THE eastern boundary
of the estate of Balquhain touches the western boundary of Blackhall.
It has been in the possession of the Leslie family ever since Sir
George Leslie, the first of Balquhain, received it from his father,
Sir Andrew de Leslie, the sixth of that Ilk, some time prior to
1340.
The house of
Balquhain has produced many men of worth, ability and power. In
1571, however, John Leslie succeeded his father as tenth laird or
baron of Balquhain. His forcefulness showed itself in ways, which
were profitable neither to himself nor to the Blackhalls, and as he
had an important influence on their fortunes, it is necessary to
consider shortly what manner of man he was. The keynote of his
character, as delineated by the late Colonel Leslie, his
representative, and the historian of his family, was a pride and
self-assertiveness which led to ruinous extravagance, and a shifty
unreliability which made him a bad partner both in public and in
private life. He had a somewhat varied connubial record also, having
divorced one wife, been divorced by another, and questionably
married to a third. One of his sons, Walter, by his third wife, also
a forceful character, became a Count of the Holy Roman Empire, owing
to the part he played in the assassination of Wallenstein, the only
palliation of which crime was the suspected treason of that great
soldier. He became wealthy in foreign parts, and helped to redeem
mortgages or wadsets on his old home, which were the consequences of
his father’s and his eldest brother’s improvidence. (Historical
Records of the Family of Leslie, by Col. Leslie of Balquhain, Vol.
III., p. 248).
John Leslie, the
tenth of Balquhain, was Sheriff-Principal of Aberdeenshire for many
years, and as late as 1597. After the death of William Blackhall of
that Ilk in 1589 without male issue, he entered an interdict against
the succession of his heir, ultimately retoured never* theless as
Alexander Blackhall of that Uk, Coroner and Forester of the Garioch,
but this only with the consent of his interdictor, and to make good
a transaction between him and Alexander Blackhall of Barra, to be
mentioned presently.
What the motives of
John Leslie were in taking this action can only be surmised, for the
reasons of the interdiction are not definitely assigned in the
document which chronicles the fact. Dr. Burnett (op. cit., p. 35)
suggests that the interdict was due to what lawyers call the “
facility or profession ” of the heir, but the point has not been
examined with any care by Burnett, who is more anxious to prove that
the hunting horn in the arms of the Burnetts was not derived from
the Forestership of the Blackhalls than anything else, and there is
nothing to show that he was in any way ineligible for the
succession, which was soon afterwards agreed to under other
circumstances by John Leslie himself. The words used in the deed
(Reg. Mag. Sig., Lib. 14, No. 20) by Alexander Blackhall are
“Noveritis me cum expressis consensu et assensu honorabihs viii
Joannis Leslie de Balquhane cui interdictus sum meis utilitate et
commodo, in hac parte undique previsis et diligenter consideratis ex
certis causis rationi consonis animum mcum ad hoc moventein et
precertim pro adimpletione, &c.” We have seen that William Blackhall
was the fifth in descent from Sir William Leslie, the fourth baron
of Balquhain, John Leslie being the sixth in descent from the same
person. As cousinship used to be reckoned in those days, this was a
by no means remote relationship. When this fact is taken in
connection with that of their being neighbouring lairds, it is quite
possible that Leslie may have considered it necessary that the
conditions of the tenure of Blackhall should be carefully examined
in the interests of the only daughter or sister of the late Coroner
of the Garioch, before the formal acknowledgment of the male heir. A
reference to the wording of the letter granting the ward of
Blackhall to the Strachans of Tibbertie might moreover be construed
as implying that an heiress might under certain circumstances
succeed (p. 30). If such a possibility was considered, the
conclusion must have been reached very soon, not only that an
heiress could not succeed at that time, while a male heir was known
to be 11' existence, but also as to who that male heir was; because
we find Leslie consenting, in 1590, to the sale by Alexander
Blackhall—who, in the year following, was retoured to both Blackhall
and the offices—of Blackhall and those offices, to Alexander
Blackhall of Barra. This transaction in itself was illegal, as the
royal consent to the proceeding had not been obtained, although,
without doubt, sale first and confirmation afterwards often took
place. Just at that time, however, such action was not without
danger, as the event proved. What can have been the object of the
action of Alexander Blackhall of Barra in this matter?
We have seen that on
a former occasion, in 1503, James IV., not wishing any harm to his
beloved William Blackhall, confirmed his possession of
Fola-Blackwater, although acquired without the royal consent. But at
the time we are now dealing with, the reckless but virile victim of
I’lodden was not on the throne, and the Royal Exchequer was very
empty. Herein lay the danger of such transactions. At the period we
are at the moment considering, the Octavians were not yet appointed.
Then finally abortive efforts did not commence till some five years
later, but the conditions of royal need were somewhat pressing, and
the royal ingenuity, and that of the King's advisers, was being
exercised to discover a means of replenishing the treasury. With the
fatuousness usually characteristic of those whom the gods have
determined to destroy, the incarnation of the feudal system—the
king, determined to support his throne by undermining its props—the
feudal aristocracy. ‘ The revenue of the country,” writes Burton, “
was in a wretched condition—the civil officers of the Government
unpaid and nothing available by which the Crown could in case of an
emergency co-operate with the feudal force in defence of the
country. The source from which the treasury might be replenished was
the forfeiture of estates. From the recent succession of convulsions
and re-actions, with their forfeitures and remissions, it may easily
be inferred that the ownership of a large breadth oi the landed
property of the country was in a complicated and dubious state. To
extricate it would require much hard work of a delicate kind. It
would have to be considered whether a forfeiture should be carried
to extremities, or the opportunity should be taken to get cash in
hand by remitting it for a fine. Estates forfeited would have to be
turned into cash in the most profitable manner; and many cases of
doubtful possession would have to be examined, with the frequent
result that the doubtful title would be rendered a firm one for a
money consideration. To do alt this work a financial committee of
eight men was appointed, who from their number were called the
King’s Octavians.” "They were Alexander Seton, the Lord President;
Lindsay of Balcarras; Walter Stewart, secular Prior of Blantyre;
John Skene, Lord Clerk Register . . . , Peter Young . . . , the
King’s tutor; Sir David Carnegie; Thomas Hamilton, the King’s
Advocate; and James Elphin-stone, one of the Lords of Session.”
(History of Scotland, Ed. 1870, Vol. VI., p. 69.) Peter Young was a
scholar who knew how to combine erudition with “ an eye to the main
chance,” and died possessed of considerable landed property. As
might have been expected, the efforts of these gentlemen were not
appreciated by the flock it was proposed to fleece, and as there
were some of the latter about the Court and person of the king, the
attempt, like many another effort of incompetent and incongruous
power, only resulted in embittering relations between the king and
the aristocracy, and was shortly abandoned. The mass of the people
had not yet discovered their power, and a people rising in its
might, led and rendered coherent by an indignant fraction of the
aristocracy, was to be the object lesson afforded by defeudalised
England in the next reign. One can but pity Charles the more when we
realize the “divine right” which he imbibed with his mother’s milk,
with the added misfortune of having a pedantic father who tutored
his youth, untaught himself by his own failures. Charles in his need
turned to that very aristocracy which his impecunious father
plundered, and they responded to his call magnificently—too
magnificently.
The case of the
Blackhalls is interesting, as will be presently shown, because it is
an example of the feudal ingratitude and foolishness of King James,
before his depredations in this direction had been regularised into
a system. Alexander Blackhall of Barra’s intrusion in this affair
was therefore probably actuated by the desire to obviate or minimise
the consequences of some accusation of feudal irregularity, which,
as we shall learn, had already, in 1590, deprived of their lands the
Kings co-portioners of Barra with the Blackhalls.
To resume our
narrative, we know Alexander Blackhall of Barra, and we have just
made the acquaintance of John Leslie of Balquhain. Who was that
other Alexander Blackhall, the heir to the Coroners of the Garioch,
and the third party in these negotiations of delay and obliquity ?
In the deed in which
he sells and alienates the titulum onerosum of Blackhall and the
offices to Alexander Blackhall of Barra, with John Leslie’s consent,
and which is dated in October, 1590, he already acts as “Alexander
Blackhall de eodem,” although his retour as such did not take place
till the following year. This no doubt was a legal formality, as I
have stated, in anticipation of the ultimate confirmation of the
transaction by the King. That confirmation took place, indeed, but
not till 1610, and much happened in the interval. |