Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Notes on Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations and Conventions
- Introduction: Adding Age and Generation as a Category of Historical Analysis
- Part I Experiences of Childhood and Youth
- Part II Representations of the Young
- Part III Constructing the Next Generation
- Envoi In Their Own Words: A Mother to Her Son
- Guide to Further Reading
- Index
- St Andrew Studies in Scottish History
12 - Elizabeth Melville, Lady Culross: Two Letters to Her Son James
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 May 2021
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Notes on Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Abbreviations and Conventions
- Introduction: Adding Age and Generation as a Category of Historical Analysis
- Part I Experiences of Childhood and Youth
- Part II Representations of the Young
- Part III Constructing the Next Generation
- Envoi In Their Own Words: A Mother to Her Son
- Guide to Further Reading
- Index
- St Andrew Studies in Scottish History
Summary
Introduction
While eight of the poet Elizabeth Melville's nine letters to her young clerical protégé John Livingstone have been in print since 1845, the present note contains the first edition of her two holograph letters to her son James Colville. These letters are almost our only direct source of information about Melville's relations with any of her offspring. We have no proof of the exact date of Melville's own birth c.1578, or that of her marriage to John Colville c.1596. Neither do we know the birth dates of any of her children. We do, however, know that her eldest son was Dr Alexander Colville (c.1595–1666), who graduated M.A. from Edinburgh on 22 July 1615. We also know that the youngest son was Samuel (M.A. St Andrews, July 1634). Melville's other sons were James (fl. 1625–41), Robert and John (both fl. 1629), and they had at least two sisters: one unnamed, who died before August 1625 but is mentioned in both letters to James, and Christian (fl. 1634–46).
Elizabeth Melville spent her own childhood at the long-vanished Halhill Tower, near Colessie in north Fife, with her sister Margaret and her brothers James and Robert. Their mother was Christian Boswell (d. 1609) of the family of Balmuto, an estate near Burntisland, and their father, Sir James Melville of Halhill (1535–617), was a busy courtier and diplomat. His famous Memoirs, written in old age, are exclusively concerned with public matters, ‘to serve for an exempler of lyf and better behavour … concerning the service of princes and medling in ther affaires’. However, his genuine care for his children's upbringing is clear from the opening words of the Memoirs’ prefatory letter to his son:
sen thou hes schauen thy self sa willing to satisfie my expectation of thee, in following and obseruing many of my formar preceptis during thy yong yeares, I grant now vnto thee thy requestis the mair glaidly, quhilk is to put in wret for thy better memorie sindrie thingis that thou had hard me rehers betymes, baith concernyng maneris, with some meit preceptis for thy barnely age; and also how to temper the rage of furious youth be the reull of godlynes and raisoun; quhilk twa tretises haue serued also vnto the rest of thy brether and sisters.
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- Children and Youth in Premodern Scotland , pp. 205 - 220Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2015