. showing the King landing at Leith, which remains hanging in
Leith Town Hall. The first of Scott's pageants took place on the King's 60th birthday, on Monday 12 August 1822. In procession, the Midlothian Yeomanry and companies of Highlanders escorted coaches carrying the Regalia of Scotland and dignitaries from the Castle to Holyrood Palace. The procession assembled on
The Mound before going up to the Castle, and within minutes of setting off was halted by the arrival on horseback of a flamboyantly dressed
Glengarry who announced that it was his rightful place to ride at the head of the procession. After a pause, a Captain Ewan MacDougall persuaded the hot-tempered Glengarry to go away. Watched by packed crowds, the procession formally received the regalia then returned down to The Mound and went down it to Princes Street and on by Calton Hill to Holyroodhouse. The King's ship the
Royal George arrived in the
Firth of Forth about noon on Wednesday 14 August, but his landing was postponed due to torrential rain. Despite the rain, Sir Walter Scott was rowed out to see the King, who exclaimed, "What! Sir Walter Scott! The man in Scotland I most wish to see!" After a drink of whisky, Scott presented the King with a jewel designed and embroidered by the ladies of Edinburgh, in the form of a silver St Andrews cross embroidered with pearls on blue velvet with a belt of gold a diamond buckle and magnificent Scottish pearl surmounted by the imperial crown picked out in brilliants, rubies, emeralds and topaz. Inscribed on the cross was "
Righ Albainn gu brath" (Long live the King of Scotland). On Thursday 15 August, the King in naval uniform arrived in sunshine at the quayside of
The Shore, Leith and stepped ashore onto a red carpet strewn with flowers to greet the waiting crowds, and the
High Constabulary of the Port of Leith (Leith High Constables). After fifteen minutes of the ritual salutations traditional in a
royal entry he got in his carriage. A quiet pause was rudely interrupted by
Glengarry on horseback galloping up beside the King, sweeping off his bonnet and loudly announcing "Your Majesty is welcome to Scotland!". The King, in good humour, bowed graciously at this unplanned intrusion as his carriage moved off. A procession including lowland regiments and Highland clan regiments with
pipe bands escorted the King's open carriage the 3 miles (5 km) up to Edinburgh past cheering Scots crowding every possible viewpoint eager to show a welcome to their monarch. At a theatrical "medieval" gateway the King was presented with the keys to the city and "the hearts and persons" of its people. Much of the pageantry for the visit would be medieval rather than Highland, but the exotic outfits of the "gathering of the Gael" were to attract most attention. The next day was one that the King spent away from the public at Dalkeith. Edinburgh was full of visitors for the occasion, and that evening they walked round enjoying "illuminations" with illustrated tributes hung on public buildings, businesses and houses, "Everywhere crowded to excess, but in civility and quiet", before being escorted to their rest around midnight by bands of boys carrying flaming torches to light their way. On Saturday afternoon, 17 August, the King attended a short
levee at Holyrood Palace, where the great and good queued to be greeted by George in his Highland outfit complete with pink
pantaloons to conceal his bloated legs, described as "buff coloured trowsers like
flesh to
imitate his
Royal knees". When someone complained that the kilt had been too short for modesty, Lady Hamilton-Dalrymple wittily responded "Since he is to be among us for so short a time, the more we see of him the better." The King would not be seen again by the public until Monday afternoon when a medium-sized crowd caught a brief glimpse of him as he went into Holyroodhouse to hear long repetitive addresses from the
Church of Scotland, the
Scottish Episcopal Church, universities, burghs, counties and
the Highland Society, and give his short formal responses. The ''King's Drawing Room'' on Tuesday 20 August was attended by 457 ladies, and custom required that he kiss each one on the cheek. This brief occasion took him away from Dalkeith House for two hours, and the presentation of the ladies lasted from 2.15 to 3.30. In the rush some ladies received no "buss" on the cheek, or in their nervousness scarcely felt the kiss at all. All were dressed in rich gowns with sweeping trains, and most had coloured ostrich plumes above their elaborately curled hair. The King was courteous and smiling, and paid particular attention to "the lady on whose account so many Highlanders went down to
Elgin two years ago" when election passions led to Lady Anne Margaret Grant, daughter of the late
Sir James Grant, 8th Baronet, and her sisters who had also supported the
Tories, being besieged by a "democratic mob" of
Whig supporting townsfolk until a rescue party of her clansmen was "summoned by the fiery cross" and released them without coming to blows. The story of "The Raid to Elgin" had amused the king, and he remarked "Truly she is an object fit to raise the chivalry of a clan", echoing Scott's romanticism. He spent the next day at Dalkeith, and that evening Scott dined with him. Heavy rain returned on Thursday 22 August as a
Grand Procession went from
Holyrood to
Edinburgh Castle. The procession and the King's closed carriage went up the
Royal Mile flanked by colourful
bunting and densely packed cheering crowds obscured by their umbrellas. At the castle, the king climbed out onto the
battlements of the Half Moon Battery to wave his cocked hat to continuing "huzzas" from the crowd for fifteen minutes, reportedly saying "Good God! What a fine sight. I had no conception there was such a fine scene in the world; and to find it in my own dominions; and the people are as beautiful and as extraordinary as the scene." and "Rain? I feel no rain. Never mind, I must cheer the people." He had not been used to this kind of reception. On Friday, 23 August, a review of 3,000 volunteer
cavalrymen was held on
Portobello sands. The king was also to honour the Clans including a contingent from the Celtic Society of Edinburgh. Though disappointingly his review ended before reaching them, the Highlanders took part in the
Grand March Past then were cheered by the crowds as they marched back to Edinburgh. That evening, George appeared at the Peers'
Grand Ball wearing a
field marshal's uniform as earlier in the day rather than the anticipated kilt. The Peers’ Ball was a formal occasion with court dress worn predominantly, though some gentlemen chose either Highland attire or military uniform. The ladies were mostly in white dresses. The Ball started with the anthem as soon as the King entered the Ballroom, followed by a
reel and then a
country dance. Lady Anne Scott together with her sister Isabel, daughters of the
4th Duke of Buccleuch, "danced the reels famously’’. Another reel was performed at the bottom of the ballroom by a set consisted of two older gentlemen, one of whom was a Highlander, and both "jumped and capered so and made all sorts of such strange antics" which "his Majesty seems to witness with much pleasure." The King arrived about 9:30 pm, entering the Ballroom with something like a candle-lit procession. The King was excited by the
reels and
strathspeys. Once more his wish was met, that while he was in Scotland all music would be "purely national and characteristic". on
Captain Adam Ferguson, Deputy keeper of the
Scottish regalia, and
Henry Raeburn, the selected representative of Scotlands fine arts. He then joined his ship at nearby
South Queensferry and departed. ==Outcome==