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JAMES'S COURT.
73

children are playing about; in some of the windows there are broken and patched panes of glass, while high above one's head, from the different storeys, are
JAMES'S COURT.
hanging out to dry garments of various sorts and hues, on a curious kind of framework, let down by a pulley and string, till it stands out square from the wall. Some of the houses are coloured with a yellow wash, in others the stones round the windows and at the corners are painted red. The uncoloured stone is a grey darkened by years of smoke. The lower windows are guarded by iron gratings. On the southern, or Lawnmarket side, a block of building juts out, and makes a division in the Court. This projection looks as ancient as any part, and was doubtless there in those old days when the place was inhabited by a select set of gentlemen, "who kept a clerk to record their names and proceedings, had a scavenger of their own, clubbed in many public measures, and had balls and assemblies among themselves."[1] It must have pleasantly recalled to Boswell the chambers

  1. Chamber's Traditions of Edinburgh, p. 68.