She had no love for Mary Stewart.
The day on which she, the mother of the king, had to give precedence to
the young beauty who had become reigning queen, stamped its mark on her
black heart. Mary stung the dowager occasionally with her sarcastic
tongue; for few were better adepts at that dangerous accomplishment which
torments and makes enemies. For all its illustrious history, the house of
Medici was an anomaly among the feudalities, from having founded its
wealth and power on commerce instead of rapine, and it lay open to sneers
as not legitimately regal; hence Mary called her mother-in-law the
fille de Marchand—a sneer which Catherine committed to her dangerous
and retentive memory. She was pretty freely accused, indeed, of having
shortened her son’s life, because she thought she would have more power
were he out of the way; and no doubt she was quite capable of the deed.
The only thing in which she showed any of the confiding weakness of
mankind was in being a devotee of astrology and divination; but these, if
they were supernatural, yet were agencies put in the power of man which
she might turn to her own immediate purpose, and which were therefore far
more to be respected than the religion which belonged to another world, in
which she could not command obedience.
Well, Catherine
was against the Spanish match, for the obvious
reason that it would render the power of the Lorraine Guises preponderant
over that of herself and her sons. She was indefatigable in carrying her
point. M. Chéruel has published some of her letters on the affair to the
Bishop of Limoges, the French ambassador in Spain. Strange documents they
are, subtle almost to unintelligibility, full of ingenious suggestion and
eager pleading, with a shadowy half-hidden under-current of menace. It was
difficult to bring very powerful arguments to bear against an arrangement
so advantageous to both the parties concerned. She tried to make out that
it would be extremely detrimental to the Catholic cause, because, if her
hand were weakened by the aggrandisement of the Guises, it would be the
Huguenot King of Navarre, and not she, who would really obtain the chief
influence in France. She endeavoured to work through King Philip’s
confessor and several of his confidential advisers. Her daughter was
Philip’s third wife—to her the
most plausible arguments were addressed.
It was proposed that Don Carlos,
instead of having Mary, should be married to the younger sister of his
stepmother, the Queen of Spain. Thus that Queen would have a sister with
her and her position would be strengthened by an alliance with the heir to
the throne, on whom her own
personal claim as his stepmother would
be but small. Catherine even endeavoured to move Queen Elizabeth to her
ends by presenting to her a prospect, no doubt sufficiently alarming, both
for the cause of Protestantism and her
own personal interest. But how Elizabeth could have acted in the matter
save through the influence of Murray, afterwards the Regent, on his sister
is not very clear. The match, however was defeated. People so unscrupulous
as Catherine are very successful in accomplishing their ends. She had in
her employment a countryman of her own, one Bianci, or Blanc, as the
French annalists call him, an expert confectioner who got the title of
Queen Catherine’s poisoner—that being the function by which he was reputed
to gain his living. A powerful effect would be produced on the mind by
such a thought passing over it as—" Well, if I push her to the wall, that
woman will poison me." From whatever cause, however she had her way on
this occasion, and one of the most brilliant of the dreams of ambition was
dispersed.
So ends the
first act; but the tragedy in which the King
of Spain, the Lorraine Guises, and Queen Mary, continue to be the chief
characters, is not yet acted out. The first casualty is among the Guises.
Mary has not long endured her dreary banishment to her own kingdom, when a
despatch arrives telling her how the brave Balafré has been murdered by
the fanatic Poltrot. The blow is a severe one. The uncle and niece had an
abundant fund of common sympathies. Both were princely, not alone by
descent and conventional rank, but by the
original stamp of the Deity, which had given them
majesty and beauty in externals, balanced by bravery, wit, geniality, and
high spirit as their intellectual and moral inheritance. She was proud of
the great warrior and the wise statesman who had guided her youthful steps
to greatness, and he was proud to be the parent and instructor of the most
fascinating princess of her age.
It was just after his death that the
dark days of Mary came upon her. Her maternal house still kept up a close
intercourse with her but personally their relation had widened. They were
cousins now, not uncle and niece, and their intercourse was rather
diplomatic than affectionate.
Upwards of twenty years have passed,
and preparation is made for the chamber of execution at Fotheringay, yet
still the chief persons in the drama are the same. A whisper arises and
passes over Europe, is a King of France, a descendant of St Louis, a
grandson of the great Francis, going to permit his sister-in-law, who wore
the crown, and yet bears the title of a Dowager Queen of France, to be put
to death like a felon? Certainly not. There is a certain Monsieur
Belliévre accredited to the Court of Elizabeth, for the purpose of
bringing her to reason, and stopping any attempt at violence. He seems to
have acted in some degree like the consul who quoted Bynkershook and
Pufendorf and Grotius, and proved from Vatel, &c.; and in the text of the
inviolability of princes, he quoted Cicero, and referred to Mark Antony,
Mutius Scævola, and Porsenna with such apt, diplomatic scholarship, that
De Thou thought his speeches to Elizabeth, as reported by the speaker,
worthy of being incorporated in full in his great History. But in reality
Belliévre had a wondrously difficult part to perform, and his big classic
talk was all intended to blazon over and hide his real helplessness.
Had the King of France determined to
act ?—that was the critical question. He had come to no such
determination; or rather he had determined, if such a term is appropriate,
not to act, and Elizabeth knew it. His object in the embassy was to
hide his real abandonment of his sister-in-law from the eye of Europe. The
ambassador, however, had personally too much chivalry for such a task.
When he was done with his classical citations, at a long personal
interview he at last distinctly threatened Elizabeth, should she persist,
with the vengeance of the French Government. The virago fired up at this;
she put it sharply to Belliévre, had he the authority of the King her
brother to hold such language to her? Yes, he had, expressly. Well, she
must have a copy of this, under the ambassador’s own hand. If Belliévre
gave her the genuine instructions communicated to him, they would be found
but faintly to warrant his brave words of defiance; for after some rather
unchivalric proposals for adjusting the affair without the necessity of a
beheading, they contain a vague sort of threat of resentment if they be
not adopted.
Elizabeth, after the tragedy was
over, wrote a jeering letter to King Henry about this threat, showing how
lightly she esteemed it—if not, indeed, showing that there was a common
understanding between them on the point. After the execution, which was
supposed to take everybody by surprise, the next question was, whether the
King of France would avenge it. M. Chéruel, who has the inner history of
the French part of the affair ready to his hand, says the country was
filled with cries of vengeance. He selects as the key-note of this
sentiment the words in which it was echoed by l’Ecossais Blackwood :— "Le
Roi, parent et beau-frère de cette dame, laisserat-il son meurtre impunil
il ne souffrira jamais que cette tache déshonore son très illustre nom, ni
que telle infamie tombe sur le royaume de France."
But he was just going, with his own
hands, to drop a darker blot on his illustrious name. M. Chéruel notices
the significant little fact, that when Renaud de Beaurne, Archbishop of
Bourges, preached a funeral sermon on Queen Mary, in which he called her
relations, the Guises, foudres de guerre, or thunder-bolts of war,
he was required to suppress this expression when he published the sermon.
The question between the Guises and the house of Valois was coming to an
issue; within a few months after the execution of Mary, the first war of
barricades was fought on the streets of Paris; a month or two later the
Duke of Guise was murdered in the King’s audience-chamber, and the family
broken. Henry’s lukewarmness to Queen Mary had its practical
explanation—he was not going to commit himself against a powerful monarch
like Elizabeth, either to frustrate or to avenge the fate of a member of
the detested family doomed by him to destruction.
The drama is not yet entirely played
out. A great scene remains before the curtain drops, in which Spain has to
play apart; it has been dictated by the departed enchantress, and is the
last, as it is the grandest, instance of her power. The history of this
affair, as now pretty well filled up by the documents printed by the
Frenchmen, is extremely curious, both for the minuteness of the
particulars, and the vastness of the historical events on which they bear.
It will be remembered that, in her latter days, Queen Mary rested her
hopes on the King of Spain, feeling that, unless her cousins the Guises
were successful, she need expect nothing from France, and conscious, at
the same time, that countenance and help from Spain would be the most
powerful means of accomplishing their success. Accordingly, with
marvellous perseverance and adroitness, she kept up a close correspondence
during her imprisonment with Philip II., and every new document discovered
renders it clearer than ever that it was at her instigation chiefly that
Philip undertook the invasion of England.
Mary left behind her a last will,
which Ritson the antiquary said he saw, blotted with her tears, in the
Scottish College at Paris. It was, like her ostensible acts, a monument of
kindness and generosity, performed with a mournful dignity becoming her
rank and her misfortunes. All who had been kind and faithful to her, high
and low, were gratified by bequests, which were precious relics, more dear
than the riches she could no longer bestow. She had, however, issued
another will of a more important character, which, with her other papers,
was seized at Chartley. This will contained such strange and ominous
matter that it was deemed wise at once to burn it; and lest there should
be any doubt that it was effectually destroyed, or any suspicion that its
purport had gone abroad, Elizabeth burnt it with her own hands. It gave
its warning—it showed the enemy—it should go no further on its mischievous
path; so thought Cecil and his mistress. But they had to deal with one not
easily baffled in the accomplishment of her fixed designs. She confided
her testamentary bequests verbally to two different persons, on whose
fidelity she could rely.
Her executor was the King of Spain.
The nature of these bequests had not been entirely concealed. James
himself; in his lubberly schoolboy-like complaints about his mother,
showed that he knew about them. They now make their appearance in the
shape of a statement of the reception which the King of Spain gave to the
testamentary injunctions. If we are to suppose—which we are at liberty to
do—that they were utter falsehoods, invented by the persons who pretended
to be accredited to the King of Spain, there is, at all events, this much
of fact in the whole affair, that the King of Spain believed them to be
genuine, and acted on them fully and emphatically. It is the record of his
so acting that we now possess.
Gorion, Queen Mary’s French
physician, was one of the recipients of this deposit. He was commissioned
to convey to the King of Spain her desire that he would pay certain debts
and legacies, and distribute pensions and other rewards among her more
faithful adherents. As to the debts and the smaller recompenses of
services, the Queen appealed to his religious feeling, on the ground that
to leave the world without the prospect of these things being paid,
pressed heavily on her conscience. The sums of money absolutely named in
these requests were considerable; and in asking that the pensions of the
English Catholics, including the Earl of Westmoreland, Lord Paget, Charles
Arundel, Charles Paget, Throckmorton, and Morgan, might be continued, she
evidently drew upon a liberal hand. Philip appears not only to have
unhesitatingly met the larger and ostensible demands thus made on him, but
with a religious zeal to have sought out the more obscure objects of
Mary’s goodwill, that he might rigidly perform her injunctions to the
utmost farthing.
One great injunction still
remained—it was that, notwithstanding her death, he would not abandon his
enterprise on England—an enterprise devised in the cause of God, and
worthy of a true Catholic king. This bequest also, as all the world knows,
the King of Spain did his best to carry into effect. There were some
little subsidiary services to be performed by him when he had accomplished
it. Mary’s account with the world had a debtor as well as a creditor side.
If the King of Spain could reward friends, it was also hoped that he would
be in a position to punish enemies: her last request, therefore, was, that
when once master of England, he would not forget how she had been treated
by Cecil, Leicester, Secretary Walsingham, Lord Huntington, Sir Amyas
Paulet, and Wade, the clever Secretary of the Council, who had discovered
the designs of Spain by putting the fragments of a torn letter together.
While the French physician bore to
the King of Spain what might be termed the burdens and obligations of the
testament, it was commissioned to other messengers—being the Queen’s two
faithful attendants, Elizabeth Curle and Jane Kennedy—to intimate what may
be called the beneficial portion, which was no less than the bequeathing
to the King of Spain the crowns of Scotland and England, in the event of
her son James continuing obstinate in his heresy. It is with almost
ludicrous gravity that M. Teulet says, "Philippe II. accepta sans hésiter
les charges d’une succession qui lui offrait des éventualités si
avantageuses." Advantageous eventualities indeed—but, as they proved to
the executor, calamitous realities.
Within eighteen months after the
death of Mary, the Armada was in the Channel. It was the last grand
explosion of the ancient crusading chivalry,— an expedition to restore the
Catholic Church to its supremacy, and at the same time to carry out the
dying wish and avenge the wrongs of an injured woman and a holy martyr.
The great actual drama is now completed, and it is wonderful with what a
close contiguity in time its long-suspended issues complete themselves.
Early in the year 1587 Queen Mary is executed; in the summer of the
ensuing year the Armada comes forth and is destroyed. That winter the Duke
of Guise is murdered and his family crushed; and again, before another
year passes, the perfidious perpetrator of the deed, Henry IlI., is
murdered by a Popish fanatic, who thus clears the throne for the tolerant
monarch who did more than any other for the real greatness of France.
From this great epoch history starts
afresh with new actors, who are to bring out a new development of events.
The mighty empire of Spain from that period collapses like the bankrupt
estate of an over-sanguine trader who has risked all his capital on some
great adventure ending in shipwreck. A powerful little colony of
industrious Protestants rises up where her yoke has been thrown off in
Holland. France is no longer in the hand of the Guise or of the Medici,
but is ruled by one who, if he dare not be Protestant, will at all events
be tolerant, and in the balance of the European powers, Protestantism, if
not predominant, is at least made secure. In the great recasting of the
position of the European powers, Scotland’s relations to France and
England respectively have undergone a revolution. Let us take a glance
backwards, then, and sketch the events which bring our own special
story—that of the Ancient League—to its natural conclusion.
The firm footing of Protestantism in
the north of Europe, and the fusion of England and Scotland, must have
seemed among the most unlikely of human events, on that 10th of July 1559,
when Henry II. died of the wound he got in a tournament, and his son
Francis succeeded him, with Mary of Scotland for queen. Elizabeth had not
been quite eight months on the throne of England. She had kept her leaning
towards Protestantism—it was little more than a leaning—so close, that
foreign nations seem for some time to have known nothing of it. Philip
II., the widower of her Popish sister Mary, had no conception of the
change that was coming. He could see nothing in the general state of
Europe, except the symptoms that things were righting themselves again,
after the partial storm of the Reformation, and settling quietly under the
wings of the Popedom. He looked on England, next to his own dear Spain and
the Netherlands, as the most Catholic kingdom in Europe. He wished the
English crown to have been entailed on him in case of his surviving his
wife. He thought it strange and rather unreasonable that this should not
have been done; but he took the personal disappointment with magnanimity,
intimating that he would still take a paternal interest in his late wife’s
dominions. He was prepared, if duty required him, to marry Elizabeth on a
dispensation from the Pope, and was astonished beyond measure when he
heard that a hint of the possible distinction in store for her had not
been received by the eccentric young Queen with the grateful deference
which it should have commanded. But it was long before he could permit
himself to doubt that her kingdom would stand by him for the Popedom,
against the lax notions which the monarchs of France had allowed to arise
in the Gallican Church. In the calculations of the Continental powers, the
prospect of England continuing at the command of Philip and the Court of
Rome was a thing so probable, that, in the negotiations for the great
treaty of Chateau Cambresis, France, when called on to give back Calais to
England, had the face to plead as a reason for declining, at least
deferring this sacrifice, the probability that this fortress might thus be
put at the command of the King of Spain, and help him to invade France
from his Flemish dominions.
Some of the most picturesque
movements of the diplomacy of the day wind round the affair of Calais.
France, having got it, was determined to keep it. Elizabeth and her
advisers were determined to get it back by any means short of capture, but
that was just short of the only means by which it was to be had. Elizabeth
pleaded, rather ludicrously, that the English people considered it so
essential a possession of the English crown that they would not submit to
its loss. It was maintained rather more reasonably on the other hand,
that, as part of the soil of France, it would be a dangerous offence to
the French people to give it up. The argument more to the point on the
present occasion, however, was one that carried keen alarm to Elizabeth’s
Court. It was thus briefly put by the French to the English commissioners
at Chateau Cambresis: "Put the case that Calais was to be re-delivered,
and that we did owe such debts to the crown of England, to whom shall we
deliver Calais? to whom shall we pay the debts? Is not the Queen of Scots
true Queen of England? Shall we deliver Calais and those debts to another,
and thereby prejudice the rights of the Queen of Scotland and the Dauphin,
her husband?"
When such words could be spoken
while the young couple were waiting for the death of a man in the prime of
life to succeed to the throne of France, it was to be expected, when the
succession suddenly opened to them, that there would be more audacious
pretensions still. The affair was no empty bravado, such as the
pretensions of the Tudors to the throne of France had come to be. With
Roman Catholics, at home as well as abroad, Mary was the heiress to the
throne of England. A large portion of England was still Romanist, and it
was not yet known what effect Elizabeth’s Reformation tendencies might
have on the popular mind. The pretensions of the young couple to the
throne of England were not the less ominous that they were made in coinage
and heraldry, in a very quiet way, and as a matter of course. The English
ambassador observed it all, reporting home in angry letters to his angrier
mistress. It came to the climax of insult when he had either to abstain
from the good things at state banquets, or eat off platters on which the
arms of England were quartered with those of France and Scotland.
Few things in the uncertain future
of the destinies of nations had ever approached nearer to a certainty than
the steadfastness at that juncture of the Old League between Scotland and
France; and yet within it elements of political decomposition were at
work, which might bring it down with a crash, as a fair building consumed
by dry rot is in a condition to fall to pieces, and is most likely to do
so when it is most relied on and put to most trying use. Two hundred years
had changed the France which received Buchan’s detachment as the rescuers
and guardians of the land. By the acquisition of Burgundy, Brittany,
Maine, Anjou, Guienne, and other fiefs, the territories absolutely ruled
by the house of Valois had increased some fourfold. Scotland had improved
in wealth, yet the relative proportions of the two countries had vastly
altered. Their diplomatic relations had changed, at least on the French
side, in the assumption of a protecting and patronising nomenclature.
There was offence to Scotland even in the marshalling of arms that had
enraged England, since the lion occupied the subsidiary quarterings on the
royal shield, as indicating a territorial possession, instead of being
charged on a pale or some honourable ordinary, as a merely personal
difference derived from a matrimonial alliance.
But the mere assumption of
superiority was not all,—in fact, the assumption was concealed as well as
such a thing could be, under decorous externals, beneath which there were
designs to accomplish something far more effective than a magnanimous
protectorship.
The papers revealed to the world by
M. Teulet show that from the time when the heiress to the crown of
Scotland came into the possession of her ambitious kinsfolk, they were
laying plans for governing Scotland in Paris, and annexing the country to
the throne of France. Dated in the year 1552 is a "Declaration" or
Memorandum of the Parliament of Paris on the adjustment of the government
of Scotland. In this document one can see, under official formalities, the
symptoms of an almost irritable impatience to get the nominal government
vested in the young Queen, in order that the real government might be
administered by her kinsfolk. She had then entered on her twelfth year.
That she ought to take the sovereignty into her own hands is a proposition
reached by two steps, which may be defined as a long and a short. The long
step reaches the position, that when twelve years old she would be
entitled to govern —a proposition fortified by a curiously tortuous
application of precedents from the sovereignty of France, to which male
heirs only could succeed. A Roman maxim which imports that a day begun is
to be counted in law as completed, is then brought up, and it is shown
that in proper logical consistency the maxim should apply to a year. Along
with the technical argument came two of a wider and more statesman-like
character, which are, however, signally open to the charge of being
inconsistent with each other. The one was, that the Deity, in
consideration of the heavy responsibilities devolved on them, had endowed
young royal personages with precocious capacities; the other was, that,
however youthful a sovereign may be, there are always at hand wise and
clever persons to govern the realm—and this, in fact, pointed to the real
object The document was no doubt drawn up by the persons who were ready to
take the responsibility of governing Scotland on themselves.
A plan was, however, found for
accomplishing the desired end more simple. and practical than the devices
of the civilians and feudalists. The Governor of Scotland was the head of
the house of Hamilton, who held that office as next in hereditary
succession to the crown if the young Queen should die. This office was
taken from him, and he was compensated for the loss by the Dukedom of
Chatelherault Mary of Guise became Regent of Scotland, under the direction
of her brothers, the great Duke and the great Cardinal.
The Scots lords now saw sights
calculated, as the Persians say, to open the eyes of astonishment. A
clever French statesman, M. d’Osel, was sent over as the adviser of the
Regent, to be her Prime Minister, and enable her to rule Scotland after
the model of France. A step was taken to get at the high office of
Chancellor by appointing Monsieur de Rubay to be Vice-Chancellor, with
possession of the Great Seal. The office of Comptroller of the Treasury
was dealt with more boldly, and put into the hands of M. Vile-more. At
Eyemouth, near the east border, a great fortress was erected, on the new
plans of fortification, to confront the English fortress of Berwick, and a
Frenchman was appointed its Governor. The Regent cast an eye on the
strongholds of the great lords, determining to fill them with garrisons
more obedient to the crown than their existing occupants. When she began
with Tantallon, which, by its situation and strength, would be a desirable
acquisition, the Earl of Angus, with epigrammatic point worthy of her own
nation, said his house was at her service, but assuredly he should remain
governor, for no other could hold it so well.
Suspicious surveys and inventories
were made of property, and it was declared, almost more to the amazement
than to the indignation of the country, that a tax was to be levied for
the support of a standing army. Now, the feudal array, which by old custom
could be called by the sovereign, each freeholder contributing to it so
many men-at-arms for a short period, was the only military force known in
Scotland, and any attempt to create a royal army in any other shape was
always received with the most nervous jealousy. On this occasion three
hundred of the chief persons interested assembled in the church of
Holyrood and declared resistance.
There were ugly stories afloat about
attempts, on the occasion of the Queen’s marriage, to juggle with the
official nomenclature which represented the independence of Scotland as a
sovereignty. It was requested that the crown and other "honours," as they
were termed, might be sent to Paris; but there was suspicion about the use
these might be put to—such as crowning the Dauphin, perhaps— and the
request was refused. It was said that Mary had been required to sign a
deed importing her husband’s absolute right to the crown on survivor-ship;
and, whether true or not, belief in such a story had its influence. It is
certain that an expression which afterwards gave a deal of trouble was
then used in conferring on the Dauphin the "crown matrimonial." It was
stated by the Lords of the Congregation in Scotland to have been an
invention of the Guises, who had some hidden meaning in it. When the
question of its meaning afterwards came up in the refusal of the crown
matrimonial to Darnley, it was explained that it would pervert the line of
succession—that the crown matrimonial meant the sovereignty in the
survivor and the survivor’s heirs, whether descendants of Queen Mary or of
another wife. In this sense, the arrangement was equivalent to the kind of
entail which Philip thought it so unreasonable that he did not get of the
crown of England.
The state papers of France at that
time speak of Scotland as of a highly-favoured dependency. An act of the
French Government, which externally was one of grace and free-hearted
generosity, did not mend matters. There had been many acts of
naturalisation in favour of Scotsmen, and now, by one sweep of
hospitality, the whole nation was naturalised. The privilege was a large
one, for France, by her droit d’aubaine, was conspicuously
inhospitable to unprivileged foreigners; but the phraseology of the
document made its object too plain, and some comments referring to the
practice of the Roman empire in admitting the inhabitants of distant
provinces to a limited citizenship did not improve its effect.
When the eight commissioners sent
from Scotland to assist at the marriage were on their way home, a special
epidemic seemed to break out among them, which killed four out of the
eight at Dieppe, and their death was as naturally attributed to poison as
the disappearance of watches in a London mob is attributed to
pocket-picking; it was maintained that they knew some facts about the
affairs of the marriage which it was desirable that they should not have
an opportunity of communicating to the Scots Estates.
These facts fitting in with the
method of the Regent’s government in Scotland, resistance and war came at
last. The Regents finding at the commencement that she might have the
worst of it, accepted in a very frank manner of a treaty, which she broke
on the first opportunity, and with a rapidity which had in it a sort of
deliberateness, since it showed that she did not yield reluctantly to sore
temptation, but acted on deliberate design. This united those who were
otherwise shy of each other, and a war, the events of which are well known
in history, broke forth against Popery and French influence.
The great turning-point in the
destinies of the British empire had now come, and to bring it on with the
tide depended on the skill of the English Government. The wounds of
Henry’s tyrannous invasions were still fresh. How narrowly England escaped
the wrong tack is shown in the later revelations from the State Paper
Office, which set forth a plan for declaring and enforcing the old feudal
claim of superiority over Scotland. So was that poor country pulled on the
other side. But, fortunately, the new Queen of England had advisers about
her who could read the tenor of old experience, and see that force was not
the way to make good the precious opportunity. Indeed, it behoved them to
be rid of their own fears before they bullied others. England was in
imminent danger. France had grand designs of annexation and empire; Spain
was relaxing her friendly grasp; and if these two Popish powers, with
Scotland at their service, fell on England, where would Elizabeth’s throne
be? The instructions to the English commissioners at the great treaty of
Chateau Cambresis might have given comfort to the Scots, had they known
the anxiety of their powerful enemy for peace with them. "We think the
peace with Scotland of as great moment for us as that with France, and
rather of greater; so, as to be plain with you, if either there should not
be a peace there fully concluded betwixt us and Scotland, we see not but
it were as good to leave the matter in suspense with the French as to
conclude with them, and to have no other assurance of the French but a
bare comprehension of Scotland." The French, it seems, were ready in their
haughty manner to stipulate for Scotland, but Cecil knew the temper of his
neighbours too well to be content with such an assurance. The instructions
come back to the topic, and press it on the commissioners: "And for our
satisfaction beside the matter of Calais, nothing in all this conclusion
with the French may in surety satisfy us, if we have not peace with
Scotland: and so we will that
ye shall plainly inform our said good brother’s
commissioners, and that with speed."
The Queen reminds her trusty
counsellors that they, "not ignorant of the state of our realm having been
much weakened of late with sickness, death, and loss by wars, can very
well consider how unmeet it is for us to continue in these manner of wars,
if we may be otherwise provided of a peace like to continue; and how fit
it is and necessary to have peace." The commissioners are directed at
great length to bully powerfully for the restoration of Calais. But the
real dangers visible, and the acute hungering for peace, squeeze out a
brief and agonising permission to sacrifice everything for peace: "We do
give you authority at the very last end, being as loath thereunto as may
be desired, rather than continue these wars, to make the peace as you best
and most honourably may, and as the difficulty of the time may serve, so
that we may have certainly peace with Scotland, with reservation of our
claims as well to Calais as to all other our titles, pensions, and
arrearages heretofore due by France."
The negotiation of the treaty was
attended by some incidents, ludicrous in themselves, and
far beneath the
dignity of history, yet curious as indicative of that stubborn pride which
bore up the Scots in all their difficulties and calamities. Where was the
treaty to be negotiated? Of course, England, the greater power, was not to
go to Scotland; but, on the other hand, Scotland refused so far to
acknowledge a superiority as to step over the border into England. On the
12th of May 1559, Bishop Tunstall writes to say, that they had extreme
difficulty in being absolutely certain of neutral ground, and "our first
meeting was in the midst of the river between us both; for the Scots do
regard their honour as much as any other king doth;" and he rather
naturally adds that he will not fail to be at the next meeting, "God
granting him health."
In some inexplicable manner the
Scots seem to have pulled too strong in the matter of the meeting-place
for their diplomatic opponents, for on the 5th of January the Earl of
Northumberland makes this ludicrous complaint to Cecil: "They were ready
to meet the Scottish commissioners on the first day, on the bounders that
are in the midstream; but they claimed customs, and caused the messengers
to go to and fro so often, that they forced the English commissioners to
come over the water into Scottish ground, or else would not have met at
all."
Peace being established, the next
step was the dissolution of the old French League and a fusion of
interests with England. We have now, thanks to the documents published by
Mr Stevenson, a minute insight into the difficult and perilous course of
hints and promises and bargains which constitute the diplomacy of this
revolution. The gradual unfolding of the mysteries is exceedingly curious,
and so exciting as to carry a reader with ease over the six hundred pages
already issued, and make him long for the rest. The general picture left
in the mind is a vision of the cluster of sagacious men who surrounded the
young Queen’s throne, discovering in the condition of Scotland a tower of
strength which had only to be honestly occupied in that hour of peril, but
baffled and paralysed by the perfidy and caprices of their mistress. She
wanted them to do everything, but to do it on their own responsibility
without any authority from her; and, indeed, with the certainty that at
any moment, when it suited her policy or caprice, she would assert that
they acted the part of rebels and traitors, and "in-top" them, to use a
favourite expression of hers, without remorse. Cecil was provoked almost
beyond endurance and proper respect to his royal mistress, when he found
that a few thousand pounds would do the business, yet could not get them.
Hints, indeed, were thrown out that
it would be good service in her advisers to invest some of their own cash
in the adventure; but their patriotism was not strong enough to induce
them to part with what under no circumstances would be repaid, while it
suspended over their heads a charge of treason.
There was one feature, indeed, in
the affair, which the Queen intensely disliked. It had a very ugly
resemblance to the backing of subjects in rebellion against their
sovereign—a kind of proceeding against which she had fundamentally rooted
objections. She tried in vain to get the matter put into the shape of a
war of succession, in which she could advocate the cause which she might
acknowledge as the rightful sovereign’s. The heir of the house of
Hamilton, who, as the descendant of James II., was next heir to the crown,
had many allurements thrown in his way to start as king; but he was
unequal to the occasion. Murray—afterwards the Regent—was spoken to, and
it is pretty clear that that sagacious and cautious statesman, had he
chosen to run risks before his sister’s return, might have had a chance of
gaining a crown about equivalent to his chance of retaining a head to wear
it on.
Among the somewhat clumsy projects
for giving unacknowledged assistance to the Protestant and English party
in Scotland was to get a body of English soldiers induced to cross the
Border, and then to proclaim them rebels for breaking the peace with
France and Scotland—rebels who must needs fight where they were, since
they could not return to England. One cheap and rather effective method of
stirring up the Scots was to ply them with news of the bloody intentions
of France; and, so far as intentions went, they could not well be too
highly coloured.
Kirkaldy of Grange, who afterwards
cut some figure in politics, is revealed in these papers as one of the
most active and ingenious agents in the national revolution. His hand
appears before the conclusion of the treaty of Chateau Cambresis. The Earl
of Northumberland wrote, on 11th February 1559, to Queen Elizabeth, that
"one William Kirkaldy, a Scotchman, came to his brother to Norham and
entered into communication for abstinence of wars, to the intent that
peace might follow." Three months afterwards, when matters had practically
advanced a step or two, we find him writing to Sir Henry Percy that the
Protestant gentry, after the Queen Regent, Mary of Guise, had played them
false, "have gathered themselves together, and have pulled down all the
friaries within their bounds." "Herefore," he continues, "I pray you let
me understand what will be your mistress’s part, if we desire to be joined
in friendship with her; for I assure you there was never a better time to
get our friendship nor at this time; therefore make labours, and lose no
time when it is offered." Two months afterwards, when the rising against
French influence was in still better shape, he wrote to Cecil intelligence
thus rendered: "At present they dare not make the matter known to many,
for fear of sudden disclosing the secrecy of their purpose; for the Queen
Regent already suspects that there is some intelligence with England in
this case, insomuch that she has spoken openly that there is a servant
sent from the Earl of Northumberland to the Earl of Argyle and the Prior.
Also some of their number are poor, and corruption by money is feared, but
in the end they fear them not. If these latter were removed from their
council, they would not be much weaker, as the hearts of the whole barons
and commonalty are so bent to this action, and so influenced against
France, that if any of the nobility would decline—of which they see no
appearance— they could not withdraw their friends nor servants from the
professing of Christ and the maintaining of the liberty of their country."
Co-operating with Kirkaldy was a
more potent spirit—the great John Knox, who had just returned from tasting
the tender mercies of France as a galley-slave. In July, while Cecil had
still no others but Kirkaldy and Knox committed to him, he wrote an
extremely cautious letter to Sir Henry Percy, observing that it was
misliked that no better personages had opened themselves than these two,
being private persons; though Knox had got to himself a position of no
small credit. Of him it is said, "He desireth, in his letter to me, to
have licence to come hitherward, wherein it is ordered that he should thus
use it. For his coming hitherward, it may be permitted to him, so as it be
used with secrecy and his name altered; for otherwise the sequel will be
fruitless, yea, very hurtful. Ye may appoint him to come to my house,
called Burley, near Stamford (where I mean to be about the 24th or 25th
inst.) If he come, changing his name, he may be directed not to come
through Stamford, but on the back side. If his chance should be to come
before my coming thither, he may have this paper included, whereby he
shall be there used to his contentation."
It would have been of questionable
safety to himself and his friends had Knox ventured upwards of three
hundred miles into England to negotiate, having to return again to
Scotland. The first embassy, however, was conducted by him. We have his
powers in eleven articles of a very distinct and practical kind, without
too much admixture of religion. In the most comprehensive and emphatic of
them he is authorised to say for his countrymen—" That they and their
posterity will bind themselves to be enemies to the enemies and friends to
the friends of the English, if they thoroughly agree in this league; and
that they will never contract with France without the consent of the
English, so as to be united with them in one body, so that neither can
make war nor peace without the consent of the other."
With credentials of this momentous
import in his pocket, Knox touched English ground by taking boat to Holy
Island, where Crofts picked him up, taking him for secret conference to
Berwick, whence his entertainer wrote to Cecil, giving as much of the
matter as he could trust to a despatch, and observing that it could not be
carried out "without charges—and, peradventure,
cum sudore et sanguine;
therefore the matter requires good deliberation, and what aid to be given,
and what charges, and when to spend and when to spare." |