Tuesday, August 13
At six I left sweet Osborne with Leopold and
Beatrice, Marie Leiningen, and the Duchess of Roxburghe, Flora
Macdonald, [The Hon. Flora Macdonald, Maid of Honour, now Bedchamber
Woman.] Colonels Ponsonby and De Ros, Mr. Collins, and Fraulein
Bauer. It was very. warm. The yachts, which were out, had a very
pretty effect. At Gosport, where we had to wait about ten minutes
before landing, as we arrived too soon, I took leave of dear Marie
Leiningen, who was to return to Germany next day. We had our own
usual large travelling railway carriages, which are indeed charming.
It was a splendid night. Sir W. Jenner joined us
at Basingstoke, and at Banbury at half-past ten we stopped for
refreshments, and lay down before twelve.
Wednesday, August 14
I had a good deal 01 rest, and was up and dressed by
eight, or a little past. But we had already passed Melrose, and
there was so much fog, and the air so thick, that we could see very
little. The last station (not in a village or town)
was Fountainhall. where old Mr. Lawson, the former Lord Provost
of Edinburgh and famous seedsman, came up to the carriage, and some
little girls presented Baby (as Beatrice is always called by us
still) with a nosegay. We passed Portobello, and a few minutes more
brought us to the very station—the private one,
outside Edinburgh—which for eleven years my beloved Albert and I had
always arrived at, and where we left it together eleven years ago.
There it was, all unaltered, and yet all so altered!
The General, Sir J. Douglas, the Lord Provost, and
other official people received us there, and we got into our
carriage. The two children and the Duchess of Roxburghe went in the
carriage with me.
It was a dull, gloomy, heavy morning, but a great
many people were out, and all most enthusiastic, reminding me
forcibly and sadly of former days. We had an escort of the Scots
Greys. We drove up to the door of the old, gloomy, but historical
Palace of Holy rood, where a guard of honour with a band of the 93rd
Highlanders were stationed in the quadrangle of the court. We got
out. walked up the usual stairs, and passed through two of the large
gloomy rooms we used to occupy, and then went past some passages up
another and very steep staircase to the so-called “Argyll
rooms,’' which have been arranged for, me, with very pretty light
paper, chintz, and carpets (chosen by Louise). There is a suite,
beginning with a diningroom (the least cheerful) at the farthest
end, and then my sitting-room, a large and most cheerful room, the
nicest of all, with very light paper) next to. this the bedroom,
almost too large a room, and out of this the dressing-room All open
one out of the other, and have, except the dining-room, the same
pretty carpets and chintzes (red geraniums on a white ground).
The page's room and a wardrobe and dresser's room are
just opposite, across a small passage.
We three took breakfast directly in the dining-room.
Our rooms are above the old rooms, and have the same look-out.
It cleared up, and though still thick and hazy, the
sun shone out brightly, and at a quarter to twelve I went out into
the garden, going through our old rooms, which looked sadly deserted
: all open and some few things removed from them; the gloomy bedroom
with its faded tapestry and green silk bed, and the wretched little
dark box-room in which I undressed at night, all full of many
recollections. I went through the long picture gallery, down the
small steps into the garden, where I met Beatrice, who walked with
me. We walked about the garden, which is improved, but terribly
overlooked, and quite exposed to public view on the side looking
towards the street. We walked about the fine old chapel with its
beautiful window and its tombstones, and then went in—Beatrice and I
with Brown (who was much interested by all)—conducted by the keeper,
an intelligent sensible man called Anderson, and visited the rooms
of Queen Mary, beginning with the Hamilton apartments (which were
Lord Darnley’s rooms) and going up the old staircase to Queen Mary’s
chamber. In Lord Darnley’s rooms there are some fine old tapestry
and interesting portraits of the Royal family, and of the Dukes and
Duchesses of Hamilton. There are some other curious old pictures in
this room.
We saw the small secret staircase which led up in the
turret to Queen Mary’s bedroom, and we went up another dark old
winding staircase at the top of which poor Rizzio was so horribly
murdered—whose blood is still supposed to stain the floor. We
entered the Presence Chamber, the ceiling of which, in panels, is
from the time of Queen Mary, and contains her mother’s and her own
initials and arms as Dauphine of France and Queen of Scotland, with
Darnley’s initials. Here is the bed provided for Charles I. when he
came to Holyrood to be crowned King of Scotland. Thence we were
shown into poor Queen Mary’s bedroom, where are the faded old bed
she used, the baby-basket sent her by Queen Elizabeth when King
James I. was born, and her work-box. All hung with old tapestry, and
the two little turret rooms ; the one where she was supping when
poor Rizzio was murdered, the other her dressing-room. Bits of the
old tapestry which covered the walls at the time are hung up in
frames in the rooms. Beatrice is immensely interested by all she
sees, and delighted with everything.
At half-past five drove off in the open randau and
four with Beatrice, Leopold, and the Duchess of Roxburghe, the two
equerries riding. We drove up through the Canongate, that, curious
old street with its very high-storied houses, past Knox’s House and
quaint old buildings, with the lowest, poorest people about, down Jlank
Street, and eastward along Princes Street, that splendid street with
its beautiful shops, hotels, etc., on one side, and its fine
monuments on the other, the gardens and institutions and other parts
of the town rising above it and crowned by the
picturesque Castle; then by Saint Andrew Street, across Saint Andrew
Square (where Lord Melville’s statue is), along George Street, a
fine wide street, at the end of which is Charlotte Square, where my
dear one’s Monument is to be placed, and where I was to have stopped
to look at the site. But the crowd, which was very great everywhere
and would run with us (facilitated by the great steepness and
slipperiness of the streets), as well as the great number of cabs
and vehicles of all kinds which would drive along after us
everywhere, made this impossible. We turned to the left with some
difficulty —one or two carriages coming in contact with ours— and
went on by Hope Street, Queen’s Ferry Street, where we took a wrong
turn, and went by Clarendon Crescent and Forres Street till we got
to the Water of Leith, where we found we could not go on.
We had to turn, with considerable difficulty, owing
to the narrowness of the road, and go hack again by Moray Piece,
Heriot Row, and thence down by Flit Street on to Inverleith
Row (outside the town), past theBotanic Garden, then along
the Queen's Ferry Road, Pilrig Street, and Leith Walk (which I
remembered from our having taken the same drive in 1861), then along
a broad street, under the Colton and Regent Terrace, past Holyrood, into
the beautiful Queen's Drive, right round Arthur's Scat with its fine
grass, its rocks and small lochs. Unfortunately, however, no clear
distant view could be obtained on account of the fog. Home to Holyrood at
half-past seven. It was a fatiguing drive.
The crowds were very great, but the people behaved
remarkably well; only they kept cheering and shouting and running
with us, for the postilions drove very slowly whenever there was the
slightest descent, and there were many in the town, and one long one
coming down home from the Queen's Drive. A good many flags were out,
hut there were hardly any decorations. The equerries kept extremely
wrell close up to the carriage, which was no easy task.
Thursday, August 15
Again a very foggy morning. Breakfasted at halfpast
nine. Beatrice and Leopold started to go and see Roslin
Chapel. Walked a little in the garden at half-past ten, and then sat
for half an hour under the only tree which afforded shade and was
not overlooked by the street, a thorn, with very overhanging long
branches, on a small grassy mound or “hillock.” Here I read out of a
volume of Poems by the “Ettrick Shepherd,” full of beautiful things
(which Brown had given me some years ago), and wrote till half-past
twelve.
At half-past five I started as yesterday with
Beatrice, Leopold, and the Duchess of Roxburghe, the two equerries
riding, and took a very long—rather too long—drive. It would have
been quite beautiful and most enjoyable from the very fine scenery
with rich vegetation, fine trees, and hills, and dales, with the Pentlands in
the distance, had it not been for a dark, heavy, leaden fog and sky
like November, but warmer, which obscured all the distance in the
most provoking way, and at one time even came down in a rather heavy
show er. We went out by the Queen’s Drive, going to the right as we
left Holyrood. Numbers of people surrounded the entrance, and, as
there is a long ascent part of the way, some of them, especially
boys, ran along with us. We proceeded by the Liberton Road, on past
the villages of Straiton, Zasswade (very picturesque, and which I
well remember from 1842), and Bonnyrigg, to Dalhousie Castle, where
we had visited the late Marquis and Marchioness from Dalkeith in
1842 (the Duchess of Buccleuch drove me over), an old Scotch castle
in red stone, where, however, we did not get out. It had been
raining, but we did not shut the carriage, and just as we had
thought of doing so the rain ceased. From here we drove under a very
fine viaduct along the South Esh, past Newbattle (not into the
grounds)—where there is an arch which was built for George IV. to
drive through, but he never went there—on through the small town of
Dalkeith, where many people, as indeed in almost every other place,
had collected, into the Park of Dalkeith. Here, as well as
everywhere in the neighbourhood, there are beautiful trees,
especially some very fine sycamores. We drove up to the house, and
got out, as I wished the children to see the rooms where we had
lived. The staircase and the gallery where I held the Drawing-room I
remembered well, as also the dining-room. Our former rooms were
shown us ; but though the bed and even the washing-basin still
exist, the rooms which had been arranged for us are altered.
We visited it last in September 1859. The population
of Dalkeith and of all the villages about here are colliers and
miners, and are very poor. We came home straight, coming into the
same road as we started by, and going down the hill of the Queen’s
Drive. We collected again a goodly and most good-humoured crowd, and
saw the little boys and girls rolling down the steep hill, and
people pouring in from the town to get a sight of us.
Friday, August 16
A thoroughly wet day. At half-past eleven I walked
out with Flora Macdonald (whose name attracted great attention
in Edinburgh), right across the court to the stables, which are very
good, and saw all belonging to them—harness-room, coach-house, etc.
Then I looked into the guard-room next door, where the guard, who
were called out and drawn up thinking I was coming by, did not know
us. I went in behind them, and I found a sergeant (I think) of the
93rd in full dress, with four medals, and I asked him his years’
service, which were twenty, and where he came from—“Perthshire.” Two
other men, who were cooking and had their coats off, were in the
room where they also slept. The newspapers have reported an absurd
conversation of mine with them, but none took place. We then walked
back through the house into the garden, and finally came home
through the chapel at half-past twelve.
It was raining hard, but nevertheless we started at
half-past four in the open landau, Beatrice and the two ladies with
me, the two equerries riding. We drove by way of Princes Street,
which overlooks the Mound with its gardens and fine buildings, and s
always so animated and full of people on foot and in carriages ;
crossed the Dean Bridge, which commands a most beautiful view,
though then it was obscured by the pelting rain; passed Stewards
Asylum, a fine new building, getting from the road a good view of
another fine institution, Hettes College, built only within the last
few years; and so on to the edge of Barntm Park, where we turned
back to Granton. By this time it had begun to blow' most violently,
in addition to the rain, and the umbrellas dripped and the carriage
became soaked. Our road lay close to the sea, past Granton
Pier where we had landed in 1842; Trinity came next, a place with
some good houses, and then Newhav&n—where we sawr many fishwives who
were very enthusiastic, but not in their smartest dress—and then Leith, where
there were numbers of people looking out for us in spite of the
dreadful rain ; but indeed everywhere the poor people came out and
were most loyal. We took a wrong turn here, and had to come back
again to go to the Albert Docks—new and very splendid large docks,
with the ships all decked out. We stopped a moment to speak to the
Provost ot Leith, who said the people were very grateful for my
coming; and I have since had repeated expressions of thanks, saying
the good people felt my coming out in the rain more than anything.
We drove on along the shore, with a distant view of the Island of
Inchkeith, by Leith Links, the London Road, the Cavalry Barracks,
St. Margaret's Station and Queen’s Park, home. We got home by ten
minutes past seven. We were all more or less wet, and had to change
our things. The waterproofs seemed not to have done their work.
After dinner, at twenty minutes past eleven, we left Holyrood; a
gardener presented me with a bouquet, and said it was “the proudest
day in his life.” It did not rain, so we had the carriage open. The
two children and the Duchess of Roxburghe were in our carriage, and
we had an escort. Numbers of people were out. The whole way was
splendidly lit up by red, blue, and yellow lights from Salisbury
Crags and Arthur's Seat, and the effect was most dazzling and
beautiful. There were besides some torches near the station, which
was the same we arrived at. The Provost hoped I “was leaving well,”
and I thanked him for the very kind reception which I had met with,
and for the beautiful illuminations.
Saturday, August 17
Did not sleep much or well— it was so very hot, and I
was too much excited, and then we had to be roused up and to dress
hurriedly before seven, by which time we were at Ballater. There
were many people out, and so there were at Balmoral, where we
arrived at a quarter to eight. The heather beautiful, but not
completely out yet. The air sweet and soft.
Beloved Mama’s birthday! That dear, dear mother! so
loving and tender, so full of kindness! How often I long for that
love! She frequently spent this day at Abergeldie, but we were not
here then. |