“As Walter Scott showed, one could preserve the most intense passion for Caledonia stern and wild, one's own, one's native land, while rejoicing in the triumphs of the British armed forces over Napoleon and expressing devout loyalty to the Hanovarian dynasty, which, despite the madness of George III and the profligacy of his son and heir, had come to represent for Britons not only the virtues of sturdy monarchy under the sublime Constitution, but, most improbably, family values.” ScotlandMonarchyFamily ValuesBritonsWalter ScottGeorge IvGeorge IiiHouse Of Hanover Book:Irish Pages, Vol. 12, No. 2: Scotland Source: Irish Pages, Vol. 12, No. 2: Scotland