The Laird o Logie

The Laird O Logie or The Laird Of Logie is Child ballad number 182.

Synopsis

Young Logie (or Ochiltrie) is imprisoned, to hang. May Margaret comes to court to plead for his life. She is unable to win a pardon but steals some token or a forged pardon (and sometimes a weapon), sometimes with the queen's aid. With these, she frees Young Logie—the man she loves, or the father of her baby, depending on the variant.

Commentary

This is based on historical events. The king is James VI of Scotland and Young Logie is John Wemyss, the Laird of Logie in North Fife. The offense for which he was imprisoned—unlike the stolen kiss claimed in some variants—was involvement with the Earl of Bothwell in an attempt to kidnap the king. Margaret Winstar was one of the queen's servants and succeeded in rescuing him from a prison in Dalkeith Palace, and they later married.

gollark: ... of what, our conversations with you or just anything about coronavirus?
gollark: ... okay, then...
gollark: "If you didnt do anything wrong, then you shouldnt be worried" only works if you cast "not being happy with things" as "wrong", as well as "being associated with people who did "wrong" things", and expect that people will just never care about politics.
gollark: I agree that that can sometimes be a problem, but it also means people can actually suggest improvements or dislike things without fearing for their lives.
gollark: People might disagree with how you run things and that's really not a good reason to imprison/whatever them.

See also

References


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