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Edith, the maid of Lorn (Argyllshire), was on the point of being married to lord Ronald, when Robert, Edward, and Isabel Bruce sought shelter at the castle. Ediths brother recognized Robert Bruce, and, being in the English interest, a quarrel ensued. The abbot refused to marry the bridal pair amidst such discord. Edith fled, and in the character of a page had many adventures; but at the restoration of peace after the battle of Bannockburn, she was duly married to lord Ronald.Sir W. Scott: Lord of the Isles (1815). Edith (The lady), mother of Athelstane the Unready (thane of Coningsburgh).Sir W. Scott: Ivanhoe (time, Richard I.). Edith Granger, daughter of the hon. Mrs. Skewton, married at the age of 18 to colonel Granger of Ours, who died within two years, when Edith and her mother lived as adventuresses. Edith became Mr. Dombeys second wife; but the marriage was altogether an unhappy one, and she eloped with Mr. Carker to Dijon, where she left him, having taken this foolish step merely to annoy her husband for the slights to which he had subjected her. On leaving Carker, Edith went to live with her cousin Feenix, in the south of England.Dickens: Dombey and Son (1846). Edith Plantagenet (The lady), called The Fair Maid of Anjou, a kinswoman of Richard I., and attendant on queen Be rengaria. She married David earl of Huntingdon (prince royal of Scotland), and is introduced by sir W. Scott in The Talisman (1825). Edmund, natural son of the earl of Gloucester. Both Goneril and Regan (daughters of king Lear) were in love with him. Regan, on the death of her husband, designed to marry Edmund, but Goneril, out of jealousy, poisoned her sister Regan.Shakespeare: King Lear (1605). Edonian Band (The), the priestess es and other ministers of Bacchus; so called from Edonus, a mountain of Thrace, where the rites of the wine-god were celebrated. Nor heed the scoffings of th Edonian band. Akenside: Hymn to the Naiads (1767). Edric, a domestic at Herewards barracks.Sir W. Scott: Count Robert of Paris (time, Rufus). |
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