Page:Marmion - Walter Scott (ed. Bayne, 1889).pdf/259

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NOTES: CANTO II.
229

was as places for performing penances, or undergoing punishment.'—Scott.

Stanza XVIII, l. 350. 'Antique chandelier.'—Scott.

Stanza XIX. l. 971. 'That there was an ancient priory at Tynemouth is certain. Its ruins are situated on a high rocky point; and, doubtless, many a vow was made to the shrine by the distressed mariners, who drove towards the iron-bound coast of Northumberland in stormy weather. It was anciently a nunnery; for Virca, abbess of Tynemouth, presented St. Cuthbert (yet alive) with a rare winding-sheet, in emulation of a holy lady called Tuda, who had sent him a coffin: but, as in the case of Whitby, and of Holy Island, the introduction of nuns at Tynemouth, in the reign of Henry VIII, is an anachronism. The nunnery of Holy Island is altogether fictitious. Indeed, St. Cuthbert was unlikely to permit such an establishment; for, notwithstanding his accepting the mortuary gifts above mentioned, and his carrying on a visiting acquaintance with the abbess of Coldingham, he certainly hated the whole female sex; and, in revenge of a slippery trick played to him by an Irish princess, he, after death, inflicted severe penances on such as presumed to approach within a certain distance of his shrine.'—Scott.

l. 376. ruth (A.S. hreów, pity) in Early and Middle English was used both for 'disaster' and 'pity.' These two shades of meaning are illustrated by Spenser in F. Q., Bk. ii. I. Introd. to Canto where Falsehood beguiles the Red Cross Knight, and 'workes him woefull ruth,' and in F. Q. I. v. 9:

'Great ruth in all the gazers hearts did grow.'

Milton (Lycidas, 163) favours the poetical employment of the word, which modern poets continue to use. Cp. Wordsworth, 'Ode for a General Thanksgiving':—

'Assaulting without ruth
The citadels of truth;'

and Tennyson's 'Geraint and Enid,' II. 102:—

'Ruth began to work
Against his anger in him, while he watch'd
The being he lov'd best in all the world.'

Stanza XI. l. 385. doublet, a close-fitting jacket, introduced from France in the fourteenth century, and fashionable in all ranks till the time of Charles II. Cp. As You Like It, ii. 4. 6: 'Doublet and hose ought to show itself courageous to petticoat.'

l. 398. Fontevrand, on the Loire, 8 miles from Saumur, had one