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i6 FAMOUS SCOTS
manager of Lord Hopetoun's mines, a gay, happy-
hearted, resourceful young Scotsman, by name Robert
Ramsay. The poet, when detailing his pedigree to the
father of his inaiiiorata, had boasted that he was
descended, on the paternal side, from the Ramsays of
Dalhousie (afterwards Earls of that Ilk). Such was
literally the case. Ramsay of Dalhousie had a younger
brother, who, from the estate he held — a small parcel of
the ancestral acres — bore a name, or rather an agnomen^
yet to be historic in song, 'The Laird of Cockpen.'
Whether in this case, like his descendant of ballad fame,
the said laird was ' proud and great ' ; whether his mind
was 'ta'en up wi' things o' the State,' history doth not
record. Only on one point is it explicit, that, like his
successor, he married a wife, from which union resulted
Captain John Ramsay, whose only claim to remembrance
is that he in turn married Janet Douglas, daughter of
Douglas of Muthil, and thus brought the poet into kin-
ship with yet another distinguished Scottish family. To
the captain and his spouse a son was born, who devoted
himself to legal pursuits, was a writer in Edinburgh, and
acted as legal agent for the Earl of Hopetoun. Through
his interest with the earl, Robert Ramsay, his eldest son,
was appointed manager of the lead mines in the Lowther
hills, and set out to assume his new duties towards the
close of the year 1684.
From this pedigree, therefore, the fact is clear of the
poet's right to address William Ramsay, Earl of Dal-
housie, in terms imitated from Horace's famous Ode to
Maecenas —
* Dalhousie, of an auld descent,
My chief, my stoup, my ornament.'

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