Nature and plan of the work—Sources of
information—Notices of the parish and church in the twelfth
century—Natural features of parish—The Castle: its antiquity and
appearance—The Viponts and Mortimers—The ballad of Sir Patrick Spens—Randolph,
Earl of Moray—The Douglases—Origin of the family—The ‘Flower of
Chivalry’—The Regality of Aberdour—The first Earl of Morton—The
Regent Morton—John, Lord Maxwell—William, the eighth Earl— The
Castle burned—Cuttlehill—The dishonest trooper—The gallery and the
schoolmasters.
In this and subsequent lectures I am desirous of calling your
attention to the leading historical incidents, of a civil,
ecclesiastical, and social kind, which are connected with our
village and its immediate neighbourhood, being of opinion that much
that is fitted to be instructive, as well as interesting, is to be
found in such local notices.
When I first came among you, a perfect stranger to the neighbourhood,
I could not help being greatly struck with its singular beauty. But
when I had gazed and admired, I naturally began to put the questions
to myself—What of the history of this place? What events, of an
important or interesting kind, have taken place in it, or near it?
What associations are connected with that venerable pile, the old
castle? What memories linger around the old church, which stands in
so secluded and picturesque a spot, and of .hid. the trees have
begun to take possessionno, that the worshippers have, for so many
years, forsaken it. What historical incidents are there, belonging
to the noble house of Morton, on the one hand, and of Moray, on the
other? What incidents of an interesting kind are there associated
with the village itself? How long has the smoke curled over its
roofs; and children, in groups, played on its door-steps ; and the
hum of industry been heard in its streets? What have the fortunes of
the village been, in earlier and later times, during seasons of
peace and war? What are the legends that are told around its
firesides on winter evenings? What notable men—nobles or
ecclesiastics, soldiers or sailors—have been connected with the
place? What men noted for their virtues have lived in it; and,
leaving their names inscribed on the mouldering tombstones of its
churchyards, have at the same time left their worth imprinted on the
memories and hearts of the villagers?
These, and a hundred other questions, naturally suggested
themselves; and to very few of them, as you may well suppose, could
I at first give a satisfactory answer. Snatches of old ballads, read
in early days—ballads which tell of ‘Sir Patrick Spens’ and the
‘Bonny Earl of Murray ’—were no doubt recalled to memory; and, along
with these, historical recollections of the 'Good Regent' and that
other, of very different mould, who pronounced the panegyric over
the grave of Knox: ‘There lies one who never feared the face of
man!’ But all else was to learn.
From that time to this, I have, as occasion has offered, been
quietly learning the history of the place; and I am here to-night to
share with you what I have learned. When I thus speak, it is of
course implied that I believe I have something to tell which is not
generally known. Indeed, I cannot help wondering that so little
seems to be known regarding the history of Aberdour and its
neighbourhood. I cannot attribute this to any want of interest in
their native place, or any want of intelligence, on the part of the
inhabitants. It is rather to be traced to the difficulty of getting
at the sources of information. For it has to be confessed that the
history of Aberdour has yet to be written, and, indeed, has hardly
been touched. There are no doubt such notices of it as give
excursionists all the information they may care to have. There are
notices in Gazetteers, which are meagre enough, and not over correct
in the information they do give. There are the two Statistical
Accounts. But the old one, though very good in a strictly
statistical point of view, does not enter at all on the antiquities
of the parish ; and the new one is little better than an abridgment
of the old, adapted to a later time. In Sibbald’s History of Fife
the whole notices of Aberdour are comprised within a page or two;
and the letterpress of Swan’s Views of Fife leaves untouched some of
the most interesting features of its history.
What, then, it may be asked, are the authorities from which I have
drawn my materials? In the earliest part of the history I have gone
to the ms. Register of Inchcolme, the printed Morton Papers, and the
charters and other valuable documents lying in the charter-room at
Donibristle—to which, through the kindness of the Hon. John Stuart,
afterwards eleventh Earl of Moray, I have been allowed access. From
these sources I have got information which is not to be found in
either the earlier or later printed histories of our country. And as
regards the later part of the history, I have carefully examined the
Kirk-Session records of the parish, which, through the courtesy of
the Rev. George Roddick, I have for a considerable time had in my
possession. In addition to these authorities, I have had many
charters and papers of various kinds put into my hands by the feuars
and other inhabitants of the village. Another source of information,
regarding local matters, it would be ungrateful in me not to
mention. It is pointed out in the lines of Allan Cunningham
Much with hoary men
He walked conversing, and sedately glad,
Heard stories which escaped historic pen.
A single remark more, and these preliminary statements, already too
long, are at an end. I wish it to be distinctly understood that the
historical notices of Aberdour and its neighbourhood, which I am to
lay before you, in this and other lectures, do not pretend to be
exhaustive. More information than I now have, and more leisure than
I can command, would be necessary ere anything having the least
claim to be an exhaustive history could be produced. Moreover, I do
not keep by a rigid order of a chronological kind; indeed, in some
instances it will be seen that the order of acquiring my information
determines the order of my narration. On the present occasion I do
little more than look at the history of the village, as that is
reflected from the history of its ancient and now ruined Castle.
Aberdour, as the most of you are probably aware, derives its name
from the little stream, the Dour, that runs between the Easter and
Wester villages, and falls into the Firth of Forth at the harbour.
The prefix, Aber, signifies the mouth of a stream ; and it is
generally coupled with the name of the stream whose outlet to the
sea, or confluence with another stream, is pointed out. Thus the
name Aberdour signifies the mouth of the Dour; and as Dour means
water, the name, reduced to its ultimate elements, means the mouth
of the water. Both parts of the word are undoubtedly Celtic, and by
many held to be Cymric or British. I need hardly say that names of
places in Scotland of which this can be truly said are very old; and
the first notices of Aberdour carry us back to a very remote
antiquity indeed.
Situated on the southern shore of Fife, one of the seven provinces
of the ancient Pictavia, or Pictland, one might naturally expect to
find some notices of it in the Chronicles of the Piets and Scots,
but this expectation, I regret to say, has not been realised. The
earliest notice of the place, so far as I know, is to be found in
the Chartulary of Inchcolme. There, in a Bull of Pope Alexander the
Third, of the year 1178, mention is made of the church of Aberdour.
And as the mills of Aberdour are mentioned soon afterwards, we may
believe that the village, in some form or other, existed as early as
the twelfth century. One would like to travel still further back,
and inquire if anything definite is known of the neighbourhood
during the occupation of the country by the Romans, or during the
period between the time of their departure and the twelfth century.
Of these periods not much bearing on the neighbourhood can with
certainty be said. We learn something regarding the condition of the
early inhabitants of the country from the weapons of war, or of the
chase, which have been found imbedded in the soil. The Rev. Robert
Liston, in the Old Statistical Account of the parish, speaks of such
weapons, in the form of axes, hatchets, and spear-and arrow-heads,
made of flint and other hard kinds of stone, having been found in
his time on a farm in the neighbourhood. That farm I know to be
Dalachy; but the weapons alluded to, as well as some stone coffins
found about the same time, have long ago disappeared.
Sir Robert Sibbald, after a careful consideration of all the facts
which have come down to us regarding the ports in Fife which the
Romans made use of, has concluded that Aberdour was one of them. How
interesting it would be to have a view of the country around us as
it then appeared ! The great natural features of the landscape
would, of course, be the same as now: the Binn lying like a huge
sleeping elephant; Dunearn Hill, shooting up its head, as if keeping
watch over the scene; the Firth, studded with its islands,
glittering in the morning sun as if every wave were floating
unnumbered diamonds on to the beach; Arthur s Seat, Salisbury Crags,
and the Castle Rock of Edinbuigh a mere hill-fort then, we may
presume—keeping watch and ward on the opposite coast; while the bold
and beautiful line of the Pentlands shuts in the landscape on the
southwest with a mountain wall. But strange-looking galleys are in
the bay; the strange accents of Roman and other tongues cleave the
air; and a few rude huts near the beach are probably all that
represent our village. The Roman invasion was, in its results,
manifestly beneficial to our country. It brought its rude and hardy
tribes into contact with civilisation of a certain kind; and, what
is better still, it opened up a way for the pioneers of
Christianity. What we know of these pioneers and their labours in
the kingdom of the Picts, especially along its southern boundary,
laved by the waters of the Forth, must be told in another
connection.
It is time for us to come to a later period, and more definite
information regarding our village. And in order that historical
personages and events may be associated with definite places, let me
ask you to accompany me in thought to our old Castle. This is by far
the most ancient building in our immediate neighbourhood. A single
glance shows that the site it occupies is one of great strength,
defended as it is by the little valley of the Dour on the west,
north-west, and south-west; and a steep declivity, that bends away
down to the Firth, on the south and south-east. The position,
moreover, is one of great beauty, commanding a delightful view of
the Firth, with its winding shores, its jutting promontories, its
deeply indented bays, and its picturesque islands, which gleam ‘
like emeralds chased in gold.’ At this date it is difficult to form
an accurate idea of the appearance presented by the Castle in its
better days, before additions, out of keeping with its original
form, had been made to it, and ere the tooth of time had gnawed its
earliest masonry down to its present state of abject and hopeless
ruin. For, the present pile, I need hardly say, is not all of the
same age. The original castle, which is the westernmost part, was a
huge square keep, of very great strength. And one can easily
imagine, from what remains of it, how it must have looked, towering
over the little valley of the Dour in solid massive strength —its
barbican wall stretching away to the east—and scowling defiance at
the invader. The description of Crichton Castle, as given in Marmion,
is strikingly suggestive of the appearance of our old baronial
keep:—
The castle rises on the steep
Of the green vale of Tyne,
And far beneath, where slow they creep
From pool to eddy dark and deep,
Where alders moist and willows w'eep,
You hear her streams repine.
The towers in different ages rose,
Their various architecture shows
The builders’ various hands.
A mighty mass, that could oppose
When deadliest hatred fired its foes,
The vengeful Douglas bands.
If in this description we substitute the Dour for the Tyne, and make
the Douglases the defenders and not the invaders of the keep, we
have a wonderfully accurate description of the site and general
appearance of our old Castle, as well as a note of its owners,
through many centuries.
There have been, apparently, three several additions made to the
original castle, on its eastern side; and appearances favour the
idea that some addition may have been made on its western side, too.
From initials which are still to be seen over the window of the
easternmost part of the building, it appears that this portion was
added by William, the eighth Earl of Morton. The date, 1635, is to
be seen on a sun-dial built into the south wall; and the same date,
I have been assured, was to be observed, not many years ago, above
one of the windows. These dates confirm the supposition that this
part was erected by Earl William, of whom we shall have more to say
at a later stage. No one who examines it with any degree of care can
fail to be struck with its highly-finished masonry; and, as Billings
has remarked, the change that took place, in the seventeenth
century, from Gothic forms to the unbroken lines of Italian
architecture, is here very distinctly indicated. This part of the
Castle buildings is associated, in the minds of some of the older
people of the village, with stories of schoolboy days. The gallery,
as the upper story is called, was used as a school before the
present parish school was built; and at an earlier time a troop of
horse, under the command of Lord Morton, had their quarters here.
The original keep is wellnigh, but not exactly, square. Its walls
are strong and massive, and bear every mark of a hoary antiquity.
Time and long-continued neglect, on the part of those who own it,
are however gradually working its destruction. Some of my audience
will remember that a large portion of the north and west walls fell,
during the night, in the midst of a thunderstorm, in the year 1844,
the noise of the fall being so loud as to awaken and alarm the
inhabitants of the easter village. Great masses of the fallen
masonry are still to be seen, the mortar binding the stones as with
bands of iron.
It is difficult to speak with certainty as to the precise age of the
venerable pile. That a castle stood here long before the Douglases
became the proprietors of the lands and barony of Aberdour is
undoubted. That the oldest part of the present Castle was that in
which the Yiponts and Mortimers—the first barons of Aberdour of whom
we have any knowledge—successively had their abode, is exceedingly
likely. But in the absence of conclusive evidence it would be rash
to make the assertion. On the supposition that it was built by the
Yiponts, the building must be somewhere about seven hundred years
old. The Viponts are believed to have been of Norman extraction, and
to have settled in Scotland early in the twelfth century. About that
time they possessed the lands of Aberdour, and they had extensive
estates in other parts of Scotland, as various chartularies prove. I
have read somewhere that the fishermen of the Forth used to chant a
song to the beat of their oars, every verse of which ended with the
refrain—
The leal gudeman of Aberdour
Sits in Sir Alan Vipont’s tower.
Nisbet, in his Heraldry, tells us that as early as the year 1126,
the second year of the reign of David the First, the lands and
barony of Aberdour passed into the hands of Sir Alan de Mortimer,
who married Anicea, the daughter of Sir John Vipont. The Viponts
were a brave and warlike family. One of them, Sir William, fell on
the field of Bannockburn, contending nobly for the independence of
Scotland; and another of them, Sir Alan, valiantly defended the
Castle of Lochleven against the English during the reign of David
the Second. It is pleasing to have the name of Vipont so intimately
connected with Aberdour. Sir Walter Scott has made a member of the
family one of the heroes of his matchless tales; and James Grant has
made Roland Vipont represent the last of the noble race, in the
story of Jane Seton.
The Mortimers, who, as we have seen, acquired the castle and lands
of Aberdour by the marriage of Sir Alan with the daughter of Sir
John Vipont, are frequently spoken of in history by the surname of
de Mortuo Mari, as the Viponts are under the Latinised form de
Vetere Ponte. The Mortimers, like the Viponts, are understood to
have been of Norman extraction; both took part in the Crusades; and
indeed the Mortimers seem to have got their family name from some
deed of valour performed near the Dead
Sea. We have not many notices of the Mortimers and their possessions
in those old days, when, as David Vedder sings—
The morning’s e’e saw mirth and glee
In the hoary feudal tower
Of bauld Sir Alan Mortimer,
The Lord of Aberdour.
Sir Robert Sibbald tells us that Sir Alan gave the half of the lands
of his town of Aberdour to God and the monks of St. Colme’s Inch,
for the benefit of a burial-place for himself and his posterity in
the church of the monastery. Of this somewhat apocryphal story we
shall, however, have something to say at a later stage. At present
all that needs to be said regarding the matter is, that Sir Alan
apparently did not get the benefit of the kind of burial for which
he had stipulated; for, as Sibbald tells the story,
‘Sir Alan being dead, the monks carrying his corpse in a coffin of
lead, by barge, in the night-time, to be interred within the church,
some wicked monks did throw the samen [same] in a great deep betwixt
the land and the monastery, which, to this day, by the neighbouring
fishing men and salters, is called “Mortimer’s Deep.”’
We have seen that there were brave soldiers in those early days
connected with Aberdour; and we may venture to put in our claim for
at least one brave sailor, although not belonging to any family who
owned its castle or lands. Who of us has not read with delight in
boyhood’s days, and with scarcely abated interest in maturer years,
‘the grand old ballad of Sir Patrick Spens,’ as Coleridge has termed
it? Its authorship and the date of its composition are alike
unknown, although some believe it to be comparatively modern, and
the work of the authoress of ‘Hardy-knute,’ Lady Wardlaw of
Pitreavie. There are several versions of the ballad of Sir Patrick
Spens, some of which evidently connect it with the period of King
Alexander the Third. That period was one which was noted for great
prosperity to Scotland; but the King’s untimely death plunged the
nation into deep sorrow, and the wars to which the question of the
succession to the Crown gave rise rolled a tide of fire over the
land. Alexander’s son, who bore the same name, was dead; and so was
his daughter Margaret, who had been married to Eric, king of Norway,
and had left behind her a newly-born child, known as ‘the Maid of
Norway.’ It had been resolved that, in the event of no other
children being born to King Alexander, the crown should go to the
Maid of Norway. But disaster followed on the heels of disaster. King
Alexander was killed by falling over the cliffs at Kinghorn, and the
youthful queen died at Orkney, on her way to Scotland; for at that
time, I need hardly remind you, Orkney was no part of the realm of
Scotland. It is difficult to fit the story of the ballad of ‘Sir
Patrick Spens’ into the history of the time; for, so far as I am
aware, there is no historical notice of a shipwreck connected either
with the return voyage of those who conveyed the daughter of King
Alexander to Norway, or with the voyage of those who conveyed his
granddaughter to Orkney. But that the ballad has reference to one or
other of these occasions is undoubted; and as King Alexander is
spoken of as being alive when the voyage to Norway took place, we
must conclude, either that the ballad relates to the former of the
events I have referred to, or that a very considerable poetical
licence has been taken by its author. King Alexander is represented
as sitting in his tower of Dunfermline, then a royal residence; and
to the inquiry what captain could be got skilful and trusty enough
to undertake the voyage to Norway, an ancient knight exclaims that
no better sailor than Sir Patrick Spens is to be found in all the
land. Sir Patrick was accordingly sent. But the voyage was made at a
stormy season, and although he and his crew reached Norway in
safety, they returned to Scotland no more. The following is the best
version of the ballad:—
The King sits in Dunfermline tower,
Drinking the bluid-red wine,
‘O whaur will I get a skeely skipper,
To sail this new ship o’ mine?’
O up and spake an eldern knight,
Sat at the King’s right knee,
‘Sir Patrick Spens is the best sailor
That ever sailed the sea.’
The King has written a braid letter,
And sealed it with his hand;
And sent it to Sir Patrick Spens,
Was walking on the strand.
‘To Noroway! to Noroway!
To Noroway on the faem!
The King’s daughter, of Noroway,
’Tis thou maun bring her hame.’
The first word that Sir Patrick read,
Fu’ loud, loud laughed he,
The neist word that Sir Patrick read,
The tear blinded his e’e.
‘O wha is he has dune this deed,
And tauld the King o’ me;
To send us out, at this time o’ the year,
To sail upon the sea?
‘Be it wind, be it weet, be it hail, be it sleet,
Our ship maun sail the faem;
The King’s daughter, o’ Noroway,
’Tis we must fetch her hame.’
They hoysed their sails on Mononday morn,
Wi’ a’ the speed they may;
They hae landed in Noroway
Upon a Wodensday.
They hadna been a week, a week,
In Noroway but twae,
Whan that the lords o’ Noroway
Began aloud to say—
‘Ye Scottishmen spend a’ our King’s gowd,
And a’ our Queenis fee.’
‘Ye lee! ye lee! ye leers loud,
Fu’ loudly do ye lee!
For I brocht as much white monie
As gane my men and me,
An’ I brocht a half-fou o’ red gude gowd
Out ower the sea wi’ me.
Make ready, make ready, my merry men a’,
Our gude ship sails the morn.’
‘Now, ever alake, my master dear,
I fear a deadly storm!
I saw the new moon late yestreen,
Wi’ the auld moon in her arm;
And if ye gang to sea, master,
I fear we’11 come to harm.’
They hadna sailed a league, a league,
A league but only three,
When the lift grew dark, and the wind grew loud,
And gurly grew the sea.
The ankers brak, and the top-masts lap,
It was sic a deadly storm;
And the waves cam’ o’er the broken ship
Till a’ her sides were torn.
‘O where will I get a gude sailor
To tak’ my helm in hand,
Till I get up to the tall top-mast,
To see if I can spy land?’
‘O here am I, a sailor gude,
To take the helm in hand
ill you go up to the tall top-mast;
But I fear you ’11 ne’er spy land.’
He hadna gane a step, a step,
A step but only ane,
When a bout flew out o’ our goodly ship,
And the salt sea it came in.
‘Gae fetch a web o’ the silken claith,
And anither o’ the twine,
And wap them into our ship’s side,
An’ letna the sea come in.’
O laith, laith were our gude Scots lords
To weet their cork-heeled shune;
But lang or a’ the play was played
They wat their hats abune.
And mony was the feather-bed
That flattered on the faem;
And mony was the gude lord’s son
That never mair cam’ hame.
The ladies wrang their fingers white,
The maidens tore their hair;
A’ for the sake o’ their true luves,
For them they ’11 ne’er see mair.
O lang, lang may the ladies sit
Wi’ their face into their hand
Before they see Sir Patrick Spens
Come sailing to the strand.
And lang, lang may the maidens sit
Wi’ their gowd kaims in their hair,
A’ waiting for their ain dear luves,
For them they ’11 see nae mair.
Half ower, half ower to Aberdour,
’Tis fifty fathoms deep,
And there lies gude Sir Patrick Spens,
Wi’ the Scots lords at his feet.
The version given by Sir Walter Scott in his Minstrelsy of the
Scottish Border, and by Motherwell in his collection of ballads, has
the last verse thus—
O forty miles aff Aberdeen
’Tis fifty fathoms deep,
And there lies gude Sir Patrick Spens,
Wi’ the Scots lords at his feet.
This seems tame, compared with the other version. It may indeed be
objected that we, who are connected with Aberdour, are hardly to be
considered unprejudiced judges in such a matter. But this cannot
fairly be said of Dr. Robert Chambers, who has given his opinion in
the following words:— ‘I think it extremely probable that Sir
Patrick Spens lived near the little port of Aberdour, which port
might then have been in use as a sort of haven for Dunfermline, from
which it is not far distant. In the last verse of the ballad, the
shipwreck is described as taking place half-way back from Norway to
Aberdour; and it is certainly a likely circumstance that the ship
was destined to the same port from which she set out.’ As adding
greatly to the probability of this theory, he mentions the fact of
the existence of an extremely fine tract of hard white sand, to the
east of Aberdour, which is commonly called ‘the White Sands;’ and
this, he thinks, is ‘the strand5 referred to in the third verse of
the ballad. [The verse quoted on last page is not the only instance
in which A berdeen has usurped the place of Aberdour. In the
Songstresses of Scotland, by Sarah Tytlerand J. L. Watson, the
following passage occurs in the notice of Joanna Baillie (page
251):—‘ In a third letter the author of the Cottagers of Glenburnie
vows that the next time the author of the Plays of the Passions
visits Scotland, she will insist on taking her to Aberdeen, quoting
an anecdote of an old gentleman who had travelled twice through
Europe, and had never seen anything to be compared to Aberdeen, but
the bay of Naples. Mrs. Hamilton prophesies that if Walter Scott
would open the cry about Aberdeen, as he has done about Loch Katrine,
scenery, how the world would be deafened by reiterated praises!’ In
every instance Aberdeen has here been put by mistake for Aberdour!]
Bishop Percy, in his Reliques of Ancient Poetry, also gives
‘Aberdour' in the closing verse of his short version of the ballad;
and he appends two notes to it, which connect themselves, in an
interesting way, both with Aberdour and Lady Wardlaw, to whom I have
lately referred. He speaks of our village as ‘lying upon the river
Forth, the entrance to which is sometimes denominated De mortuo
Jlfari.’ The good Bishop seems to think this a connecting-link
between the place and the shipwreck of Sir Patrick Spens,’ not
knowing the incident which gave rise to the name of ‘Mortimer’s
Deep.’
His note in reference to the author of ‘Hardyknute’ is also very
interesting. Apparently unaware of the fact that Lady Wardlaw was
the authoress of ‘Hardyknute,’ and suspected of being also the
authoress of ‘ Sir Patrick Spens,’ he says An ingenious friend
thinks the author of 'Hardyknute' has borrowed several expressions
and sentiments from the foregoing [Ballad of Sir Patrick Spens], and
other old Scottish songs in this Collection. If Lady Wardlaw was the
authoress of both ballads, there is another and simpler way of
accounting for the similarity of expressions and sentiments
contained in them.
Returning from what may seem a digression, we have something more to
say regarding our old Castle. It is not because of any dearth of
heroes connected with Aberdour that I have turned your attention to
the somewhat shadowy form of Sir Patrick Spens. We have already seen
the link. that binds the names of Vipont and Mortimer to the place;
and now another name appears, to which even these must yield the
palm. Who that has read the history of the noble contendings of our
countrymen during that eventful period which followed the mournful
death of Alexander the Third, and called into the field Wallace and
Bruce, and the noble band of patriots who fought under their
banners, can have forgotten the name of Randolph, Earl of Moray!
When Wallace had stirred the souls of all true-hearted Scottishmen
to their very depths in favour of liberty, and the just independence
of their country, in spite of the arrogant claims of Edward of
England, the younger Bruce, aided by his two noble friends and
compatriots—Randolph and the Black Douglas—led his countrymen on to
victory, and immortalised not only himself, but his companions and
their country, by the glorious enterprise. That Aberdour can claim
some connection, although remote, with ‘ the good Sir James Douglas/
as his countrymen long delighted to call him, is well known to all
of you, the noble family of Morton being a branch of the Douglas
line. But probably no one now listening to me has heard of any
connecting link between our village and Randolph. A short time ago I
as little dreamt of this as any of you; and it was with a thrill of
delight, as well as surprise, that I found among the Morton papers a
charter that put it beyond all question that the barony of Aberdour
belonged to Thomas Randolph, Earl of Moray, more than five hundred
years ago. How much does this simple fact increase the interest we
naturally have in the neighbourhood in which we live; and also the
interest which, apart from this association, we might naturally take
in the gallant warrior and wise statesman! Strange as it may appear
to some minds that are less under the spell of local associations
than we are, we now read with greatly intensified interest the
exploits of the old soldier—the nephew of King Robert the Bruce. We
enter with greater eagerness into the history of his early
imprisonment in England, his recapture of Edinburgh Castle from the
Southern invader, his brave conduct at Bannockburn, where he
commanded the left wing of the Scottish army, and the wise and
energetic measures he employed, as Guardian of Scotland during the
minority of David the Second.
Randolph and the good Sir James Douglas were warmly and generously
attached to each other, as only great and kindred spirits can be ;
and they were both unflinching and unwearied in their defence of
their master, the Bruce. You must often have heard the story how the
Bruce, feeling himself near his end, summoned Sir James to his dying
couch, and charged him to convey his heart to the Holy Land, and
bury it as near the sepulchre of the Saviour as he could; and how
the Douglas, when his sovereign had breathed his last, got his heart
embalmed, and put into a silver casket, which he hung round his neck
with a silver chain, as he set out to fulfil his friend’s dying
request.
There is something romantic in the story of that journey, and
something truly pathetic in Douglas’s end. On his way to Jerusalem
he passed through Spain, and became entangled in a fight with the
Saracens. Seeing, near the close of the battle, one of the knights
who followed him surrounded by the Moors, he took the casket in
which the Bruce’s heart lay, and, casting it into the thick of the
fight, exclaimed, ‘On, heart! as thou wert wont, and Douglas will
follow thee, or die.’ And, like a true warrior, he followed it, and
died, trying to rescue a friend from death. The body of Douglas,
along with the casket, was brought back to Scotland, and the Bruce’s
heart was buried in Melrose Abbey by Randolph, Earl of Moray and
Lord of Aberdour.
There is an act of devotion on the part of Randolph to his uncle,
the Bruce, recorded in the Morton papers, and also in the Chartulary
of Dunfermline, which no historian, so far as I am aware, has
noticed. In common with his countrymen of that period, Randolph
believed in the efficacy of prayers for the dead. This was one of
the doctrines, as Hallam tells us in his History of the Middle Ages,
which appear to have been either introduced, or sedulously promoted,
for the purposes of sordid fraud. But it is too much to expect that
a soldier like Randolph should have been above the prejudices of his
time, in a matter of this kind. And there is great interest in the
fact that he made over to the monks of the Abbey of Dunfermline the
lands of Culhelach—now known as Cullelo, and at that time forming
part of the barony of Aberdour—with the view of securing prayers for
the soul of his dear uncle, King Robert the Bruce, and the souls of
his ancestors and successors. And we learn further from the
Chartulary of Dunfermline that he gave the lands of Bandrum and Kin-edder,
in the parish of Saline, for a similar service to be done to
himself. It is a singular thing that after the earldom of Moray has
passed through so many hands—the Dunbars, the Douglases, the
Crichtons, the Gordons, and three different families of Stewarts—the
lands of Cullelo should again be in the possession of an Earl of
Moray. It is also an interesting fact that the ancestor of an
ancient family in our neighbourhood—the Moubrays of Cockaimie and
Otterston—was a companion-in-arms of the brave Randolph. At the
battle of Bannockburn the Castle of Stirling was held, in the
interest of King Edward of England, by Sir Philip de Moubray. After
that decisive battle, however, Sir Philip cast his fortunes into the
same scale with those of Scotland; and he fell at the battle of
Dundalk, bravely fighting by the side of Edward Bruce and Randolph,
Earl of Moray.
Randolph died very suddenly at Musselburgh in the year 1332, not
without the suspicion of having been poisoned by an English monk, as
Father Hay himself relates; and he was universally lamented as an
incorruptible Regent, a brave soldier, a wise statesman, and a
noble-hearted man. He lies buried in the Abbey of Dunfermline beside
his uncle, the Bruce, whom he served so faithfully and loved so
well. Sir Walter Scott thinks it not unlikely that the pathetic
ballad, ‘Lord Randal, my son,’ may have been written in connection
with the melancholy end of Randolph. The evident youth of the victim
in the ballad makes this, in our view, unlikely. But which of us has
not felt what an amount of simple pathos there is in the closing
lines of the ballad, in which, in reply to his mother’s fears that
he has been poisoned, Lord Randal says—
‘O yes, I am poisoned; mother, make my bed soon;
For I’m sick at the heart, and I fain wad lie down’!
The barony of Aberdour did not continue long in the family of
Randolph. The Earl had two sons, who, like himself, were warriors,
and, like himself, died prematurely. Thomas Randolph, the second
Earl, fell at the battle of Dupplin; and John, the second son and
third Earl, found a soldier’s grave at Durham. Their sister, Lady
Agnes, a noted heroine, was married to Patrick Dunbar, Earl of
March, and the earldom of Moray was for a time continued in their
family. But before John Randolph fell, the barony of Aberdour had
passed into the hands of the Douglases. Among the Morton papers
there is a charter of the year 1341, in which John Randolph gives,
grants, and confirms to Sir William Douglas of Liddesdale, his dear
and faithful friend, the lands of Aberdour, with all their
pertinents, for homage and service. And as John Randolph died
childless, it cannot be, as some have affirmed, that the lands of
Aberdour passed into the hands of the Douglas family by marriage.
It would be an easy matter to fill many lectures with the exploits
of the family of the Douglases, who, in one of their branches, now
became proprietors of the lands and castle of Aberdour, and have
continued to own them through more than five centuries. Hume of
Godscroft has written a whole volume on their lineage and history.
However they may be traced, the fortunes of the family have been
very fluctuating. At one time, as in the case of the good Sir James,
a Douglas is the King’s right-hand man; at another, as in the reign
of James the Second, the decision seems to hinge on a single battle
whether a Stewart or a Douglas shall sit on the throne of Scotland;
and at a later period still, in the reign of James the Fifth, a
royal proclamation is issued forbidding a Douglas to come within six
miles of the King, on pain of treason.
The history of the house of Douglas has engaged the attention of
many antiquaries, and after the speculations of George Chalmers in
his Caledonia, and others, the simple truth seems at length to have
been reached by Cosmo Innes. ‘The ancestry of the first William of
Douglas,’ he tells us in his Sketches of Early Scotch History, is
not to be found in a Scotch charter-chest. Like other knightly and
baronial families of the Lowlands, he probably drew his origin from
some Norman or Saxon colonist, who, in that age of immigration and
fluctuating surnames, sunk his previous style, perhaps some changing
patronymic, like those of the ancestors of the Stuarts and of the
Hamiltons, though little dreaming how illustrious was to become the
name which he adopted from his settlement on the bank of the Douglas
water.’ The earlier name of the Stewarts was Fitz-Alan, and an
earlier name of the Hamilton family was Fitz-Gilbert; but as these
earlier names gave place to those of Stewart and Hamilton, so the
earlier name of the Douglas family, which is now lost, gave place to
that by which they have been so long known. I must, however, content
myself, in what remains of this lecture, with notices of the
briefest kind regarding those members of the family who owned the
castle and lands of Aberdour. Sir William Douglas, the first of
these, was so pre-eminently a hero in the estimation of his
countrymen, that his name has been handed down by them linked with
the epithet of the ‘Flower of Chivalry.’ It has to be admitted,
however, that the less closely the claims of the ‘Knight of
Liddesdale ’ to this title are examined, the better will it be for
his fame. However fairly chivalry may have flowered in his person,
its fruit was of so very sanguinary a hue as not to be very pleasant
to look at. Indeed, so many acts of bloodshed are attributed to him,
that when thinking of him as we look at our own old castle, or as we
gaze at the ruins of Hermitage Castle in Liddesdale, we are
constrained to acknowledge that the ‘Flower of Chivalry’ yields
rather a tainted odour.
From Sir William Douglas the lands of Aberdour passed to Sir James,
his nephew, the son of the gallant defender of Lochleven Castle, and
to him also passed the lands and castle of Dalkeith, which Sir
William had acquired by marriage. But I am not to treat you to an
enumeration of family connections, which at best confer but a minor
distinction, and can only be regarded with much interest when
associated with individual worth.
I may say here that in 1383 the barony of Aberdour was constituted
by King Robert the Second an entire and free regality; and in a
charter of confirmation, a copy of which is in my possession, this
regality is said to include Woodfield, Tyrie, Seafield, and the two
Balburtons, all of which were then in the possession of the
proprietor of the lands of Aberdour. When we come to speak more
particularly of Aberdour Wester we shall find that it was a burgh of
barony, as Aberdour Easter was a burgh of regality. In the case of a
burgh of barony the baron might not only hold courts for causing
tenants to pay rents, but he could decide in cases of debt, and
punish for bloodwytes (which originally meant the crime of shedding
blood, although latterly it came to signify the fine imposed for
that crime) to the extent of ^50 Scots. And if the baron had, in
addition to this, that fearful charge to be put into the hands of
any single individual, the power of pit and gallows, he had a
criminal jurisdiction nearly as ample as that of a Sheriff of the
time. In the case of a regality the superior had a jurisdiction
equal to the Supreme Court in criminal cases. He could even repledge
from the Sheriff, and had a right to all the moveables of
delinquents and rebels who dwelt within the bounds of his own
jurisdiction.
The next name of special interest which we have to notice is that of
the first Lord Morton. He married the Countess-Dowager of Angus, the
daughter of James the First, and so was a brother-in-law of James
the Second. He was a great favourite of the King’s, and received
from him the title of Earl of Morton, as well as several valuable
grants of land. It was this Earl who founded the Hospital of St.
Martha—the ‘Nunnery,’ as it came by and by to be called—in Easfer
Aberdour, the history of the foundation of which I shall relate to
you in a subsequent lecture.
From the first Earl of Morton we pass to the fourth, the celebrated
Regent. He was the son of Sir George Douglas of Pittendriech, and
having married the daughter of the third Earl, he wilily succeeded
to his title and estates in 1553. Of this remarkable man we can at
present say little, intending at some future time to devote an
entire lecture * to his history. Suffice it to say just now that he
was a man of great natural ability and very considerable
acquirements. He was brought up and received his education in
England, the dislike of James the Fifth to the whole family of the
Douglases having kept them there, in virtual banishment, up till the
very period of that King’s death. On Morton’s return to Scotland he
at first joined the ‘Lords of the Congregation,’ as they were
called, and helped to advance the cause of the Reformation, but his
efforts were by and by more turned in the direction of personal
aggrandisement and State intrigue. He had some share in the movement
which led to the murder of Darnley. At least it was capable of proof
that he knew of it, and did not divulge what he knew, and
consequently he had for a time to live beyond the bounds of the
kingdom. After Darnley’s death Morton again made his appearance, and
played a most important part in State affairs. When the Regent Moray
fell under the hand of a cowardly assassin, Morton gradually worked
his way up to the highest place of political importance. He had been
a principal actor during previous regencies; and now that he was
unfettered, he carried out with great ability, daring, and
unscrupulousness, a policy whose principal object seems to have been
self-aggrandisement by impoverishing the Reformed Church and
infringing the liberty of the subject. This policy, of necessity,
made the Regent many enemies; and as the youthful King grew up,
means were not wanting for entrapping Morton through some of his own
schemes. In short, after the murder of Danrley had ceased to draw
much attention to it, Morton was accused by one of the King’s
favourites of being an accomplice in the sanguinary plot, and,
having been declared guilty, he was beheaded at Edinburgh on the 3d
of June 1581. ‘Never was there seen,’ says Archbishop Spotswood, ‘a
more notable example of fortune’s mutability than in the Earl of
Morton. He who a few years before had been reverenced by all men,
and feared as a king, was now, at his end, forsaken by all and made
the very scorn of fortune, to teach men how little stability there
is in honour, wealth, friendship, and the rest of those worldly
things that men do so much admire.’
It is an interesting thing for us to know that, soon after his
resignation of the regency, Morton retired for a time to his castle
of Aberdour, where he spent his time chiefly in husbandry and
gardening. I have seen several charters which were signed by him
while resident here. One would like to know what the appearance of
this notable man was as he paced through our village, what his
demeanour was as he worshipped in our old church, and his talk as he
busied himself with his trees and flowers.
On his execution and attainder, a new charter of the earldom of
Morton was ratified in favour of John Lord Maxwell, but the
attainder was ere long rescinded, and the dignity passed to the heir
of entail, Archibald Earl of Angus, who was the last Earl of Morton,
of the house of Dalkeith.
The next proprietor of the lands and castle of Aberdour, who demands
special notice at our hands, is William, the eighth Earl, who was
Lord High Treasurer of Scotland. If some of the earlier proprietors
of these lands were noted for their bravery, Earl William was
renowned for his loyalty. Few subjects have made greater sacrifices
for their sovereign than he did for Charles the First. He disposed
of his lands of Dalkeith, and other properties belonging to him, to
the amount of £100,000 Scots of yearly rental; and this splendid
sacrifice he made in order that he might the better support the
Royal cause. As some compensation for his generosity, he got a
mortgage on the islands of Orkney and Shetland, by a charter under
the Great Seal in 1642. The sale of the lands of Dalkeith was the
means of bringing him into closer relationship with Aberdour. Having
built a large addition to the Castle, on its eastern side, he took
up his residence there. It was he, too, who laid out the terraced
garden at the south side of the Castle, who built the wall round it,
who erected the summer-house at the south-east corner of it, and
planted those fine old planes, elms, and other trees, which so
greatly adorn the Castle grounds. I have in my possession copies of
various charters signed by him at Aberdour between the years 1632
and 1647. He died in the year 1648.
The next incident connected with the Castle which I have to notice
is that which left it a blackened ruin. During the troubles of 1715,
when the Earl of Mar made a very foolish demonstration in favour of
the old Pretender, a troop of dragoons were stationed in the Castle,
in the Hanoverian interest; and I have been told, on what I consider
good authority, that a fire accidentally broke out in a bedroom
occupied by one of the officers, which led to the destruction of the
inhabited part of the Castle. A valuable library, belonging to the
Earl of Morton, is said to have perished at the same time.
The Castle having thus become uninhabitable, the Earls of Morton
acquired Cuttlehill House, and a considerable portion of land
belonging to it, on the west side of the Dour, and this became their
Aberdour residence. It is almost in every case to be regretted when
the old name of a property is made to give place to a new; and I
cannot help being sorry on account of the change in the present
instance. Aberdour House, as what was originally known as Cuttlehill
House is now called, has been built at two separate times, the older
part bearing the date 1672. The obelisk which crowns the hill—the
original Cuttle-hill—was built by one of the Earls, in order that it
might be a prominent object from the family seat at Dalmahoy; but
the trees have now almost concealed it from the view even of
passers-by.
One other glimpse of the history of the old Castle, and I have done.
In the year 1758 the western part of the Castle buildings was again
roofed in, and some considerable time afterwards a troop of horse,
under the command of Lord Morton, were quartered there. The
circus-ring in which they exercised their horses can still be traced
on the Castle green. I have reason to believe that there are, among
my audience to-night, those who are old enough to have seen some of
these soldiers, for the troop was soon afterwards disbanded, and
some of the members of it took up their permanent residence in the
village. A story I have heard of one of them, who, we may suppose,
was by no means a fair representative of his comrades, is, I think,
too good to be allowed to pass into oblivion. The name of the
delinquent I do not know, but that is of little consequence. He had
strolled to a farm-house in the neighbourhood, in which he found the
goodwife busy preparing ‘sowans’—a dish the nature of which need not
be explained to a Scottish audience; and, acting on what the poet
has called
The good old rule, the simple plan,
That he should take who has the power,
And he should keep who can,
he helped himself unstintedly to the best fare the house afforded,
and put it into a wallet with which he had knowingly provided
himself. The goodwife saw that it was useless, at this stage, to
interfere, and so allowed him to go; but not before she had laid her
hands, still wet with the liquid of which the sowans were being
made, gently on his back, which he, no doubt, interpreted as merely
a gentle hint to depart. Having a shrewd guess who the intruder was,
she went to the Castle on the afternoon of the same day, and made
her complaint to Lord Morton. The troopers were ordered out in a
body, and stood in a row, facing their captain. Of course all denied
having the remotest knowledge of the matter—the culprit being, in
all likelihood, the loudest in his denial. The farmer’s wife, being
asked to point out the invader of her household stores, replied, £
My Lord, I canna tell by their faces; but if your Lordship will mak’
them turn their backs I’ll sune find him oot.’ Whereupon they were
ordered to wheel round, and there, on the back of the luckless wight,
were seen the marks of the ten wet fingers ! The next application to
his back, we may safely conclude, would not be quite so gentle.
As I have already noticed, the ‘gallery’ afterwards became the
school; but I suppose there are few now who remember much about the
Gibsons — ‘Muckle’ and ‘Little Tammy,’ as they were respectively and
rather familiarly called,—and Lumgair, and Watson, the teachers, and
fewer still who can boast of having stood on the ‘shakin’ wa’,’ or
made an attempt on the 'Jay’s Nest.’
I confess to a great liking for reminiscences of the past; and as
even ministers must have some relaxation of mind, I have, for a
considerable time past, made it mine to gather from aged lips, and
older books and papers, these and such-like stories of the bygone
time. And my pleasure will be increased if I think that, by thus
stringing together what I have collected, I have given some amount
of rational pleasure to the inhabitants of the village. I entertain
the opinion, in which I suppose I am far from singular, that it is a
good thing to call up, as fully and correctly as we can, before the
mind, those who, in the past times, have peopled the same land with
us, or even lived in the same village. And if, as will infallibly
happen in such a retrospect, we are brought face to face with error
as well as truth, with evil as well as good, it will say little for
our discernment and our wisdom if we do not learn the lesson, to
follow after the things that are true and good; for these alone look
well in every light, and these alone tend to our individual
happiness, the welfare of our fellow-men, and the glory of God. |