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A COMPLETE GUIDE TO HERALDRY

the boars' heads are turned the other way, perhaps in imitation of those above the very ancient effigy of the first Sir Alan inside the church.

Sir Alexander's son, John Swinton, "Laird Swinton" Carlyle calls him, wrecked the family fortunes. According to Bishop Burnet he was "the man of all Scotland most trusted and employed by Cromwell," and he died a Quaker, excommunicated and forfeited. To the circumstance that when, in 1672, the order went out that all arms were to be officially recorded, he was a broken man under sentence that his arms should be "laceret and delete out of the Heralds' Books," we probably owe it that until of late years no Swinton arms appeared on the Lyon Register.

Fig. 739.—Bookplate of Sir John Swinton of that Ilk, 1707.
Fig. 739.—Bookplate of Sir John Swinton of that Ilk, 1707.

Fig. 739.—Bookplate of Sir John Swinton of that Ilk, 1707.

Fig. 740.—Bookplate of Archibald Swinton of Kimmerghame.
Fig. 740.—Bookplate of Archibald Swinton of Kimmerghame.

Fig. 740.—Bookplate of Archibald Swinton of Kimmerghame.

Then to come to less stirring times, and turn to book-plates. His son, yet another Sir John of that Ilk, in whose favour the forfeiture was rescinded, sat for Berwickshire in the last Parliament of Scotland and the first of Great Britain. His bookplate (Fig. 739) is one of the earliest Scottish dated plates.

His grandson, Captain Archibald Swinton of Kimmerghame, county Berwick (Fig. 740), was an ardent book collector up to his death in 1804, and Archibald's great-grandson, Captain George C. Swinton (Fig. 741), walked as March Pursuivant in the procession in Westminster Abbey at the coronation of King Edward the Seventh of