“In March, 1786, a contract of marriage in the Scotch form was drawn up and signed by the parties. In the course of the summer of that year, Mr. and Mrs. Byron left Gight, and never returned to it; the estate being, in the following year, sold to Lord Haddo for the sum of 17,850_l._, the whole of which was applied to the payment of Mr. Byron’s debts, with the exception of 1122_l._, which remained as a burden on the estate, (the interest to be applied to paying a jointure of 55_l._ 11_s._ 1_d._ to Mrs. Byron’s grandmother, the principal reverting, at her death, to Mrs. Byron,) and 3000_l._ vested in trustees for Mrs. Byron’s separate use, which was lent to Mr. Carsewell of Ratharllet, in Fifeshire.”
“A strange occurrence,” says another of my informants, “took place previous to the sale of the lands. All the doves left the house of Gight and came to Lord Haddo’s, and so did a number of herons, which had built their nests for many years in a wood on the banks of a large loch, called the Hagberry Pot. When this was told to Lord Haddo, he pertinently replied, ’Let the birds come, and do them no harm, for the land will soon follow;’ which it actually did.”]
[Footnote 11: It appears that she several times changed her residence during her stay at Aberdeen, as there are two other houses pointed out, where she lodged for some time; one situated in Virginia Street, and the other, the house of a Mr. Leslie, I think, in Broad Street.]
[Footnote 12: By her advances of money to Mr. Byron (says an authority I have already cited) on the two occasions when he visited Aberdeen, as well as by the expenses incurred in furnishing the floor occupied by her, after his death, in Broad Street, she got in debt to the amount of 300 l., by paying the interest on which her income was reduced to 135 l. On this, however, she contrived to live without increasing her debt; and on the death of her grandmother, when she received the 122 l. set apart for that lady’s annuity, discharged the whole.]
[Footnote 13: In Long Acre. The present master of this school is Mr. David Grant, the ingenious editor of a collection of “Battles and War Pieces,” and of a work of much utility, entitled “Class Book of Modern Poetry.”]
[Footnote 14: The old porter, too, at the College, “minds weel” the little boy, with the red jacket and nankeen trowsers, whom he has so often turned out of the College court-yard.]
[Footnote 15: “He was,” says one of my informants, “a good hand at marbles, and could drive one farther than most boys. He also excelled at ‘Bases,’ a game which requires considerable swiftness of foot.”]
[Footnote 16: On examining the quarterly lists kept at the grammar-school of Aberdeen, in which the names of the boys are set down according to the station each holds in his class, it appears that in April of the year 1794, the name of Byron, then in the second class, stands twenty-third in a list of thirty-eight boys. In the April of 1798, however, he had risen to be fifth in the fourth class, consisting of twenty-seven boys, and had got ahead of several of his contemporaries, who had previously always stood before him.]