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CASSELL'S ILLUSTRATED HISTORY OF ENGLAND.
[George II.

STIRLING CASTLE.

Highland mottoes. In the highest spirits the clans marched on through Musselburgh, and over the heights at Carberry, where Mary of Scots made her last unfortunate fight, nor did they stop till they came in sight of the English army.

Cope had landed his force at Dunbar on the very day that the prince entered Edinburgh. His disembarkation was not completed till the 18th. Lord Loudon had joined him at Inverness with two hundred men, and now he met the runaway dragoons, six hundred in number, so that his whole force amounted to two thousand two hundred men—some few hundred less than the Highlanders. At Dunbar a few volunteers came in, but without followers. The earl of Home, whose ancestor had gone out to meet Charles I. at the head of six hundred well-mounted men, made his appearance in Cope's array with two followers—a proof of the decline of the feudal influence in the Lowlands, and also of the decline of the Jacobite influence too.

The dragoons tended more to weaken Cope than to

PINKIE HOUSE.