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harp gives back mournful sounds instead of the joyous ones he is trying to evoke, by calling to Ellen's mind two other occasions when it behaved similarly. One of these was when it foreboded the death of Ellen's mother; the other when it foreboded the exile of the Douglasses during the minority of James V. For particulars, see the introduction on the historical setting of the poem. Bothwell Castle is on the Clyde, a few miles from Glasgow. 159. =From Tweed to Spey.= The Tweed is in the extreme southern part, the Spey in the northern part, of Scotland. 200. =Lady of the Bleeding Heart.= The minstrel calls Ellen so because a bleeding heart was the heraldic emblem of the Douglas family. 206. =strathspey.= A dance, named from the district of Strath Spey, in the north of Scotland. It resembled the reel, but was slower. 213. =Clan-Alpine's pride.= Clan Alpine was the collective name of the followers of Roderick Dhu, who figures later in the poem as Ellen's rejected suitor and the enemy of the mysterious "Knight of Snowdoun" who has just taken his departure from the island. 216. =Lennox foray.= Lennox is the district south of Menteith, in the Lowlands. It was the scene of innumerable forays and "cattle-drives." 221. =In Holy-Rood a knight he slew.= Holyrood is the royal castle at Edinburgh, where the court usually was held. It was deemed a heinous and desperate offense to commit an act of blood in the royal residence or its immediate neighborhood, since such an act was an indirect violation of the majesty of the king, and a breaking of "the king's peace." It was for this offense that Roderick Dhu was exiled, and compelled to live like an outlaw in his mountain fastness. 227. =Who else dared give.= Notice how skilfully Scott manages to give us the relations of the chief characters of the poem to each other, and to show that Ellen's father, pursued by the hatred of James V, has been given the island shelter in Loch Katrine by Roderick Dhu who is about to make his appearance in the story. 236. =Full soon may dispensation sought.= A papal dispensation was necessary, because Ellen and Roderick Dhu were cousins. See next note. 249. =All that a mother could bestow.= Here again the poet takes the indirect way of making clear his point, namely that the matron introduced in the first canto is the mother of Roderick Dhu. The phrase "an orphan in the wild," is in apposition with the following phrase "her sister's child"
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