By this time the citizens
of St Andrews had been roused by the numerous retinue expelled from the
castle; the alarm-bells were rung, and the burghers, (by whom Beatoun
was greatly beloved, notwithstanding his tyranny,) led by their provost,
Sir James Learmonth of Dairsie, surrounded the castle, and, crowding at
the margin of the moat, clamoured for scaling-ladders, and to be led to
the assault, if the cardinal was not instantly shown to them.
“What have ye done unto our lord the cardinal?” they loudly demanded;
“have ye slain him? let us see our lord the cardinal.”
From the lofty ramparts Norman Leslie scoffingly advised them to return
to their houses, saying that their “lord the cardinal” had got the
reward of his crimes, and they were troublesome fools for demanding to
see a dead man. This answer only served to enrage them more; and they
cried “We will never depart until we have seen him!” But as they spoke,
the corpse of Beatoun, stripped, bloody, and ghastly, was indecently
suspended over the walls of the fore-tower—“even out of the very place
where before he had so exultingly beheld the execution of George Wishart.”
“There is your god!” exclaimed Norman Leslie; “and, now that we have
satisfied ye, begone to your houses!”
Upon this the appalled burgesses retired, murmuring vengeance, their
Lord Provost, who was in the interest of the conspirators, manifesting
no inclination to lead them to the assault. Contemplating this barbarous
deed with the horror which it naturally excites, the great courage and
conduct of the perpetrators fail to excite our admiration; yet,
execrable as the affair was, Leslie and Carnbee were soon able to
assemble a numerous band to defend the deed of blood.
That “godly fact,” as Knox exultingly calls it, had no sooner been
committed, than the rage of these Reformers was extended to the
inanimate remains of the cardinal. Pitscottie and others record an
ensuing episode, too offensive to be repeated, but very indicative of
the spirit which animated the vassals of Kirkaldy and Rothes. “These,”
exclaims Knox, with a triumph bordering on impiety, “these are the works
of our God, whereby he would admonish the tyrants of this earth.”
According to Balfour, after Beatoun had lain salted for nine months in
the vault of the sea-tower, (of which a description is given in a
preceding chapter,) he was obscurely interred in the convent of the
Blackfriars at St Andrews.
The tidings of his death spread rage and consternation among the
Catholics of Europe; in their eyes it was a deed of the utmost sacrilege
and horror ; while to the persecuted Protestants it sounded like a
tocsin of hope, and was only viewed as a just retribution for the fate
of Wishart, and as a deadly blow to the vast power of the established
church. John Knox hesitated not to write “merrily” on the subject; hut
the more elegant and witty knight of the Mount wrote with better taste—
“As for the cardinal, I grant
He was the man we well might want;
God will forgive it soon.
But of a truth, the sooth to say,
Although the loon be well away,
The deed was foully done.”
It is somewhat remarkable, that on the very
morning when Beatoun was slain, some Scottish exiles at Ripperwyck, in
Norway, who could not have been aware of what was acting at St Andrews,
solemnly burned the cardinal's effigy on the sea-shore, “making his
portraitoure of a great oaken blocke, with his name upon it, affixed to
a paper.”
Several likenesses of Cardinal Beatoun with his baretta are to be seen
cut in freestone, in bold relief, on the walls of an ancient tower built
by him near Monimail.
The old Laird of Grange and his three other sons, James, ( Thomas, and
David, joined the successful conspirators in the evening, adding their
vassals and influence to the garrison of the castle. Any compunction he
or his sons might have felt for having abetted Beatoun’s death, was
completely cured by the discovery of certain papers in the primate’s
repositories, from which it appeared “that Norman Leslie, sheriff of
Fife, John Leslie, father’s brother to Norman, the Lairds of Grange,
elder and younger, Sir James Learmonth of Dairsic, and the Laird of
Kaith, should either have been slain or else taken,” and been placed as
prisoners at the mercy of him that Carnbee had slain.'
The Melvilles of Raith joined the Kirkaldys and Lesbes next day.
About Easter 1547, John Knox came to St Andrews and joined their
standard, bringing with him his three pupils, George and Francis
Douglas, sons of the Laird of Longniddry, and Alexander Cockburn,
younger of Ormistoun. Hamilton, Beatoiun’s successor, had long been
intent on Knox’s destruction; and being compelled to flee from place to
place, the Reformer led a vagrant and miserable life, haunted
continually by the terrors of the dungeon and stake, until, urged by
danger, by the advice of his friends, and his own inclination, he sought
an asylum in the castle of St Andrews—a circumstance deemed by some
equal to participation in Beatoun’s murder, and which has given rise to
charges of the most serious nature against his clerical character. Other
persons of great note had by this time joined the growing faction;
including Sir David Lindesay of the Mount, John Rough, a celebrated
Reformed preacher, whom Dempster characterises as u an impious and vile
apostate; ”Henry Balneaves of Halliill, (who had been made
clerk-treasurer by Sir James Kirkaldy,) a senator of the College of
Justice, and secretary of state; Henry Primrose, the Laird of Pitmillie,
an immediate relation of Beatoun ; Sir John Auchinleck, and many
gentlemen of the surname of Melville. In all, they mustered only one
hundred and fifty armed men. Well aware that they had committed a
fearful violation of all Divine and human laws, assured of the thunders
of the church, the vengeance of the government, and of Beatoun’s
kinsmen, they rushed into further rebellion and defiance. The regent
immediately sent messengers with tidings of the event into France, from
whence he expected galleys of war, soldiers, artillery, and engineers to
assist him in reducing this little band of desperate insurgents, as the
mass of the Scottish people were averse to drawing their swords against
them.
He was on the western borders with an army of observation, expecting an
invasion from England, when the first notice of the catastrophe reached
him. With other military vassals of the crown, the Earl of Rothes was
with him; and with one voice the nobles demanded that he should be
brought to trial, as cognisant of his son’s crime, ere he was permitted
to continue under the royal standard with soldiers whose honour was
untainted. A court was held; its verdict fully acquitted him of having
had the least knowledge of the Master’s designs; and then the army
marched towards England.
Though outwardly the regent expressed the utmost grief for Beatoun’s
death, he must have felt inwardly the highest exultation. He could not
forget that his name had been the first on that black muster-roll of
nobles doomed to destruction by the cardinal; he was now freed from the
stern admonitions of a fearless monitor, and the annoying surveillance
of one whose mind was superior by a thousand degrees to his own.
However, he issued a proclamation, thirteen days after the murder,
citing the Kirkaldys of Grange, Norman Leslie, and their companions, to
compear before the assembled parliament of Scotland on the 30th of July,
under penalty of treason. George earl of Huntly, who had succeeded
Beatoun as Lord Chancellor, affixed the great seal of the kingdom to the
mandate.
It was now the midsummer of 1546, and the season was one of intense
heat.
On the 11th June an edict was issued, forbidding all communication with
the castle of St Andrews under pain of death. For those successive
fulminations the bold spirits therein cared little: they possessed a
strong and magnificent castle, with all the cardinal’s treasure, jewels,
church ornaments, rich hangings, gold and silver plate, munition of war,
artillery, armour, provisions, and rich household stuff of every
description; they had the regent’s son as hostage; and, finding
themselves outlawed, they refused to listen to any terms of
accommodation whatever. The fleet of their friends, the Protestant
English, commanded the sea in their vicinity, and could at any time
afford them supplies. To secure further support from the south, William
Kirkaldy, Balneaves of Halbill, and John Leslie, were sent as envoys to
Henry VIII., and returned in safety, with assurances of assistance, on
condition of their promoting the intended marriage between their young
queen and the Prince of Wales. An English ship brought them back to
share the dangers of the blockade and siege, and they had with them an
Italian soldier of fortune, who was supposed to be very skilful in all
the art of war. Kejoiced at the death of Beatoun, Henry VIII. liberally
supplied the insurgents with money, provisions, and stores; and to aid
them in their rebellion, six ships of war, commanded by Tyrell his
admiral, anchored on several occasions within gunshot of the ramparts of
St Andrews. To Balneaves, Henry remitted £1480 for the subsistence of
the garrison; and in the succeeding March and May, £450 for himself. As
they were unable to draw any rent from their estates, he sent £200 to
Sir James Kirkaldy, and £280 to the Master of Kothes. The allowance of
the garrison was eightpence per diem for the soldiers, forty of whom
were troopers, and had horses to forage.
The parliament met at Edinburgh on the 4th August 1546, and the eight
Kirkaldys of Grange, with all others within the castle of St Andrews,
were solemnly declared forfeited traitors; and the great weakness of the
regent’s government is strongly evinced by the fact, that one hundred
and fifty brave men were able to keep him so long and so fully at
defiance.
Many of them were young in years, and all were rash; exulting in their
successful vengeance, and animated by that inborn love of tumult and
daring for which the Scots of those days were so eminently
distinguished, they broke out into yet more open rebellion. They laid
the city of St Andrews, and the whole adjacent country, under blackmail
; and the tenor of the lives of some of them became one continued scene
of riot and debauchery, "oppressing all the country,” saith Pitscottie,
“with spoiling of goods and ravishing of women, notwithstanding the
manifold admonitions of those godly men who were with them.” Knox
severely reprehended their profligacy, and attributed to it the violent
ends to which some of tbeir lives came; and, indeed, it is rather
remarkable that nearly all of the eonspirators perished by violenee.
They plundered, wasted, and ravaged the whole adjacent parishes; and if
the stem exhortations of the furious Knox failed to restrain them, it
was evident that nothing short of cannon-balls would do so; and the
Scottish government prepared for war. During these proceedings, John
Rough, who had acted as their chaplain, made his eseape into England,
where, after endeavouring to subsist by preaching and knitting caps and
hose, he was burned in Smithfield by Bonner bishop of London.
On the 21st of August the Regent Arran proclaimed, by sound of trumpet,
that all the vassals of the crown should muster by the 29th of the
month, to blockade the castle of St Andrews; though he did not feel much
anxiety either concerning its reduction or the punishment of its
garrison, hut fears for the safety of his eldest son, (whom he wished to
unite to the little Queen Mary.) Incited by the clamours of an indignant
priesthood, and the religious importunity of the queen-dowager, he
displayed the royal standard before the fortress, and invested it with a
considerable body of troops. The Catholic clergy taxed themselves in the
sum of £2000 monthly, to enable him to succeed.
He had with him several pieces of brass artillery; two of these were of
very heavy ealibre, and familiarly known among the soldiers as Deaf Meg
and Crook Mow. His train battered at intervals the strong walls for
three months, but without success: the cannon-shot of those days, being
generally round stones lapped in sheet-lead, were not of sufficient
weight to breach a rampart. The regent was so wavering in his
proceedings, that he even offered to restore their lands and heritages;
but with one voice the besieged refused to accept his accommodation.
Upon this, he sent four pieces of heavy cannon to the flank of his
western trenches, for the purpose of destroying the sea-tower; but
notwithstanding that from these guns a constant fire was maintained all
day, from seven in the morning until four in the afternoon, the
cannoneers only succeeded in beating down the battlements and top-house,
and unroofing some buildings next the sea. The moment the rampart gave
way, from its corbells the royal cross-bowmen shot their feathered
balistae with deadly precision at the unsheltered besieged, who,
terrified by the falling ramparts and showers of heavy slates which
descended under the concussion of every cannon-ball, were compelled to
abandon the sea-tower with confusion and precipitation. But from other
parts their cannon fired briskly on the regent’s trenches, and slew his
master of artillery, John Borthwick, and killed and wounded many others.
A secret paper, addressed to Balneaves of Halhill, the conspirators’
agent with Henry VIII., gives a very minute account of this siege.
On the 17th December the Lyon herald sounded a trumpet before the walls,
bearer of a request from the regent that they would hear an offer of his
envoys, the justice-clerk and the provost of Aberdeen. Through these he
offered to permit their retaining the castle and his son as hostage,
until his promises of restoring the lands of Grange and others were
fully performed by deeds signed and sealed; hut he required that William
Kirkaldy, the heir of the ex-treasurer, should he placed in his hands,
as a pledge for their peaceable conduct. This they refused to accede to;
but offered him the younger sons of the Laird of Grange, James and David
Kirkaldy, who were accordingly sent to his camp 5 and it does not appear
that they were ever allowed to return, by which they escaped many
dangers and a long captivity abroad.
A desultory shooting of crossbows, and firing of cannon and harquebusses,
was maintained for three months, without much slaughter on either side;
for strong ramparts, deep trenches, and armour of proof, were good
preservatives of life and limb. The besieged were sometimes straitened
by want of provisions; but generally flesh, flour, and wine were
supplied them in the night by their secret friend, the Laird of
Monkquhanny, at a private postern near the kitchen tower, where a boat
could at any time, when the tide was full, come close to the eastern
rocks. Monkquhanny’s son, the famous and changeable Sir James Balfour,
was then serving with the insurgents, having repaired to the castle soon
after the death of Beatoun.
The troops of the regent, like himself, were but coldly disposed in the
affair; while Angus, Gleneairn, Marischal, Cassillis, Bothwell, Fleming,
and others, who led them, were all secretly in the interest of Henry,
who had gained them by gross bribery to aid him in the promotion of that
marriage which was so obnoxious to the nation; and yet those men, who
sold themselves so basely, again and again, to further the grasping
ambition of a foreign despot, were the boasted leaders of our Scottish
Reformation. Judging by the sums he received from Henry, old Sir James
of the Grange appears to have sold his political influence as freely as
any of his colleagues.
While the young heir of Arran was detained by this hand of successful
revolters, their threats against him, if driven to extremity, must have
had a powerful effect on a mind so wavering and undecided as his
father’s. Their ally, Henry VIII., was extremely anxious to get this
young lord into his hands, that by potion or dagger he might he rid of
him for ever, as he dreaded Arran’s project of uniting bun to the infant
queen—a measure which, if carried into effect, would completely have
destroyed his favourite matrimonial union, which the cardinal had so
long opposed; and it is to the honour of Norman Leslie and his
companions that they kept the young heir of Hamilton in their own safer
custody.
On the appearance of a pestilence in the city, the regent, glad of a
decent pretext for furling his standard, prepared to raise the blockade
and retire. Previous to this, the wild spirits in the castle had become
tired of a year’s confinement within its narrow compass, and finding
themselves latterly almost deserted by their abettor, Henry of England,
and doubtful of their safety, if by treachery, starvation, or force,
they fell into the power of the parliament, they concluded an armistice,
the leading conditions of which were:—
First. That the regent should procure them absolution from the pope,
Paul III.
Second. That hostilities should cease until the decision of his holiness
became known.
Third. That hostages should be retained in the regent’s hands to insure
the capitulation of the fortress, and release of his son, on the arrival
of the papal absolution.
These articles were agreed to, although neither of the parties were
sincere in the matter; but immediately after, the regent dismissed the
crown vassals without achieving the object for which he had mustered
them, and returned to Edinburgh to attend the meeting of parliament.
How so small a body of men could be able, for so many months, to defy
his power, can only be accounted for by the fact that, in addition to
their being indisposed to hostilities against the revolters, the
Scottish leaders were not very proficient in the art of assailing
fortified places; while the weapons, discipline, and martial impetuosity
of their soldiers often unfitted them for the protracted operations of a
regular siege.
On the truce being agreed to, the garrison of the castle joyfully issued
forth, and openly associated with the citizens of St Andrews ; but their
release from durance induced them to renew their old excesses in the
most outrageous manner, until those champions of religious regeneration
became regarded only in the light of libertine desperadoes.
Sir James Kirkaldy of Grange, his three brothers, and four sons, were
all under doom of forfeiture and outlawry. |