Bunkle (Bonkyl) Kirk is where the Homes, a wealthy local family, had their ancestral tomb. The keystone of the Kirk is all that is left of this now. One person buried here is Lady Margaret Home, or Lady Billy. This old rhyme remembers her murder at Linthill House, Eyemouth, on the 12th August, 1751.

The Lady's gane and Norman's ta'en
Norman wi' the bloody hand
Now he will hae to pay the kain
For being the De'il's command.

Norman Ross wi' pykit pow
Three corbies at his e'en
Girnin' in the gallows tow
Sic a sight was never seen'

Norman Ross, Lady Billy’s butler, broke into her bedroom to rob her. She caught him in the act and a fight ensued. Both were badly injured, resulting later in Lady Billy’s death. R

oss was found guilty of her murder at the High Court in Edinburgh and was publicly hanged. The rhyme fills in more detail of this grisly tale. It makes specific reference to Ross’s hand, which was cut off as part of his punishment. It also creates a gruesome visual of three corbies, or crows, pecking at his head and eyes as his body hangs on the gallows.