The news of the landing
of William in 1688 withdrew from James VII the loyalty of the Scottish
Presbyterians and magistrates of the capital, who now, with the wildest
enthusiasm, welcomed the invader. William and his Queen, Mary, were
proclaimed the rulers of Scotland by a few representatives of an
illegally constituted Convention of the Estates, who set forth that King
James had forfeited all claim to the Throne. This was to open a new
chapter in the history of the Castle. The Duke of Gordon, who had been
entrusted with the care of the fortress, finding the ancient city in the
hands of a drunken mob which had ransacked the wine-cellars of Cavalier
families, at once drew up the drawbridge. He soon discovered that the
garrison was divided in its political opinions, and fearing that a
mutiny was imminent he held a consultation with his officers, with the
result that forty-four of his soldiers were deprived of the King’s
uniform and dismissed from the service, their places being taken by
double the number of Highlanders loyal to the Stuarts. The Duke, being a
Roman Catholic, was suspected by the new regime and requested by the
Privy Council to surrender his command in favour of a Protestant
officer; but this he refused to do, saying, "I am bound only to obey
King James VII.” Meantime, John Graham of Claverhouse, Viscount Dundee,
had pushed north, and now reached Edinburgh with a remnant of Life
Guards and Scots Greys who had refused to join the Scottish army in its
revolt against James, and their presence gave great encouragement to the
Royalists. Many bands of foot-soldiers from the surrounding country
joined the revolutionary party, and they were reinforced by some six
thousand Cameronians, who marched into the city bearing standards on
which was displayed an open Bible surmounted by the words, “For
Reformation according to the Word of God.” This great military display
demoralized a section of the garrison, and the Duke of Gordon found
himself in difficulties in dealing with them. “Bonnie Dundee” and other
Royalists fled from the city with his band of troopers on hearing that
William of Orange and his party had planned his assassination. The Duke
of Gordon, from the ramparts of the Castle, followed their flight
through his telescope as they galloped round the old church of the Holy
Trinity and amongst the fields on the north side of the Castle rock.
Gordon had fixed a red flag on the ancient postern as a sign that he
wished to have a conference with the departing Viscount; on seeing this
Dundee rode down the Kirk Brae, and, dismounting from his horse,
scrambled up the rugged rock to the famous postern, now marked by a
memorial tablet, where he entreated the beleaguered
THE FAMOUS POSTERN WHERE
“BONNIE DUNDEE” CONFERRED WITH THE DUKE OF GORDON
Duke of Gordon to come
with him and raise the Highland clans for King James. To this suggestion
Gordon would not listen, preferring rather to hold the Castle at all
costs. As Dundee was about to retire the Duke asked him, “Whither go
you?” “Wherever the shade of Montrose may direct me,” was the pensive
and poetic reply, and Dundee clambered down the rocks to rejoin his
troopers after bidding farewell to the Duke, whom he was never to meet
again.
The Earl of Lothian and
Marquis of Tweeddale now appeared at the gate of the Castle and, in the
name of the Estates, demanded its surrender within the space of
twenty-four hours; they also tried to induce the garrison to join the
revolutionaries by the bribe of twelve months’ pay for each soldier. "My
Lords,” said Gordon, “without the express orders of my royal master,
King James VII, I cannot surrender the Castle,” whereupon the Duke was
publicly proclaimed a traitor and outlaw, to which he scornfully
replied, throwing the men some guinea pieces to drink the King’s health,
"I would advise you not to proclaim men traitors who wear the King’s
coat till they have turned it.”
The Earl of Leven was
ordered to blockade the Castle with his Cameronians and three hundred
Highlanders, under the command of the Marquis of Argyll. It is
interesting to note that from these warriors two famous Scottish
regiments were raised in the short space of twenty-four hours. One was
called the 25th or "Edinburgh Regiment,” known to-day as the 25th King’s
Own Scottish Borderers, which bears on its colours the triple castle
with the city motto, Nisi Domimis frustra; and the other the 26th
Cameronians, or, as they are more familiarly known, “The Cameronians”
(Scottish Rifles).
The siege was pressed
with all fury, and the defenders of the Castle were further reduced by
the discharge of some eighty of the rank and file whose loyalty to James
could not be depended upon. There were now only some eighty or ninety
men left, including officers and volunteers. Barricades were thrown up
behind the gates, and the gallant Gordon prepared for a stubborn defence,
although he had written to James in Ireland that he could not hold out
longer than six months without relief. The little garrison had to work
twenty-two guns, and their ammunition, it appears, only amounted to
thirty barrels of gun powder,
The whole rock was now
surrounded by the besieging army, to which had been added three
battalions of the highly trained Scots Brigade under General Hugh Mackay
of Scoury, with a brigade of artillery, who brought with them a great
quantity of wool-packs, which they used to form breastworks. Mackay
planted batteries in various parts of Edinburgh commanding the Castle.
From High Riggs he raked the royal palace and the Half-Moon Battery with
his eighteen-pounders, from a site on which now stands the Register
House he replied to the guns from the King’s Bastion, and from a point
to the west of Heriot’s Hospital his mortars blazed with deadly
precision. A breach was made in the western wall, but the precipitous
rock at this point made an assault impracticable. Mackay’s bombs
exploded with continuous fury within the walls of the fortress, and by
April it hardly seemed possible for the Royalists to hold out much
longer. The roofs of nearly every building had been torn off, the
water-supply was at a low ebb; but, as if sent by Providence, snow fell
to a considerable depth, and was immediately stored to quench the thirst
of those who stood so loyally to their guns.
The Duke of Gordon now
gave up all hope of relief from the King he was so bravely fighting for.
In the uniform of an officer of James VII, and wearing the Order of the
Thistle, he held a parley with Major Somerville, who represented the
Earl of Leven. It was not found possible, however, to arrange
satisfactory terms, and so the bombardment recommenced with greater
fury. A continuous cannonade was kept up on both sides for twenty-four
hours, at a great cost of life to the Jacobite soldiers. The handful of
defenders had subsisted for ten days on dry bread and salt herrings,
eaten raw, the only food now remaining. 1 heir ammunition was coming to
an end, and it had become a physical impossibility to hold out longer.
Accordingly, on June 13 Gordon lowered the King’s colour that he had so
bravely kept flying on the tower of the Royal Palace for six months, and
the gallant little band surrendered their stronghold on condition that
the Royalist soldiers should enjoy their full liberty, and that Colonel
Winram, a persecutor of the Covenanters, should have security for his
life along with his estates.
The Duke assembled the
remnant of his followers, called the roll, and handed to each a small
sum of money, after which the men marched through the gates, a
bedraggled, half-starved, ragged group numbering fifty all told. They
suffered shamefully at the hands of the mob, having to fight their way
to the city gates before making good their escape. The Duke was
arrested, but soon after was given his freedom on promising not to lift
arms against William of Orange. This was the last occasion on which
Edinburgh Castle was held by the Jacobites.
During the siege the
buildings had suffered severely; in fact, scarcely any had escaped the
fire of Mackay’s guns and mortars. The work of restoration was,
therefore, a serious matter, but it was now taken in hand under the
supervision of John Drury, chief of the Scottish Engineers. The work
when completed left the Castle ramparts practically as we see them
to-day.
A curious story is told
in a note to Law’s Memorials of an apparition which is supposed to have
been seen at this time. The Earl of Balcarres was lying as a prisoner in
the Castle, when from his bed he became aware of the presence of the
apparent figure of Claverhouse. After looking sorrowfully at the Earl,
the spectre strode slowly from the chamber without a word. Lord
Balcarres, in great surprise, not suspecting that what he saw was an
apparition, called out repeatedly to his friend to stop, but received no
answer, and subsequently learned that at the very moment when the shadow
stood before him Dundee had breathed his last near the field of
Killiecrankie.
The next and perhaps not
the least interesting episode in the story of the Castle took place in
1745, with the advent of the romantic u Young Pretender,” Prince Charles
Edward Stuart, "Bonnie Prince Charlie,” in his endeavour to regain the
Crown that was so hopelessly lost to the Stuarts when William of Orange
came over.
Prince Charlie, after his
first arrival in the Highlands, had marched south with his following of
clansmen, who now flocked round him in great numbers, and finally
reached Edinburgh, where he proceeded to the old Palace of Holyrood.
When about to enter the
historic royal dwelling a cannon-ball fired from the Castle struck James
the Fifth’s Tower, not a very pleasant reception for the young Prince,
who, however, entered the outer gate without betraying alarm. James
Hepburn of Keith, a staunch Jacobite who had taken part in the rebellion
of 1715, came forward from the crowd, bent his knee in token of homage,
then, drawing his sword and raising it aloft, he marshalled the way
before Charles upstairs. Meanwhile, the citizens of Edinburgh were in a
state of great excitement and perturbation. The Castle, situated on its
inaccessible rock, and held by a sufficient garrison, was quite secure ;
but the cit' was protected on the south and east only bv the old wall,
hastily erected after the battle of Flodden, by the Nor’ Loch on the
north side, and by some slight fortifications. The wall was from ten to
twenty feet in height and was embattled, but the parapet was too narrow
for mounting cannon, and was in various places overlooked by lines of
lofty houses, only a few feet distant, so that it afforded little
protection to the city. The Lord Provost, Archibald Stewart, a
well-known Jacobite, was afterward brought to trial for neglect of duty
in this emergency. He certainly was not hearty in taking or
countenancing measures for the defence of the capital, and his
reluctance to assist in the preparations which were made to resist the
attacks of the Highlanders is said to have been due to his desire to
thwart his burgh rivals, who, under the leadership of ex-Provost
Drummond, were zealous in their efforts to defend the town, rather than
to the lack of means at the disposal of the authorities, utterly
inadequate for that purpose as these were. The only trustworthy force in
the city, in addition to two regiments of dragoons, consisted of the
veteran soldiers of the Town Guard, about one hundred and twenty in
WALLACE’S CRADLE AND THE
WELL-HOUSE
number. There was,
indeed, a numerous body of militia, called Trained Bands, divided into
sixteen companies, and numbering upward of a thousand men, but they were
entirely undisciplined, and not a few of the men were known to be
friendly to the Jacobite cause.
Toward the end of August
1745 the more zealous citizens had proposed to raise a regiment of a
thousand men for the defence of the town, the cost to be met by
voluntary subscription ; and the professors of the University and the
clergy, who were warmly attached to the Government, made liberal offers
of money for that purpose. But the royal permission was not obtained
till September 9, and up to the time of Prince Charlie’s arrival in the
vicinity of the capital only two hundred men had been embodied, and
these were for the most part persons of dissolute character who were
tempted to enlist merely by the promise of pay. In addition to this
force, which was designated the Edinburgh Regiment, about four hundred
of the inhabitants formed themselves into a separate band or
association, and were supplied with arms from the Castle. They were
divided into six companies, officers were appointed to command them, and
they were regularly drilled twice a day. Several old pieces of cannon
were placed on the walls, chiefly obtained from the shipping at Leith,
and the various gates of the city were strongly barricaded. Many of the
volunteers were doubtless gallant young men, students from the
University and so forth, but by far the greater part were citizens of
ages unfit for arms, and without previous habit and experience. They
had, therefore, no great stomach, even from the first, for the dangers
of an encounter with stalwart Highland warriors, and on the near
approach of the insurgent army their show of zeal and valour very
speedily disappeared.
When intelligence was
received that the van of the rebel army had reached the village of
Kirkliston, a few miles to the west of the city, it was proposed that
the two regiments of dragoons, supported by the Town Guard, the
Edinburgh Regiment, and the volunteers, should march out and give battle
to the enemy. This proposal was agreed to by the Provost, who placed
ninety of the Town Guard at the disposal of General Guest, and about two
hundred and fifty of the volunteers pledged themselves to march out with
the dragoons. The appointed signal for their assembling was the ringing
of the fire-bell, and its ominous sound was heard on the forenoon of the
Sabbath, the 15 th, during divine service; but, “ instead of rousing the
hearts of the volunteers like the sound of a trumpet, it rather reminded
them of a passing knell.” The churches were immediately emptied, and the
inhabitants in a state of great excitement poured out into the High
Street, where they found the volunteers drawn up in the Lawn Market,
preparatory to marching against the Highlanders. Immediately after,
Hamilton’s Dragoons, who had been summoned from Leith, rode up the
street on their way to Corstorphine, and were welcomed with loud huzzas.
At sight of the volunteers they in turn shouted and clashed their swords
against each other. The volunteers now prepared to march, but their
mothers, wives, and other female relatives and friends, clinging to
them, implored them with tears and cries not to risk their lives in an
encounter with savage Highland men. At the word of command, however,
they began to march up the Lawn Market, led by their captain, ex-Provost
Drummond; but the scene they had just witnessed had not tended to
animate their drooping courage : some lagged behind, some stood still in
the street, some stepped aside into closes or courts, and some bolted
into houses whose doors stood temptingly open. In descending the famous
West Bow they disappeared by scores into doorways or down wynds, until
their commander, halting at the West Port and looking behind him, found
to his surprise and mortification that nearly the whole of his valiant
followers had disappeared and that only a few of his personal friends
remained.
Throughout the whole of
Monday the capital was in a state of great agitation. Early in the day a
message from the Prince was delivered to the citizens by a person named
Alves, requiring them to submit, and threatening severe measures if they
ventured to resist. The next day the dragoons got into touch with
Charles’ vanguard at Coltbridge, but fled at once, whereupon crowds of
the inhabitants collected in the streets and clamoured loudly for the
surrender of the city. At four o’clock in the afternoon the Provost
called a meeting of the magistrates to consider what should be done. The
officers of the Crown were invited to attend and give their advice, but
it was found that they had prudently withdrawn from the city. A large
number of unauthorized persons crowded into the chamber where the
Provost and magistrates were assembled, so that it was found necessary
to adjourn to the New Church aisle, where the question “Defend or not
defend the town?” was put. The meeting was exceedingly noisy and
tumultuous, and whilst the excitement was at its height, the great
majority clamorous for surrender, a letter was handed in from the Prince
demanding that the city should be given up, and promising that the
property of the citizens should be protected and their rights and
liberties preserved. The perusal of this letter finally decided the
meeting in favour of a capitulation, and deputies were immediately
appointed to wait on the Prince with instructions to solicit time for
deliberation. Meanwhile, the volunteers were drawn up in the streets in
readiness to obey any orders that might be given them, when a gentleman,
whose person was not recognized, rode up the West Bow on a grey horse,
and, passing rapidly along the front of their line, cried out that he
had just seen the Highlanders and that they were sixteen thousand
strong. This announcement completed the dismay of the disheartened
volunteers, who immediately marched to the Castle and delivered up their
arms to General Guest, the governor. The other bodies of militia that
had received arms from the Castle magazine speedily followed their
example, so that, although the Trained Bands still continued to man the
walls, all hope of resistance was now virtually laid aside. Early the
next morning Cameron of Lochiel succeeded in gaining entrance to the
city through the Netherbow, and by dawn his men were in possession of
all the city gates.
At the battle of
Prestonpans, on September 20, Charles was successful in routing Cope’s
cavalry, who fled for refuge to the Castle of Edinburgh. The account
runs: "When all arrangements had been completed, Charles addressed his
men in these words: 'Follow me, gentlemen, and by the blessing of God I
will this day make you a free and happy people.’” He had expressed a
wish to lead the charge, but in compliance with the urgent request of
the chiefs he consented to take a position between the two lines, in the
midst of a small guard. The morning had now fully dawned, and the beams
of the rising sun were beginning to illuminate the waters and estuary on
their right \ but the mist was still rolling in huge masses over the
morass on the left and the cornfields in front, so as to hide the armies
from each other. Everything being now in readiness, the order to advance
was given. A brief and solemn pause ensued, during which the clansmen
took off their bonnets, raised their faces to heaven, and uttered a
short prayer; then, pulling their bonnets over their brows and throwing
aside their plaids, they began their charge. They advanced in silence,
at first slowly, but as they proceeded they quickened their pace, and
moved with such rapidity that they had to halt once or twice to recover
their broken ranks before closing with the enemy. At this moment the
mist rose like a curtain and showed the royal troops, and the dark
masses of the clans rushing on to the attack. With a tremendous yell the
Highlanders threw themselves with irresistible impetuosity upon the
glittering ranks of their enemy. The first squadron of dragoons was
ordered to attack them; but on receiving an irregular fire from the
Highlanders’ fusees they were seized with a disgraceful panic, and,
wheeling about, rode over the artillery guard and galloped from the
field.
The second squadron,
under Colonel Gardiner, was then led forward to the attack by the
gallant veteran himself, who encouraged his men to be firm; but they had
not advanced many paces when they too wavered, halted, and then followed
the first squadron in their flight.
Hamilton’s Dragoons
behaved even worse than Gardiner’s, for no sooner did they perceive the
flight of their comrades than they turned and galloped off the field in
confusion without striking a blow. A desperate effort was made by Cope
and other officers to rally the dragoons, and by dint of threats and
entreaties and by presenting pistols at the men’s heads they succeeded
in turning about four hundred into a field, whence they endeavoured to
lead them back to the charge. But the terror of the soldiers was too
deep-rooted \ the accidental firing of a pistol renewed their panic, and
they went off at full gallop to Edinburgh, and through the High Street,
gaining the Castle with great confusion and uproar. General Preston,
however, who was again in command of the fortress, having taken it over
from General Guest, who, it is said, regarded the place as indefensible
and had recommended its surrender, ordered them to be gone or he would
open his guns upon them for cowards and deserters. Terrified by this
threat, the runaways turned their horses down the Castle Wynd and
pursued their flight to Stirling.
The Highlanders entered
Edinburgh a few hours after the battle, playing their pipes and
displaying in triumph the colours they had taken from the dragoons. Next
day the main body marched through the principal streets of the capital,
exhibiting their prisoners and spoil, amid the joyous acclamations of
the multitude, while the pibrochs played the Jacobite tune, “The King
shall enjoy his own again.” The Highlanders in their excitement fired
their pieces in the air, and one of them being loaded with ball, a
bullet grazed the forehead of Miss Nairne, a young Jacobite lady who was
waving her handkerchief from a balcony-overlooking the Castle Hill.
"Thank God,” exclaimed the fair enthusiast, as soon as she was able to
speak, “the accident has happened to me, whose principles are known. Had
it befallen a Whig, they would have said it was done on purpose.”
The great contrast in the
methods of Charles and Cromwell in housing prisoners is to be found in a
letter which the Prince sent to his father the night after the battle:
“I am in great difficulties how I shall dispose of my wounded prisoners.
If I make a hospital of the church it will be looked upon as a great
profanation. Come what will, I am resolved not to let the poor wounded
men lie in the streets, and if I do no better, I will make a hospital of
the palace, and leave it to them.” The wounded that were brought to
Edinburgh were placed in the Royal Infirmary. One of the Whig officers
broke his parole and escaped into the Castle and the rest were sent to
Perth. On their recovery the wounded were all released on taking oath
not to serve against the Prince for twelve months, an engagement which
it is believed many of them violated. The number of prisoners was
between sixteen and seventeen hundred. The Highlanders did not realize
the value of their booty. One of them who had got a watch which had
belonged to an English officer sold it for a trifle, observing that he
was
THE HIGHLANDERS MARCH UP
THE HIGH STREET
"glad to be rid of the
creature, for she had lived no time after he had catched her ”—the watch
had really stopped for want of winding up. Another exchanged a horse for
a pistol, and several were seen carrying large military saddles upon
their backs, which they took back with other spoils to their homes.
Charles on his entry into Edinburgh wore a short tartan coat, with a
star of the national order of St. Andrew, a blue velvet bonnet with a
white satin cockade, a blue sash over his shoulder, small clothes of red
velvet, and a pair of military boots. His appearance was greeted with
loud acclamations by the country people, who crowded around him whenever
he went abroad, and eagerly sought to kiss his hand and touch his
clothes. Charles, having succeeded in winning the hearts of the citizens
to some extent by his personal charm, now blockaded the Castle, because
his Highland Guards stationed at the Weigh House were being annoyed by
the fire from its batteries. The governor immediately dispatched a
letter to the Lord Provost protesting against the blockade, and
intimated that if it were not removed he would fire on the Highland
Guards. This threat caused great consternation amongst the citizens, who
would have suffered great loss in the event of a bombardment. Prince
Charlie returned an answer to the governor in which he expressed his
surprise at such a threat, and assured the people that if any injury
should be inflicted on the city he would indemnify them for their
losses. It is said that the Prince intimated to General Preston that the
house of his elder brother at Valleyfield, on the shores of Fife, would
be destroyed if he ventured to fire on the city, and that the stout
veteran received the threat with scorn, declaring that if Valleyfield
were injured the English vessels of war would, in revenge, burn down
Wemyss Castle, the property of the Earl of Wemyss, whose eldest son,
Lord Elcho, was in the Jacobite camp. Eventually hostilities were
suspended until the return of an order from London, with a proviso that
the Castle was not in the meantime to be attacked by the forces of the
Pretender. .
But owing to some
misunderstanding, on the following day the Highlanders fired on some
people who were carrying provisions to the Castle, in consequence of
which the governor considered himself justified in returning the fire.
Prince Charlie now decided to retaliate by blockading the fortress, and
all communications were cut off between the citizens and the garrison
under the heaviest penalties; the garrison, however, in revenge fired at
all the Highlanders they could see.
On October 4 the city was
exposed to a heavy fire from the Castle batteries, which was kept up
throughout the day until dusk. Under cover of darkness the garrison then
made a sally for the purpose of demolishing some houses near the gates
that had been deserted during the day. A deep trench was dug across the
Castle hill, wherein were placed several pieces of ordnance which
commanded the Lawn Market and High Street. Their fire unfortunately
killed and wounded a number of peaceful citizens as well as the
Jacobites. Next day the bombardment recommenced with great fury, causing
panic among the inhabitants, who hurried out of the city in much
confusion, carrying their children and valuable effects, besides
assisting their aged relatives to places of safety beyond the Flodden
Wall. A strong appeal was made to the Prince to remove the blockade, and
out of pity for the citizens he yielded. The garrison then ceased its
bombardment of the town, and provisions were allowed to pass freely into
the fortress.
In commemoration of the
event a ball was given at the palace, which had long been deserted, by
the royal Stuarts, and was attended by all the Jacobite ladies, who were
charmed by the manners of the youthful aspirant to the Throne.
The citizens suffered
greatly from bands of robbers, who took advantage of the period when the
courts of law were suspended and the authority of the magistrates had
not yet been restored. Wearing white cockades and the Highland dress,
they demanded money and property from the people. The chief was “Daddie”
Ratcliff, a notorious villain, who plays an important part as one of the
characters in Sir Walter Scott’s novel 'The Heart of Midlothian".
Charles, although he
dealt with these miscreants severely and made every effort to restore
the stolen property, was to some extent to blame, for the offences were
mostly perpetrated by those who had been liberated from the public
jails, which had been thrown open by the Jacobites. The Prince decided
to quit Edinburgh and move his army across the border. He had already
issued a proclamation on October 3 which ran: "I have, I confess, the
greatest reason to adore the goodness of Almighty God, Who has in so
remarkable a manner protected me and my small army through the many
dangers to which we were at first exposed, and Who has led me in the way
to victory, and to the capital of this ancient kingdom, amidst the
acclamations of the King my father’s subjects.” Some difficulty was
found in raising for him a regiment from the surrounding country, as the
people were not keen on adventure with some doubt of success. “For my
part,” said a canny Scot, “I’m clear for being on the same side as the
hangman. I’ll stay till I see what side he's to take and then I’ll
decide.”
But for all this the
Prince was receiving almost daily reinforcements from the North, where
the strength of the Jacobite cause lay. On the evening of October 31
Prince Charlie had completed the preparations for his departure, and he
left Edinburgh never to return. He advanced into England as far as
Derby, but found insufficient support and retreated northward, until at
Culloden, on April 16, 1746, his troops were defeated and scattered, and
he himself became a fugitive in the western Highlands. The faithful
Highlanders never once wavered in their loyalty in the five months or
more of his wanderings. He was chased like “the red deer driven along
its native heights,” ofttime ragged and torn, exposed to hunger and
thirst, but in spite of the great price put on his head by the
Government the fidelity of the clansmen never for a moment failed. The
clever help rendered to him by Flora Macdonald at a time of supreme
danger is too well known to need more than mention.
Finally he was guided to
his faithful adherents Cluny Macpherson and Cameron of Lochiel, who were
in hiding in a romantic retreat called the Cage, which had been
constructed by Cluny at the base of a craggy, precipitous rock
overlooking Loch Ericht. This habitation was capable of accommodating
six people, and was concealed by a thicket, and being supported by a
large fir springing from amidst the rocks it somewhat resembled a great
bird-cage. In this last hiding-place Prince Charlie waited patiently for
an opportunity of escape, and at last two French vessels arrived at the
point where fourteen months before he had secured a landing. Two days
after the news reached him, Charles, journeying secretly at night,
embarked on board Heureux, accompanied by Lochiel, Colonel Roy Stuart,
and about a hundred other friends, who were also glad to seek safety on
a foreign shore. Concealed by a fog, the two vessels passed safely
through the middle of the English fleet, and arrived eventually near
Morlaix, on the coast of Brittany.
A romantic story is told
concerning the Prince when in hiding. It is said that a Jacobite officer
named Mackenzie, having fallen into the hands of the soldiers, was shot
by them, and when dying exclaimed: "You have slain your Prince! ” with
the view of aiding Charles’ escape.
Some of the most
beautiful of Scotland’s plaintive songs commemorate the heroism and
trials of 'Bonnie Prince Charlie,’ when roaming a lonely “stranger o’er
hills that were by right his ain.” In one the Jacobite mother declares
that had she ten sons she “would give them all to Charlie.” In another
the maiden protests that if she were a man, like her brothers, she
"would follow him too,” and many others breathe a longing for the return
of the Stuarts in such lines as, “Come o’er the stream, Charlie,” and
"The Stuarts shall enjoy their ain again.” |