ment as they take this to be upon their property, had it 
                    appeared in a short-lived newspaper, especially when published 
                    by a certain authority or rather command; but it afflicts 
                    us much to see the same usurped title of the forementioned 
                    battle find a way into your last September Magazine, which 
                    bids fair to perpetuate it. 
                    "May it please you therefore, good sir, if you have occasion 
                    hereafter to publish anything concerning said battle, to denominate 
                    it from one of your petitioners, or at least to publish this 
                    our remonstrance against the encroachment upon our right, 
                    and your petitioners, " etc. etc. 
                    (Signed) " FLYING SHOTS. " 
                    Whereupon the editor tells his readers, " to change or 
                    not, just as they have a mind. "  
                     
                    CHAPTER XXII. 
                    LORD GRANGE, PRESTON HOUSE, ETC. 
                    Preston House, etc. —Lord Grange-Other Proprietors—Lord Provost 
                    of Edinburgh—Dr Oswald—Erskine of Grange—Lord Grange—Lord 
                    Lovat—M'Leod of M'Leod, and Lord Grange—Lady Grange carried 
                    off—Held in Captivity till Death—Dr Ramsay—Dr Schaw—Schaw's 
                    Bequest—Hospital Founded—Names, Trades, and Professions of 
                    Inmates—Revisit of Old Scholars—Murray's Bequests—Institution—Matron, 
                    Teachers, Inmates, etc. 
                    THIS fine old ivy-clad ruin stands a little to the east of 
                    the old Market Cross, directly south of Murray's Institution, 
                    and at the extreme east end of the village of Preston. 
                    Preston Tower, as already mentioned, was finally destroyed 
                    by fire in 1663, and abandoned by the Hamiltons as a dwelling-place. 
                    Sir James de Preston or Hamilton was proprietor at that period, 
                    but we do not know that he ever returned to the old village 
                    or approached the desolate Tower. In 1685 we find Sir William, 
                    his son, fighting under Argyll, and he died some years afterwards. 
                    His brother Robert did, or ought to have succeeded him, but 
                    his estates (private, apparently, for as yet he had no claim 
                    to Preston) had been confiscated for his denunciation of the 
                    king and his court, and he had been banished for his covenanting 
                    principles. He returned in 1689, before his brother died, 
                    but still refused to acknowledge king or court, and never 
                    served himself heir to the estate or to the baronetcy. He 
                    died at Bo'ness in 1701. 
                    The old Tower and estate at Preston were shortly afterwards 
                    transferred to a nephew of the late Sir Robert Hamilton, Dr 
                    Oswald, a son of Sir James Os\yald, who was Lord Provost of 
                    Edinburgh at that period. But the transference took place 
                    under an arrangement that the estate should be redeemed if 
                    a covenanted sovereign surmounted the throne. For this new 
                     
                     
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