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152 THE HERALDRY OF YORK MINSTER.<br />

and when she saw him fall in battle, rushed herself into the heat of the<br />

fight, and was killed after slaying several of the English. The old people<br />

point out her monument, broken and defaced. The inscription is said to<br />

have been legible within this century, and to have run thus :<br />

" Fair maiden Lillyard lies under this stane,<br />

Little was her stature, but great was her fame ;<br />

Upon the English loons she laid many thumps,<br />

And when her legs were cutted off she fought upon her stumps."<br />

That it was a sanguinary battle Scott has indicated in his poem<br />

on the<br />

" Eve of St. John," where he says<br />

:<br />

" He came not from where Ancram Moor<br />

Ran red with English blood ;<br />

Where the Douglas true, and the bold Buccleugh,<br />

'Gainst keen Lord Evers stood."<br />

Four years after, Lord Eure died, and was succeeded by Sir Ralph's<br />

eldest son, William, whose mother was Margaret, daughter of Ralph Bowes,<br />

of Streatlam Castle, Durham. His first marriage, with Mary, daughter of<br />

Lord Darcy, celebrated at Eynsham, Oxon, when he was eleven and she<br />

only four years old, was dissolved thirteen years afterwards, 1554, by decree<br />

at Durham. He seems to have succeeded to the office held by his father<br />

and grandfather, as, 6th Edward VI., he was appointed Warden of the<br />

Middle Marches towards Scotland ; and, 4th and 5th of Philip and Mary,<br />

and ist of Elizabeth, Captain of Berwick-on-Tweed. His second wife was<br />

Margaret, daughter of Sir Edward Dymoke, of Scrivelsby, Champion of<br />

England. He left a sum of money to his son to build a house at Jarrow,<br />

but it seems never to have been carried out.<br />

In 1544 the cell of Jarrow had been granted to William, Lord Eure,<br />

by the Crown, and the property remained in the family until 1627, when<br />

William, Lord Eure, conveyed<br />

it to Henry Gibb, of Falkland, Gentleman<br />

of His Majesty's Chamber.*<br />

Lord Eure's two sons were both distinguished men. The eldest, we are<br />

told, was born at Berwick Castle, 28th Sept., 1558, at eight<br />

o'clock in the<br />

morning, and christened the following Monday in the parish church,<br />

Mr. Christopher Nevill acting deputy for his brother Henry, Earl of Westmoreland,<br />

and Thomas, Earl of Northumberland.! He was made Warden<br />

of the Middle Marches 1586, when 28 years of age;<br />

and Sheriff of Yorkshire<br />

1594; and I conclude that he conducted the difficult duty of maintaining<br />

order on the Borders with satisfaction to Queen Elizabeth of England and<br />

James of Scotland, for the former continued him in that office until her<br />

death, seventeen years after.<br />

* Surtecs' History of Durham, vol. ii.<br />

p. 73. t MS. Lord Harlech.

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