vi. iv. 6:—
‘On his shield he gripple hold did lay.’
line 225. They hide away their treasures without using them, as the magpie or the jackdaw does with the articles it steals.
Canto sixth.
Stanza I. line 6. Cp. Job xxxix. 25.
line 8. Terouenne, about thirty miles S. E. of Calais.
line 9. Leaguer, the besiegers’ camp. Cp. Longfellow’s ‘Evangeline,’ I. 5,—
‘Like to a gipsy camp, or a leaguer after a battle.’
Stanza ii. lines 27-30. Cp. ‘Faerie Queene,’ iii. iv. 7.:—


