In January next year, the
marriage of John lord Maxwell with Lady Elizabeth Douglas, daughter of
the Earl of Angus, was celebrated at Dalkeith; and in honour of the
nuptials of his fair young kinswoman, Morton resolved to give a splendid
banquet, in his baronial castle of Dalkeith, to the lords of the king’s
faction. A long train of sumpter-horses, bearing his rich household
plate, a quantity of venison, wines, and other viands, on their
circuitous way from Leith, were intercepted and earned off by a party of
horse despatched by Kirkaldy for that express purpose; and some of the
earl’s valets, who were foolhardy enough to draw their swords, were
speared and slain by the foraging mosstroopers.
Morton cared little for the loss of his men, hut that of his plate he
could never forgive. At the head of a body of infantry, he entered Fife
and overran Kirkaldy’s barony and estates, laying waste with fire and
sword the lands of Grange, of Tyrie, Balbairdie, Pitkennie; and, after
destroying the houses and slaying three of the principal vassals,
returned, as d’Oisel had done before, laden with booty. But he gained
nothing by this revengeful raid; for on the 8th of February, the same
day on which his property in Fifeshire was destroyed, Kirkaldy, who had
received tidings of Morton’s intentions, rode to Dalkeith at the head of
a party of horse. He entered it at four o’clock on a dark winter
morning, and destroyed the whole township by fire, slew ten of Morton’s
retainers, captured nine, and retired to Edinburgh, having lost only a
single trooper, and leaving the whole of Dalkeith in smouldering ruins,
from the crofts to the gate of the Lion’s Den. The estates of his
son-in-law, Femihirst, were afterwards overrun in revenge; and these
raids were popularly known as u the Lord Maxwell’s hand-fasting.”
In the same month Mr Carie, son of Lord Hunsdon, had arrived at the
castle, envoy from Elizabeth to its governor, craving that the city
might u he free to the king’s subjects but Kirkaldy and the loyalists
would know of no king. No pen can adequately describe the miseries
endured hy the peaceful portion of the citizens during the storm of
civil war which raged around them,*and the peculiar spirit of the time
is evinced by the fact of a drummer being sent to Leith, challenging
fifty men from that town to meet and fight an equal number from the
capital—a defiance never answered.
Kirkaldy’s soldiers made terrible havoc on the estates of their enemies
,* and now came those atrocities which, from being introduced by Morton,
were named The Douglas Wars—scenes of death and horror, in which both
parties were so lost to the principles of humanity, and the laws of
honour, that they appear to have become insane. It was not in the field
alone that their implacable vengeance was displayed; but for two months,
after every engagement, both parties banged their prisoners without
regard to mercy, age, rank, or justice. Morton strung up bis by fifties
on a gigantic gallows at the Gallowlee, midway between Leith and the
city; and the loyalists invariably displayed an equal number on a gibbet
which reared its ghastly outline on the Castlehill, in view of the
regent’s camp.
The brave Kirkaldy deplored this barbarous practice, as a reproach to
humanity and to Scotland: he wrote many letters to the Regent Mar,
expressive of his abhorrence for such proceedings ; but, ruled as that
good earl was by the ferocious Morton, his remonstrances were in vain,
and this war of terror continued until both parties, by the thinned
aspect of their ranks, began to feel severely the havoc they were
making.
Meanwhile the distresses of the hapless citizens increased. During the
severities of an inclement winter, the poor were driven from its closed
and hostile gates, where the pike glittered and the cannon ever frowned;
the houses of foes and fugitives were demolished, and their elaborate
fronts of ornamental oak torn down and sold for fuel at an exorbitant
price; a stone-weight of wood was bartered for a peck of meal; the arts
of peace were utterly abandoned; in the city and around it, the Sabbath
bell was heard no more, or rang only the call to arms; the fields lay
untilled, while the plough rusted in the grass-grown furrow; the
farm-horse was bestrode by the mailed trooper, or yoked to the clanking
culverin. The surrounding hamlets and villages had all been given to the
flames, and women and children fled from the bloody hearths where
fathers and husbands had perished beneath the sword of the destroyer—if
not dragged away to the wheel, the rack, or the gibbet. The poor peasant
who dared with his stores to approach the desolate and unused
market-place, was branded with hot iron like a slave, or hanged; and
even women, whom necessity forced on the same perilous errand, were
scourged, burnt on both cheeks, and hanged or drowned. Men heard even
the voice of the preacher and the word of God in fear and trembling; for
daily and nightly the galloping troopers, the booming cannon, and the
volleying harque-busses, the clash of armour, and the war-cry of God and
the Queen! rang among the dark wynds and desolate streets of the
capital. At one time, a hundred of its citizens fled to Leith, but were
driven back with blows and opprobrium, threatened with the cord as spies
and adherents of Mary, and returned to find the gates closed and their
houses demolished. Such were the horrors of the Douglas Wars, which
(save the butcheries of Cumberland) form the blackest chapter in our
Scottish annals.
Amid all this national misery, the cruel Elizabeth and her subtle
ministry continued their deep intrigues, and played off each fierce
faction against the other. By a secret pension she had secured the
adherence of Morton, who vowed never to furl his banner until the
loyalist cause was rendered hopeless by the fall of Edinburgh castle,
and the destruction of its governor. After the execution of the
unfortunate Norfolk, Elizabeth resolved, by every means, to destroy the
faction of her beautiful rival. Her innate avarice and caution prevented
her sending an army into Scotland, thus risking a defeat and a national
war; hut by her orders, Sir William Drury, the marshal of Berwick, and
Lord Hunsdon, entered into a correspondence with Kirkaldy, for the
purpose of shaking his loyalty; while Cecil, Lord Burleigh, wrote to his
old correspondent Lethington, with the same view.
Elizabeth proposed that Kirkaldy should formally yield the castle to the
Earl of Mar, promising that she would see him maintained in office as
its governor, with one hundred and fifty soldiers of his choice, in
addition to the ordinary garrison; but the honourable and prudent
soldier knew too well with whom he had to deal, and was not to be
deluded thus.
“To be guided by Elizabeth, or her councils,” said he, “would be to
prejudice my sovereign and my country;” and well would it have been for
Mary had he always held that opinion. The high tone he assumed intensely
disgusted and irritated the haughty Elizabeth against him. While she was
concerting plans of vengeance, there ensued a tedious correspondence,
which ended by Kirkaldy rejecting her offers, and openly despising the
threats of her envoys.
To enter into a detail of the battles, raids, skirmishes and outrages of
the four regencies, would require as many volmnes, and be rather foreign
from the present Memoirs, which are intended to be descriptive only of
the scenes in which the hero or his immediate friends were concerned.
Suffice it to say that the Highlanders—ever loyal and true—triumphed in
the north; Fernihirst and Buccleuch, with their bold mosstroopers,
rolled the whole fury of border war on the queen’s rebels in the south ;
Lord Semple was defeated in the west; Kirkaldy’s cannon held the capital
in complete subjection, while his soldiers overawed all Lothian, and so
by mid-summer 1572 the affairs of the captive queen were in a victorious
and flourishing condition. Kirkaldy received money, arms, and ammunition
repeatedly from the courts of France and Spain; and by his orders a
goldsmith of Edinburgh coined in the castle silver pieces of ten,
twenty, and thirty pence Scots, for the payment of the garrison and
queen’s troops.
During May and June there were many severe conflicts around Edinburgh,
but of these a brief notice will suffice.
Kirkaldy had released his kinsman Sir Archibald Napier, and permitted
him to retire to his estates in the province of Lennox; but his
fortalice of Merchiston, which stands about half a mile south of
Edinburgh, had been for some time previous occupied by a garrison of
king’s troops, who cut off all supplies coming to the city in that
direction. The tall outline of this old gray tower of the fourteenth
century, with its steep slated roofs and projecting battlements, is just
visible from the castle of Edinburgh, rising above the dark-green
copsewood, at the west end of the Burghmuir. From its lofty situation,
it overlooks the whole of that spacious common, the ancient muster-place
and campus Martins of the Scottish hosts; it commands a complete view of
the country spreading southward to the base of the heath-clad Pentlands,
as well as of the magnificent valley extending to the west—a
far-stretching landscape, where the smoke of Glasgow rises between the
faint blue bills of Stirling and Dumbarton. Altogether, its reduction
became of the utmost importance to the queen’s party.
Accordingly, on the 5th of May, a Captain Scougal, with a body of
pikemen and harquebussiers, marched against it; while Kirkaldy from his
south-west ramparts discharged forty pieces of cannon to cover the
attack. This cannonade, together with the fire of Scougal’s band, soon
drove the defenders of Merchiston from their outworks; the barbican wall
was stormed and demolished. Captain Scougal fell mortally wounded—but
his pikemen pressed bravely forward, driving the enemy into the
donjon-tower, from the loop-holes and battlements of which they shot
securely on the assailants. These, finding it impossible to dislodge
them, fired the stables and outhouses of the court-yard, to smoke them
forth.
At this crisis, a strong party led from Leith by the Laird of Blairquhan
rushed to the rescue. Disheartened by the death of their commander, on
their flank being assailed the harquebussiers retired towards the city,
furiously pressed by the enemy. Retreating by the quarries of
Bruntsfield, they skirted the great sheet of water called the Burgh
Loch, firing as they retired until they reached the hamlet of the
Sciennes, which they gave to the flames, and, favoured by the smoke and
confusion, escaped in safety. Blairquhan’s horse was shot under him, and
it was afterwards carried into the city—which, observes an old
journalist drily, “was no tocken of gude cheir theirin.”
On the 10th of June following, the Regent Mar laid siege to the castle
of Nidderie-Seaton, near Edinburgh, upon which Kirkaldy and the loyal
lords sent a strong force against Merchiston, for the double purpose of
gaining it and causing a diversion of the regent’s intentions. Led by
George Earl of Huntly, this party, with two heavy culverins, approached
Merchiston in the forenoon; and from two until four in the afternoon
these ordnance battered the square keep, till several breaches yawned in
its massive walls. Mean time the active troopers were scouring the
adjacant fields, from which they collected forty head of cattle ; while
cannon and caliver were plied against Merchiston with such success that
its occupiers beat a parley, and, as their captain was absent, offered
to surrender to the earl if he would permit them to march out with the
honours of war.
Glad to obtain possession of this obnoxious little fort-let on any
terms, Huntly assented; but unluckily, at that moment, the approach of
some peasants, drawn there by curiosity and the noise of the fire-arms,
startled his half disciplined soldiers, some of whom called aloud that
Morton and the king’s men from Nidderie were upon them ! Seized by a
panic, they began to retire ; and the undecided earl sent off his cannon
instantly to the city, among the southern suburbs of which his
retreating band were assailed by a party from Leith, who rushed upon
them with the utmost fury, and by one tremendous charge completed their
discomfiture. For a moment there was a shock and a conflict; the earl
had his horse killed under him by a shot from the walls of Holyrood
Palace, and then all became confusion. His soldiers threw down their
arms and fled to the city gates, which received them. Fifteen were slain
in cold blood after surrender. Many were taken prisoners, and driven
towards Leith in a close column—but goaded like a herd of cattle with
swords and pikes, beaten by staves and truncheons until they reached the
foot of the great gallows, where Morton instantly hanged them all! In
reprisal, fifty-six of his men, who were prisoners in the castle, were
gibbeted at the west end of the city by the loyalists, and this last
scene of atrocity closed the cruelties of the Douglas wars.
As the wretched citizens were now enduring the greatest misery, by want
of the most common articles of food, Kirkaldy sent Captain Hamilton with
a squadron of one hundred and fifty lances to forage. He succeeded in
collecting one hundred sacks of meal, and eighty head of oxen; but on
approaching Edinburgh with the valuable booty, the garrison of
Merchiston made a sudden sortie on one flank, while Sir Patrick Hume of
the Heugh, at the head of eighty horse, assailed them on the other.
Rendered desperate by danger and starvation, Hamilton’s little troop
fought bravely to secure both their retreat and their much-prized booty.
Deadly was the struggle that ensued, and they must have lost the fight
had not a party sallied from the city, and turned the fortune of the day
against the king’s men, who were compelled to retreat, leaving fifty
prisoners and twenty-seven slain behind them. Among these were two brave
knights of the name of Hume, Patrick of the Heugh, and Sir Patrick of
Polwarth, ancestor of the Earls of Marchmont. Of the loyalists one only
was slain ; he fell by a shot from the walls of Merchiston.
On the 5th of the same month (July) Kirkaldy suffered a great loss by
the death of John lord Fleming, a firm partisan of the queen : he was
struck by a random shot from the castle wall, and died a short time
afterwards at Biggar. As he was borne from the garrison in a litter, he
was nearly killed outright by the sudden descent of the portcullis, an
iron spike of which entered the head of a gentleman named Henry Balfour,
and slew him on the spot.
It was about tbis time that Elizabeth, who watched with increasing alarm
the success of Kirkaldy and his brothers in arms, proposed an armistice
for two months, which should secure the safety and honour of Mary’s
adherents. Accordingly her envoy Sir William Drury, who by old writers
is always accused of endeavouring to blow the flames instead of
quenching them, arrived at Edinburgh on the 18th of July. He halted for
a night at Bestalrig, and sent a trumpet to the city to announce his
arrival to the venerable Le Crocq, his diplomatic brother from France.
Weary of the horrors he had witnessed, and feeling for the starving
people, Kirkaldy was willing that—if possible—the war should cease until
Mary’s restoration, and the re-formation of a government on a solid
basis, affording peace and security to all. According to Melville, the
loyalists, u for their parts, desired no man’s goods, but only liberty
peaceably to enjoy their own livings. Grange desired that the regent
would pay certain debts contracted for repairing the castle and
artillery,” which debts he promised, in the presence of the Laird of
Tullybardine, to disburse.
Historians have considered it strange that so able a statesman as
Lethington should have consented to those peaceable measures, which were
ultimately to prove the ruin of his party, the destruction of himself
and of his friends. But he and Kirkaldy had long been branded by their
opponents as men of bbod, who obstinately refused even a breathing-time
to their bleeding and exhausted country; and it was to refute the
aspersion that they agreed to the “ abstinence,” just when famine in all
its gaunt horror was stalking among them, and gradually reducing both
parties to the utmost extremities. There was to be an entire cessation
of hostilities for two months, commencing from the 1st of August; and it
was expressly stated that, as soon as possible, the nobles and barons of
the realm should meet to deliberate on a general peace. It was signed on
the 30th of July, amid the acclamations of the people, and under a
joyous salute from the long-dreaded batteries of the castle. Immediately
afterwards, Chatelherault and Huntly, with other loyalist leaders, and
their forces, marched from the city, which was entered by the Earls of
Mar, Morton, and their troops from Leith. Contrary to the truce, they
placed a strong guard in the church of St Giles, disarmed all citizens
suspected of being queen’s men, and billeted soldiers at free quarters
every where. But Kirkaldy maintained a strict neutrality for the time,
and, aware of treachery, remained close within his formidable garrison,
which was ever on the alert, with closed gates and loaded cannon.
He and his skilful adviser, Maitland, were not permitted to remain long
ignorant of their sad mistake in agreeing to a truce. Mar, though
sincere in his wishes for Scotland’s peace and welfare, was completely
ruled and guided by the avaricious Morton, who longed greedily for the
rich estates of the queen’s adherents to maintain him in his career of
private and political profligacy,—in the intrigues with Mistress
Cullayne, Lady Helen Kirkaldy, and others. The former was so notorious,
that the bishop of Galloway feared not to reprehend him severely in his
discourses. The affair with Lady Helen will, to a considerable extent,
explain that deep-rooted inveteracy which existed between Kirkaldy and
Morton. The former was too punctilious and high-spirited to forgive such
an injury done to his family: Morton knew that well; and having obtained
the superiority of the lands of Grange in Fifeshire, he resolved by
every political wile, by every kind of legal and illegal duplicity,
openly or secretly, to accomplish the destruction of his gallant enemy
and the attainder of his family. Now, when too late, Kirkaldy began to
find the toils of the snarer closing around him.
Elizabeth’s late alliance with France had considerably cooled the
political interest of that false and fickle nation in Mary’s cause,
which was fast declining even at home— for nothing could be more
distasteful to the proud and jealous Scottish nobles than the
correspondence carried on by Kirkaldy, Huntly, and other loyalist
leaders, with the persecuting Duke of Alva and the Catholic court of
Madrid,* and fearful of a Spanish yoke, the English parliament,
participating in the same feeling, had severely voted the unhappy queen
of the Scots the greatest enemy to their nation.
Matters between the factions were in this state, when all Protestant
Europe was overwhelmed with consternation hy tidings of the barbarous
massacre at Paris on the 23d of August—the eve of St Bartholomew—when
thirty thousand French subjects were slaughtered in cold blood by their
kindred and countrymen—an event which, while it exhibits in strong light
the stern principles and dark intrigues of the Roman church, is
unmatched in the annals of religious atrocity.
The miserable Mary, pining in her English prison, was a Catholic, and
the terrible massacre of Bartholomew’s eve had the most fatal effect
upon her interests : it terrified the irresolute, and staggered her
adherents,— gained her the enmity of many, and cooled the warmth of all.
Horror and pity, grief and rage, animated the people by turns ; and,
participating in the general feeling of the nation—perhaps, too, feeling
the old prejudices of other days, which his stern father had instilled
into his mind, and recalling something of the spirit that animated him
when he drew his sword beneath the banner of the Congregation—Kirkaldy
is said to have been completely paralysed in his movements, to have
wavered in his adherence to Mary, and to have become still more anxious
that a happy peace should succeed the truce of the first of August.
According to agreement, the Estates, on the 27th September, met in the
old Tolbooth (the Heart of Mid-Lothian) in solemn council, to devise
measures for the restoration of peace and prosperity.1 John of Mar, the
regent, presided at this meeting, which, by the wicked artifices of
Morton, had been thus delayed until near the expiry of the second month.
On the second day of the assembly, Kirkaldy sent a gentleman of his
garrison with a document containing nine articles necessary for the
personal security of his officers, his soldiers, and himself, in case
they came to terms, (note H.) The seventh item required the Earl of
Morton to resign his superiority acquired over the estates of Grange.
The good Regent Mar was willing to accede to all Kirkaldy’s terms; but
his overruler Morton, to whom the seventh was particularly distasteful,
and who foresaw in the happy end of civil discord his own downfall, and
the probable rise of Maitland, bent his whole soul, energy, and
interest, against the threatened peace.2 His hand numbered fully five
spears for every one of the regent’s, and when his pride, wrath, and
avarice, were engaged, he became a most formidable ally or enemy to a
weak government. All who were in temporary possession of the estates of
queen’s men warmly concurred with him, and the good and pious intentions
of Mar were completely frustrated. Impeded thus, instead of restoring
peace to his distracted country, he was only able to procure a further
truce till the first day of the ensuing year.
A discovery of such avarice and ambition on the part of his friends and
advisers, had a powerful and fatal effect on the temper of this
patriotic and estimable noble; his spirit became broken, a settled
melancholy preyed upon his mind, and aggravated an illness under which
he had long been labouring. He attended a grand banquet given hy Morton,
at the castle of Dalkeith, after which he immediately became worse, and
departed hurriedly to Stirling, where he expired on the morning of the
29th October; and the popular voice loudly accused Morton of having
administered poison to him during dinner. Indeed, when we consider the
boundless ambition, insatiable avarice, and deliberate cruelty of this
wicked peer, the suspicions arising from the sudden death of Mar are not
to he wondered at.
All the worst qualities of Morton were eminently displayed in his
treatment of the unfortunate Earl of Northumberland, his friend and
benefactor when exiled in England, and whom (when in turn a fugitive) he
so basely sold to Elizabeth, who executed him at York. Kirkaldy was very
wroth with Femihirst and Buccleuch that they did not save the English
earl, when Morton had him at Jedburgh, in their immediate neighbourhood.
In November this year died the celebrated John Knox, who during his long
illness often bewailed, touchingly, the defection of Kirkaldy from the
party of the young king. As one of his oldest friends he sent him a
solemn message, which, coming from such a man, was in those days of
superstition considered prophetic. Calling Master David Lindesay,
minister of Leith to his bedside,—
“Go,” said the dying Reformer—“go to yonder man in the castle—he whom ye
know I have loved so dearly— tell him that I have sent ye once more to
warn him, in the name of God, to leave that evil cause, for neither the
craigy rock in which he so miserably confides, nor the carnal prudence
of that man Lethington, whom he esteems even as a demigod, nor the
assistance of strangers, shall preserve him; hut he shall be
disgracefully dragged forth to punishment, and hanged on a gallows in
the face of the sun, unless he speedily amend his life, and flee to the
mercy of God! ”
Lindesay related this to Kirkaldy, who at first was moved by the solemn
message, and the tidings that Knox lay on his death-bed but the hauteur
of the soldier resumed its sway, and, at Maitland’s instigation, he
returned a scornful answer, for which he afterwards expressed regret.
"Begone,” said he, "and tell Master John Knox he is but a dirty
prophet,” and dismissed the messenger.
Knox expired on the 24th of the month; according to Bannatyne and
others, his last moments were disturbed by the constant din of war. |