CLAIM OP THOMAS, LORD WAKE, TO
THE LANDS OF LIDDEL—EDWARD BALIOL AT ROXBURGH SOLEMNLY SURRENDERS THE
LIBERTIES OF SCOTLAND—ROXBURGH, JEDBURGH, THE FOREST, AND PEEBLES GIVEN UP
TO THE ENGLISH—THEY ARE REGAINED BY THE SCOTS—MURDER OF DALHOUSIE BY THE
KNIGHT OF LIDDESDALE AT HERMITAGE — DEATH OF THE KNIGHT—WARK CASTLE DEFENDED
BY THE COUNTESS OF SALISBURY — BATTLE OF NEVILLE’S CROSS, AND RECOVERY BY
EDWARD III. OF THE BORDER COUNTRY—THE BLACK DEATH TRANSMITTED TO THE BORDERS
FROM ENGLAND—SCOTS AND FRENCH DEFEAT THE ENGLISH AT NISBET—BALIOL’S SECOND
SURRENDER TO EDWARD III. AT ROXBURGH — THE “BURNT CANDLEMAS”—BORDER COUNTRY
UNDER ENGLISH ADMINISTRATION — DOUGLAS CLAIMS THE CROWN — THE EARL OF
MARCH’S SQUIRE SLAIN BY ENGLISH IN ROXBURGH MARKET-PLACE — THE “BLOODY FAIR
” AND ITS SEQUELS — UNREST ON THE BORDERS — JOHN OF GAUNT’S
INVASIONS—DOUGLAS WINS BACK THE SCOTTISH BORDER COUNTRY—JOHN OF VIENNE COMES
TO THE BORDERS—CAUSTIC CRITICISMS OF HIS FOLLOWERS—DESTRUCTION OF MELROSE
ABBEY BY RICHARD II.—STORY OF DIVINE RETRIBUTION FOR THE SAME—THE BATTLE OF
OTTERBURN—ITS CHARACTERISTICS.
A period of warfare was now
to follow, which was redeemed neither by substantial success nor by the
distinction of individuals engaged in it. Of the three Scottish estates
which a provision of the Treaty of Northampton had sought to secure to their
English owners, only one had been given up. Of the two remaining, one — that
of Liddel, or Liddesdale, claimed by Thomas, Lord Wake—lay on the Borders.
It had been repeatedly demanded by Edward for his subject; but Moray, who
acted as regent for Bruce’s infant son, David II., seems to have seen good
reasons for delaying to comply with the demand. It is true that a dispute as
to the ownership of Upsctlington, a Border village, had been amicably
conducted, and that Edward had even taken special measures for preserving
peace on the Borders. But, on the other hand, the government of England was
at this time extremely unsettled, whilst the arrival and honourable
entertainment of the son of John Baliol at the English court might well be
regarded as a suspicious symptom. Moray was also far too sagacious to
overlook the important fact that, in case of war, the lands of Liddesdale
would afford a convenient entrance to Scotland. Students of history will
remember that the difference of opinion now under notice became eventually a
cause of war—resulting in an invasion of Scotland by the claimants, Wake and
Buchan, in conjunction with other barons who had been called upon to choose
between England and Scotland, and having chosen England, had found
themselves dispossessed of Scottish estates. As this invasion took place by
sea, the Borders for once did not suffer from it in any special degree; but
its result was the placing of Edward Baliol upon the Scottish throne. After
his coronation, Baliol made his way to Roxburgh, which then became the scene
of the “solemn surrender of the liberties of Scotland” by this subservient
son of a subservient father. His passage thither had been opposed, and some
fighting now followed—in the form partly of civil war, partly of raids over
the Border, the principal leaders on the national side being Sir Andrew
Murray of Bothwell, the late king’s brother-in-law, who was now regent, and
two Douglases—namely, Archibald, brother of the Good Sir James, and William,
known as the Knight of Liddesdale. Among the. incidents of this warfare were
the capture and burning by Baliol of a castle in Teviotdale which Hailes
identifies as that of Oxnam, a fight at Roxburgh bridge, a raid by the elder
Douglas into Gilsland, and a counter-raid, in which the Knight of Liddesdale,
otherwise called the Flower of Chivalry, was made prisoner. The English,
maintaining that the terms of a treaty had been broken, now laid siege to
Berwick. Archibald Douglas had become regent in succession to Murray. He
marched with an army to its relief, but only to sustain the crushing defeat
of Halidon Hill, in which he himself was slain (1333). Berwick now passed to
the English, to whom the county, town, and castle of Roxburgh, the town,
castle, and forest of Jedburgh, with Selkirk and Peebles, were also given
up.
If we are to trust such
questionable evidence as English records of Scottish Acts of Parliament
which have no place among the Scottish records, this substantial tract of
territory was to serve as security for a gift promised by Baliol to the
English king, in acknowledgment of support received. In English keeping, at
any rate, through much indecisive fighting, this part of the country
remained, until lust of a richer prize drew the attention of Edward III. to
France. Then the national party, under Murray and Robert the Steward as
regents, began actively to recover their losses. In 1339 Baliol withdrew
from Scotland. Two years later, the young king, who for safety had been sent
to France, returned; and in 1342 Roxburgh, the last or almost the last of
the strongholds, was retaken by Sir Alexander Ramsay of Dalhousie. In
recognition of this service Dalhousie was appointed Sheriff of Teviotdale—a
piece of preferment which aroused the jealousy of the “ Flower of Chivalry.”
Grossly belying his title of honour, Douglas forcibly seized his rival,
while the latter was peaceably performing his official duties in the church
at Hawick, and hurrying him away into the wilds of Liddesdale, secured him .
in an oubliette at Hermitage. Tradition has it that the vault lay beneath a
loft where corn was stored, and that the grain sifted through the
interstices of the floor sufficed to sustain life in the captive until the
seventeenth day, when he at last succumbed to the pangs of hunger. Douglas
duly succeeded to the coveted office, but from this time forth his fair fame
is tarnished. Suspected of treachery to his country and of complicity in
murder, he was himself slain by his godson and namesake William, Lord
Douglas, whilst hunting in Ettrick Forest. The place of his death was
Galsewood—afterwards called Williamshope—on Minch Moor, where a cross known
as William’s Cross was still standing in Godscroft’s day. He was buried in
Melrose Abbey. Ballad literature has woven a tale of lawless love and
jealousy around his death, but the author of ‘ The Douglas Book ’ shows that
the subject of the fatal dispute was much more probably the land on which
the two men met than any lady’s love.
This, however, is an
anticipation. Soon after his return from France, David thrice crossed the
Border with an army. On the first occasion he is said to have laid siege to
Wark, which was valorously defended by Joan Plantagenet, Countess of
Salisbury, famous in the story of the origin of the Order of the Garter—an
incident located in that fortress. But though this is a Border history, were
every Border raid or 'ncursion which took place to be so much as named in
it, not only would our prescribed limits be greatly exceeded, but the
patience of a Job or a Griselria among readers would be exhausted. Suffice
it for the present, then, to say that a truce followed, which upon the
Borders was not observed very strictly. In 1346, the year of Cressy, whilst
Edward was still absent in France, David, acting in the interest of his ally
the king of that country, once more marched at the head of an army into
England. The battle which followed recalls, in the religious enthusiasm
which animated the opposing party, the defeat sustained by the king’s great
namesake and predecessor at the battle of the Standard. Guided by the dream
of a monk, on the day of battle the English fastened their cherished relic,
the chalice-cloth of St Cuthbert, to a spear-head and displayed it by way of
banner. Their force in the field, being under the authority of the
Archbishop of York, numbered in its ranks many of the clergy, who doubtless
relied upon supernatural assistance; but — a precaution which had bet-n
neglected at Mitton — the secular arm was also powerfully represented by the
captains, Henry Percy of Northumberland and Ralph Neville of Raby. The
English gained a decisive victory, making many prisoners, among whom was the
Scottish king. They also captured, in the “ Black Rood,” a Scottish relic of
great reputed sanctity from the times of St David and St Margaret. The scene
of the engagement was afterwards marked by a cross—from which the battle was
named — which in 1589 fell an early victim to Puritanical iconoclasm.
Flushed with victory, the English now pushed on across the Border, where
Roxburgh was surrendered to Percy by its governor, Tassy Loran. Hermitage
followed, and soon the whole of Teviotdale, Tweeddale, and the Forest were
again in English hands.
David II. now endured an
eleven years’ captivity in England, his sister’s son, Robert the Steward,
acting as regent during his absence. Meantime a succession of truces between
the two countries, which followed the battle of Neville’s Cross and lasted
over several years, were observed with the usual laxity on the Borders,
until the outbreak of a pestilence more terrible than any yet known in the
history of the land for a time drew men’s thoughts away from fighting. This
scourge first appeared in England, and if one authority is to be credited,
Scotland owed her inoculation to an attempt to profit by the sufferings of
her neighbour. Having mustered in Selkirk Forest, a Scottish army was
marching to invade the plague-stricken kingdom, when 5000 men are said to
have dropped dead. The remainder, retreating, sowed the seeds of death
broadcast among their countrymen, until, as is estimated by the chroniclers,
one-third of the total population must have perished. The bodies of persons
attacked, who were generally of the poorer classes, are described as
becoming inflated in a terrible manner, the patients seldom lingering more
than two days. The panic and demoralisation which ensued were indescribable.
Ties of blood were forgotten, and children fled from their dying parents “as
before a serpent”. There were other visitations of the pestilence within the
next few years. .
At last, in 1355, the King of
France stirred up the Scots to further hostilities against his enemy, Edward
of Windsor. The means employed towards this end were the sending of a
renowned knight, De Garancieres by name, with funds and picked followers to
Scotland. The gold was judiciously kept in pocket until the Scots had
pledged themselves to a war to the knife. But it ought to have been paid for
performances rather than for promises or preparations, for, even so, very
little was accomplished. An expedition to plunder Norham was, however,
arranged by the Earl of March and William, Lord Douglas, slayer of the
Knight of Liddesdale, who intrusted its execution to Sir William Ramsay of
Dalhousie. Having executed his task, and finding himself hard pressed by the
enemy, this knight retreated, contriving to draw his pursuers after him
towards Nisbet, where he knew that Douglas with his Scots and Frenchmen
lurked in concealment. Putting the spur of a hill between him and the enemy,
Ramsay then hastened on to announce their approach. Douglas’s men came forth
merrily to meet them, and as there was no time for flight, the English,
utterly taken by surprise as they were, had perforce to stand their ground.
They were easily routed, and though but few were slain, the ransom of
prisoners made the victory profitable to the Scots. The principal loss on
their side was that of a most valiant and warlike John of Haliburton1—a name
which Sir Walter Scott, tracing through his grandmother, claimed afterwards
to represent. The commander on the English side was the valiant Sir Thomas
Gray, keeper of Norham Castle, whose capture on the field and subsequent
confinement in Edinburgh Castle were the occasion of his composing the
famous ‘Scalacronica.’
Berwick was entered by
escalade by the Scots, who had approached it by sea, during the night. But
though the intruders plundered the city, they were not strong enough to hold
it, and on Edward’s advancing against them, they retired. From Berwick
Edward proceeded to Roxburgh, where he was met by Baliol, who now made a
surrender which was even more degrading than that which he had made in the
same place some years before. Scarcely containing himself for wrath, says
the chronicler, he burst forth into “words bitterer than death itself”: “Oh
king! most powerful of princes, who art as I know more excellent than any
other man of the time, to thee I yield, wholly, once for all, and without
reserve, my cause and every right which I possess, or shall come to possess,
in the kingdom of Scotland. This I do in order that you may avenge me of my
enemies, to wit the Scottish nation, a people most unjust, who have cast me
out from reigning over them.” Then, gathering up earth and stones from the
ground, as symbols of the kingdom which he resigned, he held them forth,
together with the crown, and said, “All these I give you in token of your
investiture. Act but manfully and be strong, and so conquer, to be yours for
ever, the kingdom which was once my due.” The date of this ignominious and
unpatriotic cession is January the 20th, 1356. The King of England remained
for some days at Roxburgh, apparently awaiting the submission of the
Scottish barons. Enraged to find this expectation disappointed, he made the
ferocious raid into the country which caused the Feast of Purification in
that year to be long remembered by the name of the “Burnt Candlemas.” It was
the eastern counties, however, which sustained the brunt of his ire,—the
destruction of the beautiful Abbey Church of Haddington, known as the Lamp
of Lothian, being specially bewailed. But the elements, fighting against
him, compelled him to retreat before his time. Meanwhile the Scots harassed
his rear, slew many of his men, and from an ambuscade under Douglas, in the
forest near Melrose, came very near taking his life. Notwithstanding the
comparative failure of the incursion, it served to bring a great part of the
Border country again under English rule; and that it so remained for a good
many years to come is shown by an Act of the Scottish Parliament of 1367,
which refers to the inhabitants of the district as “ at the peace of the
King of England,” and makes provision for recording the succession to
estates within its bounds by subjects of the Scottish crown who are debarred
from taking possession. During this period the inhabitants, though subject
to England, were governed in accordance with Scottish custom, as in a proc
lamation issued after the Burnt Candlemas Edward had promised that they
should be. As a further attempt to win the Borderers to him, it is recorded
that he offered to confirm the men of Teviotdale, in consideration of past
good hehaviour, in certain, undefined, “liberties and privileges” supposed
to be their right.
Edward's attention being now
again drawn to France, a treaty was entered upon between De Bohun, Earl of
Northampton, his warden of the marches, and Lord Douglas, by which the
latter agreed, so long as his own estates and those of the Earl of March
were respected, to abstain from molesting the English. This did not,
however, prevent his taking part in the battle of Poictiers on the French
side. There was also present his kinsman, Archibald, a natural son of the
Good Sir James, who owed his escape from captivity after the battle to
Ramsay, of Colluthy, who feigned to recognise him as a knave masquerading in
his master’s armour, and thus as a prize not worth retaining.3
From 1357, the year of David’s return from imprisonment in England, to his
death in 1371, a succession of truces between the two kingdoms, better
observed than commonly on the Border, made the history of that part of the
country unusually uneventful.
On the death of David, Robert
the Steward succeeded to the throne. His title was opposed by William, Lord
Douglas, who in right of his mother, a sister of the Red Comyn, declared
himself the representative of the claim which had been resigned by Baliol.
He was not supported, but by way of consolation his son, James, received the
king’s daughter in marriage. The Borders had now enjoyed an unusual interval
of rest, but the old state of matters was soon to recur. The body-servant of
George, Earl of March, attending the fair at Roxburgh, was slain in the
market-place by the English, who, it will be remembered, were in possession.
The earl’s appeals for redress being met with jeers by the English wardens
of the marches, he bided his time, and when the fair came round again, and
the English were flocking thither with their goods, surrounded the town and
wrought such great slaughter that it is said no Englishman escaped. The
houses into which they ran were burnt, and large booty was secured. This was
the signal for a general outbreak of Border hostilities—forays, ravages, and
burnings becoming now of daily occurrence. On the English side these were
directed specially against the lands of the Lord of Gordon, who had been
prominent at the “ Bloody Fair,” and who gave back as good as he got. He was
intercepted at Carham by Sir John Lilburn, when returning from a raid into
England, and a fierce battle was fought, in which the Scots had the
advantage. This led Sir Henry Percy, the English warden, to take up the
matter. He marched into Scotland, wasting and burning, at the head of 7000
men-at-arms. But when he reached Duns Park, some Scottish countrymen, not
unmindful of the advice of Bruce’s Testament, by an ingenious use at night
of shepherds’ horns and the clochbolg, or husbandman’s rattle, created such
a panic among his horses as drove him to an ignominious retreat.
There was now an interval of
a few years, and then, in 1377, once more irregular warfare broke out on the
Borders. Roxburgh was again' burnt by the Scots, which led Percy, who at the
coronation of Richard II. had been created Earl of Northumberland, to
retaliate by ravaging the Earl of March’s lands for three days with 10,000
men. Peace negotiations were then entered upon, but were rendered abortive
by one of the favourite night-attacks on Berwick, in which seven daring
Scots made themselves masters of the town, which they contrived to hold for
a few days against a strong force of English. Taxed with this infringement
of the status quo, March disavowed all knowledge of it; but his honesty
seems to have been suspected, for an expedition under Sir Thomas Musgrave
was sent into Scotland, whence it was expelled by Archibald Douglas, who met
it near Melrose. In this incursion young Henry Percy, afterwards known to
fame as Hotspur, earned distinction.
At last these continued
Border disturbances roused the attention of the central authority, and John
of Gaunt, Duke of I^ancaster, acting as principal regent for his young
nephew, marched to Scotland in hopes to end them. Meetings took place, first
between the Scottish commissioners and the Earls of Warwick and Suffolk at
Lyliot’s Cross, Maxton, and Muirhouselaw, and then at Ayton between the Duke
of Lancaster himself and the Scottish wardens of the marches —William, Earl
of Douglas; George, Earl of March ; and Archibald Douglas, Lord of Galloway.
An attempt to arrange a modus vivcndi between the two kingdoms was now made,
which, being suspended during a two years’ truce, was resumed in 1383, when
I^ancaster, returning to Scotland, met the king’s eldest son, the Earl of
Carrick, at Lyliot’s Cross and Muirhouselaw. In the interval the situation
had been complicated by an attack of the Scots upon Wark Castle, damages for
which were now to be assessed by a mixed board of arbitration, to act with
the aid of experts. There is, indeed, about the whole of these proceedings a
curious inconsistency, — elaborate machinery being employed to gain an end
not really desired, — and one is not surprised when the Scots, having
concluded a treaty w’ith the mad king Charles VI. of France, resume
hostilities against England on the expiration of the current truce.
Lancaster now made a second, and this time really warlike, invasion of
Scotland, which was, however, cut short by famine and the rigour of a
tempestuous March. Douglas retaliated, and enjoyed the satisfaction in this
the last warlike enterprise of his life of finally driving the English from
that part of the Scottish Border, excepting Roxburgh, which they had held
practically since the battle of Neville’s Cross, nearly forty years before.
He died not long afterwards, and was buried at Melrose, being succeeded by
James, his son, and the heir of his hostility to England.
In fulfilment of the new
treaty, in this year (1385) Jean de Vienne, Admiral of France, was sent with
men, arms, and money to assist the Scots. Acting in conjunction with the
Frenchmen, the Border chieftains now took and razed the fortresses of Wark,
Ford, and Cornhill, and, after two or three raids into England, laid siege
to Roxburgh. But here a dispute arose through the French claiming to keep
the castle when they should have taken it. This led to a disruption, and the
French returned to their native country, full of contempt and dislike for
the Scottish Border, which they had expressed to their admiral by saying:
“Sir, what pleasure hath brought us hither? We never knew what poverty meant
till now. We find now the old saying of our fathers and mothers true when
they would say, Go your way, an ye live long ye shall find hard and poor
beds’—which now we find.” The restrictions put upon their plundering habits
by the independent spirit of the country they found in particular
inconvenient. But in justice it must be added that, exclusive of the gifts
which they brought with them, the soldiers were paid in advance, and were no
tax to the country.
Before the French left
Scotland, Richard II. had crossed the Border at the head of a vast army.2 It
is said that the dashing Frenchmen were all for immediately attacking him,
but that Douglas, taking De Vienne up into a high place whence he could look
down on the enemy, so impressed him with the contrast between the two armies
that he made no further difficulty as to following the traditional Scottish
methods of war. These were soon as effectual with Richard as they had been
with his predecessors, but unhappily they were powerless to prevent his
wanton destruction of Melrose Abbey. The obscurity of Richard’s last days
has given rise to various stories regarding his end, among which the monkish
chronicler of Pluscarden tells us that, for this and other impious acts, he
was doomed to wander, a beggar, among the Scottish isles, until recognised
and brought to the Scottish court, where he ended his days in idiotcy.
There is mention about this
time of two raids into Cumberland; but it is a relief to turn from such
obscure and petty wars to the deathless fame of Otterburn. The occasion of
that well - fought field was as follows. When John of Gaunt retired from the
North some years before, he had left the English marches to the care of
Percy of Northumberland, empowering him to levy the forces of the northern
counties to repel invasion, and placing the castles of Wark and Norham at
his disposal; In 1386 John Neville of Raby had succeeded ’ Percy in this
office, which in 1388—the year to which we have now come—had been taken from
Neville and given back to the Percys. A feud between the two great northern
families was the result. In this juncture James, second Earl of Douglas, saw
his opportunity for repaying the ravages of Richard’s late invasion. The
Scottish plans were laid—in secret, as was believed— at Aberdeen, far off
from the Border, and an army numbering upwards of 40,000 assembled at the
kirk of Southdean, within the shade of Jed Forest. The principal leaders on
the Scots side were the Douglases, the Earl of March, and the king’s second
son, Robert, Earl of Fife and Menteith. They passed the Carter Fell,
entering England by the Reidswire, having previously taken prisoner an
English spy, and formed their plans by the light of information elicited
from him. The result was that the army divided — the main body pursuing its
way towards Carlisle to plunder, whilst Douglas led a detachment estimated
at 300 men-at-arms and 2000 infantry to Durham, to divert the attention of
the English warden. But in spite of precautions the Scottish plans had been
betrayed by spies of the seneschal of York and the governor of Berwick, who
had been present in the masquerade of minstrels at the meeting at Aberdeen.
Northumberland ought therefore to have been warned in time, but his first
intimation of the actual proximity of the Scots was derived from the smoke
of devastated hamlets. He at once despatched his sons, Henry and Ralph, to
collect the northern levies at Newcastle, where they were encountered by
Douglas, when he recrossed the Tyne, having harried the country about
Brancepeth.
Taking up a position to the
north of the town, so as to keep open a retreat, Douglas spent several days
in the neighbourhood of Newcastle. The time was passed in skirmishing with
the enemy, and thus occurred the incident which was to lead up to the
battle. The Percys are described by the old translator of Froissart as
“yonge lusty knyghtes,” ever foremost at the barriers to skirmish, where
were many proper feats of arms achieved. Douglas was just thirty years of
age, and no less eager for distinction. One day he fought hand to hand writh
Harry Percy, and vanquishing him, bore away his pennon, declaring that he
would carry it into Scotland and set it on high on his castle of Dalkeith,
to be seen far off as a sign of Percy’s prowess. One can fancy how the fiery
Hotspur would brook this affront. He vowed to retrieve the gage. But next
morning the Scots broke up their camp and turned homewards without his
having done so.
Passing by Ponteland, the
Scots reached Otterbum, w'hich is situated in a green rolling country,
traversed by the brawling river Rede, and at that time probably much
overgrown by the small natural birchwood of which patches remain to this
day.
They were now within a long
day’s march of the hill barrier of their own country; but, instead of
pushing on, Douglas proposed that, in order to give Percy another chance,
they should assail the tower of Otterburn. This, “for their honour and for
the love of him,” the rest accorded. Availing themselves of the marshy
nature of the ground, and using their carriages for barricades, they made
lodgings of boughs and “great herbes,” and there passed the time without
molestation.
It was in this position that
Hotspur came upon them. Chafing under the sense of injury, he had clamoured
to pursue them instantly, but had been overruled by more prudent counsellors,
so that it was not ur..'l definite in formation as to the size of the
Scottish armament had been received that his representations availed. Then,
with a force more than double that of the Scots, he was allowed to start in
their pursuit. It was late in the evening, and though there was a moon, the
Scots had given up expecting an attack for that day, so that Hotspur took
them by surprise. He had first told off a division of his men under Sir
Thomas Umfraville, who knew the ground, to pass to the northward of the
Scots, so as to cut off their retreat; then with the remainder of his force
he fell upon the camp.
By a mistake, arising from
the half-darkness, his first attack was made upon the servants’ quarters.
Fortunately the camp was fairly strong, and the servants defended themselves
stoutly, thus affording their masters a moment in which to arm themselves.
As it was, Douglas fought with armour only partly fastened, Moray without a
helmet. Now, though the Scots had allowed themselves to be surprised, they
were not without a plan previously formed to meet the case of sudden attack.
On this they now proceeded to
act. A body of men was first sent forward to relieve the servants, and
whilst these held the enemy engaged, a second body, leaving the camp by the
rear, made a circuit, and in their turn took the others by surprise by
falling upon their flank. The battle now waxed keen, and cries of “Douglas!”
“Percy!” filled the air.
State papers of the period
show us that Borderers of the two countries could not always be depended
upon to fight each other in the field. There were times when a national
cause in which they had no personal interest would yield to natural feeling
and to ties of propinquity and fellowship. But, as was now seen, when march
men met in a private feud, and, as in the present case, one of old standing,
the case was very different The Earl of Douglas, impatient for renown,
ordered his banner to advance; Percy did the same, and the two banners met.
Great then was the pushing of lances, many gallant deeds were done, and many
on both sides were struck down. Froissart, who drew his information from men
of either side who had taken part in the affray, records it as the hardest
and most obstinate battle ever fought. Meantime the moon lighted the
assailants; we are also told that the August night was temperate and serene.
The press of battle was so
great that bows were useless —the fight was at close quarters. Seeing that
the Scots were losing ground, Douglas, seeking to rally them, seized a
battle-axe with both hands and dashed in among the foe, dealing deadly blows
about him, hewing himself a passage through their midst. In this moment of
battle-rapture, Froissart likens him to Hector. But such a triumph could not
last. Struck by three spears at once, he was borne fighting to the ground.
The darkness, now probably thickening as the moon set, prevented his being
recognised for more than “ some person of considerable rank.” He received a
blow on the head from an axe, and the rush of battle passed over him. When
his friends gathered round him, in a lull of the fray, they found his body
defended by his chaplain, William Lundie. By his side, covered with fifteen
wounds, lay the body of another faithful attendant, Sir Robert Hart, who had
fought beside him all night. Asked by Sir John Sinclair, one of the first to
come up to him, how he did, he replied, “ Right evil; yet, thank God! but
few of my ancestors have died in their beds. I am dying, for my heart grows
faint; but I pray you to avenge me. Raise my banner, which lieth near me on
the ground. Show my state neither to friend nor foe, lest mine enemies
rejoice and my friends be discomfited.” These were his last words. Having
covered the body with a mantle, Sir John Sinclair raised the fallen banner
from the ground, and returned to the charge, to such good purpose that the
ranks of the English were broken, and they were soon in full retreat. Thus,
as some think, was fulfilled an ancient prophecy of the Douglas clan that a
dead man should win a field. It must not, however, be forgotten that the
English, hurried on by Percy’s impetuosity, had entered the battle at a
disadvantage, coming as they did direct from marching more than thirty miles
through the heat of a summer day. The Scots did not neglect to follow up the
advantage they had gained, but the failing moonlight deprived them of its
full effect. Froissart, however, states the English loss at about 1040 taken
or slain in the field, and upwards of 800 in the pursuit. The Scots,
according to the same authority, lost but 100 slain, and 200 made prisoners.
The ransoms of English prisoners, amongst whom was Hotspur, amounted to
^8000. But the death of Douglas dashed the joy of victory with mourning. His
body was placed upon a bier and borne to Melrose Abbey, where it was
interred beside his father’s, his banner being left to droop above the tomb.
Leaving no son, he was succeeded in the earldom by his kinsman, Archibald,
Lord of Galloway, sumamed the Grim, a natural son of the Good Sir James. The
Percy pennon, the cause of so much grief and valour, is preserved to this
day at Cavers House, with Douglas’s armour and other relics. In this
sceptical age it would be strange if doubt had not been cast upon its
authenticity; but the author of *The Douglas Book,’ after weighing the
evidence, concludes that in this case tradition is “ probably correct.” The
banner bears the badge of the Percys, the white lion, together with that of
the Douglases, the bloody heart and mullet, and their motto, “Jamais arriere,”—the
most plausible theory being that the latter are an addition made after its
capture. With the pennon are preserved a pair of gauntlets, elegantly
embroidered with seed-pearls, which are supposed to have been captured at
the same time.
Thus ended the battle of
Otterburn, famous in history, more famous still in song. The present age,
utilitarian as well as sceptical, may ask what results were obtained at so
great cost. We see that, since the days of Bruce, the struggle against
England had declined from a war of patriotism to what one may almost call a
war for war’s sake, a mere war of habit, or, as it has been otherwise put,
an “episode in the larger contest which it had stirred between England and
France.” To the utilitarian, at first sight the net result of Otterburn
seems nil. But, from another point of view, if Bruce’s wars had illustrated
a noble national spirit, no less did Otterburn illustrate a noble individual
one. It was an age when in the natural course of events fighting had come to
be looked on as the finest work a man could turn his hand to, and in the
generous ardour of the time the cause of fighting would often be left out of
sight. We read that Edward III. once kept his Easter at Berwick, and there
held a tournament. Twelve Scottish knights entered the lists against as many
English, and three were left lifeless on the field. This was by way of
sport. Cui bono? Was the game worth the candle? Yes. For a high spirit and a
noble scorn of pain and danger are always good; and, at least until we
finally turn the spear into the pruning-hook, they are most useful too. Nor
need we fear lest they become too common. Douglas and Hotspur were men of
their own age, as all great men of action must always be; but the story and
example of their meeting and fight at Otterburn remain to stir and to uplift
the hearts of fighters in a better cause, as they stirred the gallant heart
of Sidney, and have stirred many others before and since. |