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[A composite volume : containing The ballads and songs of Ayrshire ...

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JOHNIE FAA.<br />

supposed <strong>of</strong> old to be practised by w<strong>and</strong>ering gypsies, <strong>and</strong> -which must<br />

have been the only magic used on this occasion. <strong>The</strong> Countess condescended<br />

to elope with her lover. Most unfortunately, () ere they had proceeded<br />

very far, the Earl came home, <strong>and</strong>, learning the fact, immediately<br />

set out in pursuit. Accompanied by a b<strong>and</strong> which put resistance out <strong>of</strong><br />

the question, he overtook them, <strong>and</strong> captured the whole party, at a ford<br />

over the Doon, still called the Gypsies' Steps, a few miles from the<br />

Castle. He brought them back to Cassillis, <strong>and</strong> there hanged all the<br />

gypsies, including the hajDless Sir John, iipon " the Dule Tree," a splendid<br />

<strong>and</strong> most umbrageous plane, which yet flourishes on a mound in front<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Castle Gate, <strong>and</strong> which was his gallows-in-ordinary, as the name<br />

testifies. As for the Countess, whose indiscretion occasioned all this<br />

waste <strong>of</strong> human life, she was taken by her husb<strong>and</strong> to a window in front<br />

<strong>of</strong> the Castle, <strong>and</strong> there, by a refinement <strong>of</strong> cruelty, compelled to survey<br />

the dreadful scene—to see, one after another, fifteen gallant men<br />

put to death, <strong>and</strong> at last to witness the dying agonies <strong>of</strong> him who had<br />

first been dear to her, <strong>and</strong> who had periled all that men esteem in her<br />

behalf. <strong>The</strong> particular room in the stately old house where the unhappy<br />

lady endured this horrible torture, is still called "the Countess's Room."<br />

After undergoing a short confinement in that apartment, the house belonging<br />

to the family at Maybole was fitted for her reception, by the<br />

addition <strong>of</strong> a fine projecting staircase, upon which were carved heads representing<br />

those <strong>of</strong> her lover <strong>and</strong> his b<strong>and</strong> ; <strong>and</strong> she was removed thither<br />

<strong>and</strong> confined for the rest <strong>of</strong> her life—the Earl in the meantime marrying<br />

another wife. One <strong>of</strong> her daughters. Lady Margaret, was afterwards<br />

married to the celebrated Gilbert Burnet. While confined in Maybole<br />

Castle, she is said to have wrought a i^rodigious quantity <strong>of</strong> tapestry, so<br />

as to have completely covered the walls <strong>of</strong> her jDrison ; but no vestige <strong>of</strong><br />

it is now to bs seen, the house having been repaired, {othenvise ruined) a<br />

few years ago, Avhen size-paint had become a more fashionable thing in<br />

Maybole than tapestry. <strong>The</strong> efiigies <strong>of</strong> the gypsies are very minute,<br />

being subservient to the decoration <strong>of</strong> a fine triple window at the top <strong>of</strong><br />

the staircase, <strong>and</strong> stuck upon the tops <strong>and</strong> bottoms <strong>of</strong> a series <strong>of</strong> little<br />

pilasters, which adorn that part <strong>of</strong> the building. <strong>The</strong> head <strong>of</strong> Johnie Faa<br />

himself is distinct from the rest, larger, <strong>and</strong> more lachrymose in the expression<br />

<strong>of</strong> the features. Some windows in the upper part <strong>of</strong> Cassillis<br />

Castle are similarly adorned ; but regarding them tradition is silent."<br />

We do not know what authority Chambers has for identifiying the lady<br />

who played so unenviable a part in the drama. Unless he has positive<br />

evidence to show that she was the Countess <strong>of</strong> John, the sixth Earl <strong>of</strong> Cassillis,<br />

we should be strongly inchned, from a document which we have<br />

seen <strong>and</strong> copied, to doubt the fact. This is a letter <strong>of</strong> the Earl <strong>of</strong> Cassillis,<br />

inviting Lord Eglinton to the funeral <strong>of</strong> his Countess. From the<br />

12

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