Less knightly and
chivalric than Sir William Kirkaldy, the French general did not return
an answer to the defiance; and thereupon the sender of it prepared for
summary and signal vengeance. During the whole time of this wanton
invasion into a peaceful and industrious district, the force under the
orders of Kirkaldy were but a u handful,” indifferently armed, and
ill-provided ; yet with these he had effectually retarded, and often
vanquished and cut off, d’Oisel’s well-appointed troops, fighting them
before every village, tower, and cottage—making them literally gain the
ground by inches, and at a fearful expense of blood.
Captain James Cullayne, a famous Scottish officer of the queen’s, (whose
name will appear prominently at a future period,) was appointed to
supply the invaders with provisions; for which purpose he made several
voyages with two armed crayers or sloops between Leith and the shores of
Fife, where all was ruin and desolation.
From Torrybum and Kinghorn, d’Oisel marched along the coast to Wemyss,
as usual giving all to fire and sword, and sending forth companies in
succession to plunder the neighbouring estates.
Spurred on by revenge, Kirkaldy was on the alert, as were the Master of
Lindesay and the Laird of Craig-hall, with their vassals, Early one
morning, the first observed Captain l’Abast, a Swiss in the service of
France, march from Kinghorn with his company of one hundred harquebusses,
to plunder the estate of Dunikier, which lies to the northward of
Kirkaldy. Before the dawn had brightened, the Laird of Grange had his
mounted jackmen, armed with their long lances, twohanded swords, and
calivers, posted in ambush on the Switzer’s line of march; while
Lindesay and Craighall, at the head of a select party of their
retainers, were concealed close by to aid in the eneounter.
Kirkaldy’s impatient troopers remained in close cover until the
unsuspecting l’Abast and his company had marched fully one mile distant
from Kinghornj'Vhen, the French being close to the thickets in which
they were concealed, a signal was given, and to the astonishment of
l’Ahast, the lances of the dreaded Kirkaldy filed forth at full speed
upon his view. To form and to charge were the work of an instant!
“Provoked by the cruelty of the French,” observes Buchanan, “utterly
unmindful of their own safety, and wholly intent on the destruction of
their enemies using no other weapons than their horsemen’s lances—they
(ultimately) bore down all that were in their way.”
The moment he saw Kirkaldy’s horsemen in their shining jacks appear,
l’Abast, like a skilful soldier, threw his company into the ruined and
deeayed village of Glameshouse, situated among the steep and arid rocks,
broomy hills, and sandy scaurs near the picturesque old burgh of
Kinghorn, which had then the venerable tower of St Leonard crowning its
scattered lines of steep and straggling alleys. L’Abast posted some of
his soldiers in the ruins of the village; others occupied the place of
Glames, with its court and yards, from thence, in conjunction with those
behind the kail-yard walls and leafless hedges, they opened a brisk
harquebussade upon the assailants, who were instantly upon them.
Fighting less for honour than life, the French defended themselves with
all their national spirit; the horsemen were repulsed, and many saddles
were emptied. Young David Kirkaldy, a knight named Robert Hamilton, and
others, were unhorsed, and rolled in the dust severely wounded.
Infuriated on beholding his brother shot by his side, and his soldiers
recoiling on every hand, “Fy!” exclaimed Kirkaldy—"Fy! let us not live
after this day! Shall we retreat from a band of dastardly French
scybalds? Forward!”
Animated by his gallant bearing, once more the fierce jackmen returned
to the charge. Goading on their panting horses, they leaped the ruined
barriers, spearing all that were within reach of their long lances;
while Craighall and the Master of Lindesay beat down the gates, and,
bursting in among them, a furious hand-to-hand combat ensued. Both
parties were equally animated by religious and political hatred; but
despair endued the French with the courage of lions. Lindesay, whose
horse had been shot under him, rushed with his lance upon l’Abast; the
point glanced off the polished mail of proof, and the Master fell; but,
suddenly recovering, and animated by fresh rage, he bore the Switzer
backward by main force. The latter defended himself with his partisan
for a thne with the utmost resolution and valour, refusing to take
quarter; until Lindesay, in his fury, relinquished the lance for his
two-handed sword, and, with one blow on the gilded helmet, cleft l’Abast
through steel and bone to the gorget. Fifty of his soldiers lay
weltering in their blood around him; while the rest, upon laying down
their arms, were by Kirkaldy sent prisoners of war to Dundee. After this
the French became more wary in their marauding expeditions.
General d’Oisel, the Count de Martigues, and their comrades, made their
head-quarters at the village of Wemyss, and probably occupied the fine
old castle of the same name, which is perched upon a rock forty feet
high, jutting out among the vast caverns of that romantic shore. A year
or two afterwards, Queen Mary had her first interview with Darnley in a
room of that stately old fortalice.
It was now the depth of winter : the lochs were frozen, the bleak
Lomonds and the deep valleys of Fifeshire were covered with a mantle of
snow, the ancient roadways, which run straight over hill and glen, were
buried many feet deep; and the steel-clad Frenchmen, unused to so cold a
climate, underwent innumerable toils and hardships.
After sacking Wemyss and the old royal burgh of Dysart to their perfect
satisfaction, a debate arose among the French officers, as to whether
they should march against Kirkaldy of Grange and the Prior of St
Andrews, or proceed on their course of devastation towards Cupar, the
scene of the broken treaty. In consequence of the rapidity and
uncertainty of Kirkaldy’s manoeuvres, and the deep state of the roads,
which equally retarded the march of their heavily-armed cavalry and
rapid transmission of their cannon, it was decided they should march
first to St Andrews, and from thence to Cupar.
They had long been expecting succours from France, and on tidings
reaching Wemyss that a strange fleet was visible off the mouth of the
Firth, they became so elevated that, forgetting the fate of l’Abast and
his company, and that his destroyers still hovered about them, they
resolved to march at once for the purpose of reaching the county town,
where there was a considerable muster of the adherents to the
Congregation.
Moving eastward by the beautiful shores of the Forth, on the 15th of
January 1560, they passed successively the now deserted burgh of Methil,
and the pretty villages of Leven, Lower Largo, and Buckhaven, (the last
hut recently formed by a colony of industrious Netherlander, whom the
house of Wemyss had permitted to settle there.) Galled every pace of the
way by Kirkaldy’s skirmishing troopers, after a semicircular march of
ten miles round the hay of Largo, on reaching the promontory of
Kincraigie, a rocky eminence shelving downwards to the Forth, they
discerned u eight great ships, of the first rate, at sea; these they
concluded to have the long-expected reinforcements on hoard, and, in
honour of their arrival, fired seaward a salute with their great
culverins from the brow of the hill. Their feu de joie and
congratulations were somewhat premature, as the strange harks were the
fleet of the English admiral, Winter, hearing gallantly up the Firth of
Forth to assist the Scottish lords in besieging Leith, to which Lord
Grey of Wilton was marching from the Borders with auxiliaries. On
beholding St George’s red cross, and discovering that the ships were
those of Elizabeth, the French, overwhelmed with mortification and
disappointment, broke into three separate columns, and retreated
westward with the utmost expedition, abandoning their bivouac at
Kincraigie, and leaving behind their dinners, which, no doubt, would
form a very acceptable repast for Kirkaldy’s exulting troopers, within
whose sight the English admiral made capture of Captain Cullayne’s two
little vessels.
One division of the French retired to Kinghom, another to Burntisland,
and a third retreated so far as Dunfermline, which was then enclosed by
walls, defended by four ports or gates, and an ancient castle
overhanging the wooded vale of Pittencrief. Grange and his squadron
briskly followed up this party, and, in the disorderly retreat, amply
avenged the destruction of his house by the numbers he slew or captured
on every hand. Forming a junction, d’Oisel and the Count de Martigues'
continued their retreat towards Stirling; but, ere they reached
Tullibody, the relentless Kirkaldy had pushed in advance of them with
his six hundred lances, seized the ancient wooden bridge which spanned
the rapid and romantic Devon, and, by cutting it through, utterly
destroyed their retreat across the mountain-stream, then swollen by the
snows of winter. Not daring to enter the dark shelter of the wood of
Tullibody, d’Oisel’s soldiers, with no other covering than their armour,
bivouacked all night amid the snow, without food, fire, or tents, on the
dreary and extensive muir of Fotherick, where many of them were slain by
Kirkaldy’s troops, or perished under the accumulated agony of wounds,
cold, and exhaustion.
The islands or Inches, which in summer are so beautiful and fertile,
were then the haunt of the stormy petrel, and were buried completely
under the frozen snow, which covered the whole country, as far as their
eyes could see, from Tinto in Clydesdale to Ben Lomond in the country of
the clans, and from the hills of Fife to the towers and town of Stirling.
In the morning, the skilful French stripped the roof off the venerable
kirk of Tullibody, laid the rafters and planks across the ruined bridge,
crossed the water in the face of Kirkaldy, and escaped; but failed in
attempting to cross the Forth at Alloa, for the untiring pursuer was
close upon their rear.
Revenge and good generalship, as well as their natural inclination,
prompted them to make greater devastations in their retreat; and these
they carried to such excess, that Catholics and Protestants suffered
alike. It is related that a gay chevalier, richly armed, and wearing a
gilded morion and scarlet mantle, entered the house of a cottar at
Whyteside, demanding all the provisions it contained. The housewife
offered him all she could spare, craving that her meal and beef girnels
might not he emptied, as they contained the sole subsistence of her
children during the winter. The unscrupulous forager advanced at once to
ascertain the contents of the store 5 hut as he bent down, the wrathful
matron seized him by the legs, and, precipitating him head-foremost into
the gimel, resolutely held him there until he was suffocated by the
brine.
Death and disaster were the concomitants of their retreat; and, after
sustaining immense loss in their hourly skirmishes, the French, harassed
and exhausted with fatigue, and palled with excesses, reached the
beleaguered ramparts of Leith, minus the best and bravest of their
comrades.
In the same month Kirkaldy, with Lord James Stuart, the Master of
Lindesay, and a party of horse, re-entered Fife, and, riding to Wester
Wemyss, surprised the laird of the castle, and took him prisoner Field,
Meffen, Balnmto, and Balgonie, four other of the lesser barons who were
unfavourable to the cause, were also captured and sent to St Andrews. In
an encounter which took place near the lakes of Lundie in Angus,
Kirkaldy received a severe wound, which probably incapacitated him from
taking an active share in the famous siege of Leith. A bullet passed
through his corslet, doublet, and shirt, and, entering the left breast,
"stuck in one of his ribs,” by which the Congregation lost his services
for a time.
The queen-regent—a princess of prudence and intrepidity, of gentleness
and humanity, when not led astray by bigotry and devotion to the
interests of France—now overcome by the cares of state and a deadly
illness, retired into the castle of Edinburgh, while the siege of her
French mercenaries in Leith was pushed with the utmost vigour.
The operations were now confined to that seaport: d’Esse, the general,
with d’Oisel, de Martigues, Jacques de la Brosse, and other officers,
with their French and Sc'ottish soldiers, were closely blockaded. The
Scots of the Congregation—consisting of eleven peers, one hundred and
twenty lesser barons, with twelve thousand soldiers—and the English
army, six thousand strong, under Lord Gray, had invested the place on
every side. The numbers of these forces are variously stated by
different authors; but their batteries were formidable, and mounted with
heavy ordnance. The defence was obstinate, and protracted for nearly six
months. Trained to war, and inured to arms and discipline, these men
were the veterans of Francis I. and Henry II., and their martial
obstinacy gave infinite trouble to the less skilful besiegers.
During the leaguer, Mary of Guise died of a lingering illness, after
having an affecting interview with the leaders of the Congregation, to
whom she lamented the fatal result of those counsels she had so rashly
followed; and, with all the candour of which her generous mind was
capable, confessed the errors of her administration, begged them
forgiveness with touching humility, and expired. She died unregretted;
but all men spoke gently of her memory, save the unforgiving Knox. Soon
afterwards, the French soldiers, who had defended themselves so
successfully against the combined force of Scotland and England, were
withdrawn by a treaty of peace, which was concluded at Edinburgh on the
5th July 1560, between the plenipotentiaries of Elizabeth and those of
the King of France.
In common with many of the wise and well disposed among his countrymen,
Sir William Kirkaldy was well convinced of the inutility and danger of
the French league and alliance to Scotland. Though no man could then
have foreseen that the time would come when Scotland, deprived of all
her national institutions and dignity, would silently sink to the rank
of a mere province, by the intrigues of a few base and time-serving
peers, he was perfectly aware of the advantage to be derived from a
league, offensive and defensive, with England,—a measure which the
barbarous policy of the ferocious Edward I. and his grasping successors
had rendered so intensely obnoxious to the Scottish people, and which,
until the era of the Reformation, had been overlooked by both nations to
a great extent.
Kirkaldy’s efforts contributed greatly to the formation of that dubious
friendship which subsisted between the able ministers of the cold and
hollow-hearted Elizabeth, and the stern and intolerant Scottish
Reformers, but without which it is doubtful whether the Reformation
would have been so easily effected.
As a recompense for the losses sustained by his family in these unhappy
wars, on the new faith being fully established, he obtained a gift of
the ancient castle of Wester Kinghorn, which stands on an eminence above
Burntisland. It was the same place which d’Oisel had seized, and was
built in 1382 by the Duries of that Ilk, whose coat armorial was in
those days visible above the gateway. |