[2] An eighteenth-century author Lachlan Shaw stated that King James the Sixth and his Queen consort, Anne of Denmark, attended the marriage.
[4] They wore Venetian carnival masks and helmets with red and pink taffeta costumes, made by the Edinburgh tailor Alexander Miller.
Taylor the Water-Poet visited Lady Lilias and her husband at Ballachastell in 1618 and was much pleased with her, and he records that she was, both inwardly and outwardly, plentifully endowed with the gifts of grace and nature.
[3][2] Lady Lilias was a reader, and had, for these days, a good if not very varied collection of books, is proved by two lists of her own library given under her own hand.
[3][2] The two poems, a lyric about a maid overheard complaining of the pangs of love, and a complaint against Cupid mentioning a "mumchance", a masque or guising, are known in other manuscripts.