this duty by Mr. Thomas Thomson, Mr. Napier, and
several other literary friends, I was led to begin
it, and Lord Meadowbank having presented my petition
to the Dean and Faculty of Advocates, they were
so liberal as to permit me to have the use of the
MSS. in succession at Fountainhall, where I then was
on a visit to my Father, and where I transcribed
everything fit for my purpose. Emboldened by
the remembrance of what passed in conversation with
you at Mr. Pringle’s, I took the liberty of trespassing
on you in a letter dated 18th February 1815, to
beg you would inform me whether you knew of the
existence of any of Lord Fountainhall’s MSS.
besides the eight Folio volumes I had then examined.
You did me the honor to write me an immediate reply,
in which you stated that you knew of no other MSS.
but those I had mentioned, and you conclude by saying,
that you were glad to hear that I was busying myself
in a task which would throw much light on the history
of Scotland. In May 1816, whilst engaged here
in arranging and retranscribing the materials I had
collected for the work in the order of a Journal,
I met with a little difficulty about the word FORRES,
which the sense of the passage led me to read FORREST,
meaning ETTRICK FORREST. Knowing that you were the
best source from which true information on such
subjects was to be drawn, and presuming upon your
former kindness, I again addressed you, 23rd May 1816,
begging to know whether I was right in my conjecture.
To this I received a very polite answer in course
of post, in which you express great pleasure in complying
with my request, and are so obliging as to conclude
with the assurance that at any time you will be
happy to elucidate my researches into my ancestors’
curious and most valuable Manuscripts with such hints
as your local knowledge may supply.
’Since the period to which I have just alluded, I have continued to prosecute the work, but only at intervals, having met with frequent interruptions, among which I may mention an excursion to Italy; and after having finished about two-thirds of it in my own handwriting, it is only now that I have been able to complete it, by the aid of an amanuensis. I do not much wonder that, employed as you are in administering fresh draughts of enjoyment from the exhaustless spring of your genius to the ever-increasing thirst of a delighted public, you should have forgotten my humble labours. But whilst I regret that they should have been so forgotten, inasmuch as they might have contributed to aid or lessen yours, I beg to assure you, that every other feeling is absorbed in that of the satisfaction I am now impressed with in learning that you have taken Lord Fountainhall under your fostering care, as I am well aware that, independent of the honor done him and his family by his name being coupled with that of Sir Walter Scott, there does not now, and perhaps there never will, exist any individual who could elucidate him so happily as your high