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Weary of Scotland she may have been: she was now even more tired of Lord Methven, who was proving himself to be even worse than Angus in his desire both for other women and for his wife's money ; also, their only child, a daughter ( possibly called Dorothea Stewart ), died in infancy.
She was once again eager for divorce but proceedings were frustrated by James, who she believed her husband had bribed.
As so often in Margaret's life, tragedy and unhappiness were closely pursued by intrigue and farce.
At one point she ran away toward the border, only to be intercepted and brought back to Edinburgh.
Time and again she wrote to Henry with complaints about her poverty and appeals for money and protection – she wished for ease and comfort instead of being obliged " to follow her son about like a poor gentlewoman.

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