<h3>ELIZABETH HALKETT.</h3>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_198" id="Page_198"></SPAN></span></p>
<p class="heading">[1677.]<br/>
CONOLLY.</p>
<p><ANTIMG src="images/ib.jpg" alt="B" width-obs="69" height-obs="67" class="floatl" />ORN
in 1677, the authoress of the celebrated ballad of "Hardyknute" was
the second daughter of Sir Charles Halkett of Pitferrane. At the age of
nineteen she married Sir Henry Wardlaw of Pitreavie in Fife, to whom she
bore four daughters and a son.</p>
<p>She at first attempted to pass off the ballad of "Hardyknute" as a
genuine fragment of an ancient poem, and caused her brother-in-law, Sir
John Bruce of Kinross, to communicate the manuscript to Lord Binning,
himself a poet, as a copy of a manuscript found in an old vault of
Dunfermline.</p>
<p>The poem of "Hardyknute" was first published in 1719, and it was
afterwards admitted by Ramsay into the "Evergreen," and for many years
was received as an old ballad [a circumstance which has been founded on
by some modern writers as sufficient to invalidate the claims of many of
our "old ballads" to an origin beyond that of the date of Lady Halkett's
successful literary fraud. Nay, several of these have been ascribed to
this lady chiefly upon the internal evidence of identical words; but it
seems to have been overlooked by these inquirers that Lady Halkett would
naturally imitate the old ballads; and no doubt she did; so that the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_199" id="Page_199"></SPAN></span>
supposed proof may be successfully turned against the new theory.] The
real authorship of "Hardyknute" was first disclosed by Bishop Percy in
his "Reliques," published in 1755, and has since been established beyond
a doubt [but there is no evidence beyond what has been mentioned that
she wrote "Sir Patrick Spens," or any other of our so-called old Scotch
ballads].</p>
<div class="figcenter p6">
<ANTIMG src="images/i009.jpg" width-obs="268" height-obs="148" alt="Decoration" /></div>
<div class="figcenter p2">
<ANTIMG src="images/i210.jpg" width-obs="454" height-obs="756" alt="Lady Mary Wortley Montague" />
<p class="caption">Drawn by J. Thurston. Engraved by W. Finden.<br/>
LADY MARY WORTLEY MONTAGUE.<br/>
From an enamel Miniature by Zink in the possession of Charles Colville
Esq<sup>r</sup>.</p>
</div>
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