IT is only of late years that
the records of the kirk-session—or, as they are popularly termed, the
session books, kept in every Scottish parish— have been conned and
investigated, with the view of obtaining thereby some information regarding
the manners and customs of our ancestors. Dr Robert Chambers availed himself
to a considerable extent of the collection of materials thus furnished, in
his ‘Domestic Annals of Scotland’; and Dr Ebenezer Henderson has both
published an interesting selection from the kirk-session records, and also
incorporated these, with many more from the same source, in his *Annals of
Dunfermline." Dr Ross, too, has given to the world a very interesting little
volume in connection with the session records of Dalgety, as illustrating
the history of its minister, Mr Donaldson, in the Covenanting times. But it
cannot yet be said that the subject has been very generally taken up, or
that the extensive and rich field, with the stores buried therein, has been
investigated and worked with the thoroughness that it deserves. There can be
little doubt that a vast amount of inedited information is still to be
procured, alike from the records of our kirk-sessions and the minute-books
of our burgh councils, which would throw a flood of light on the daily life
and social manners of our Scottish forefathers.
The session records of
Culross commence in 1629, and go on uninterruptedly to 1657, betwixt which
date and 1676 there is a blank, arising no doubt from the ecclesiastical
commotions and disorders of the period, when no minutes of the session’s
proceedings were preserved. And another hiatus occurs between 1684 and 1693.
The earliest volume extends from 1629 to 1646, and is in a sadly dilapidated
condition— some of the first pages having crumbled into fragments, whilst
many of the others have become nearly illegible from damp. Yet, after the
expenditure of a good deal of time and labour, I have succeeded in
deciphering almost all that is worthy of being preserved and extracted. The
succeeding volumes are generally both in good preservation and sufficiently
legible.
At the period when these
minutes begin, Scotland was in a condition of comparative tranquillity,
though many would doubtless characterise it as the tranquillity of
exhaustion or indifference, and perhaps, with still more reason, as that of
the ominous calm that precedes the storm. The old Presbyterian spirit of
ecclesiastical independence had been in a great measure crushed, and
Episcopacy had been forced on and sullenly submitted to by the nation. James
VI., after his accession to the English throne, felt himself emboldened to
exhibit and carry into action the old hostility by which he had long been
animated against the Presbyterian system of Church government, which had
asserted itself in such uncourtly fashion against kingly supremacy, and
exercised so strict a surveillance over kingly morals. He encountered in his
measures the most determined opposition, but at last succeeded in bending
the Church to the acceptance of a modified Episcopacy. Nothing more than a
modified form of it was ever established in Scotland, whether in the days of
James, his son, or his grandsons; and the abortive attempt of Charles I. to
introduce the liturgical service, in addition to the ecclesiastical polity
of England, proved such a disastrous failure that it was never afterwards
repeated. I shall have occasion again to enter more fully into the real
character of the ecclesiastical measures which the Stewarts sought to
enforce on the Scottish people with such pertinacity and cruelty, and which
the latter, though at times crushed and silenced, continued to resist to the
very death, and in resisting and freeing themselves from which they at last
succeeded. But for the present it may suffice to say, that notwithstanding
the supremacy of the bishops, who certainly regulated and controlled the
affairs of the Church, its administration as regards services and parochial
discipline remained throughout essentially Presbyterian, as it had been
settled at the Reformation. The machinery of the Church courts, with their
judicatories of kirk-sessions, presbyteries, and synods, continued the same,
with this important proviso—that in the last of the three the bishop acted
as a perpetual moderator, and practically exercised in all of them an
absolute control. In examining, therefore, the kirk-session records of
Scottish parishes, we find comparatively little difference in their
proceedings and phraseology in the days of Episcopacy from those in the
times of Presbytery, unless it be, indeed, in the much greater vigour of
administration and discipline which always marks the latter.
In 1629, when the first
volume of the Culross session records commences, Mr Robert Colville— of
whom, in the preceding chapter, we have had some account—was minister of the
parish. He succeeded, as already detailed, Mr John Dykes, who had been
appointed minister of Culross as far back as 1567; so that at the period
under notice, Mr Colville was the second Protestant minister who had served
the cure there since the Reformation. His career, however, was now rapidly
approaching its close; and of the following extracts from the kirk-session
minutes, there is only one which belongs to the period of his actual
ministry. It is not of much interest in itself, but may nevertheless be
presented:—
“30 January 1631.
“The said day it was havelie
regrated by the minister that the West Kirkyaird dykes were not as yett
repaired, as had been concluded and enjoined before, and that the kirk
treasurie wad be burdened therewith to much unless remedy was used in tyme,
and a way sett down quhereby all such as had through stones might furnish
monie for suplie, and perfecting of that work, and some dyat appointed for
that end whilk was thought expedient.”
It is well known that Culross
Church is a collegiate or double charge, and so blessed with the incumbency
of two ministers; but it is not so generally apprehended that it actually at
one time could boast, if not of three churches, at least of three
churchyards. Of one of these—St Mungo’s Kirk or Chapel, with its little
burying-ground—I shall say nothing at present; and, indeed, it belongs
altogether to the past. But there are still two burial-grounds in the parish
in actual use. One of them is attached to the Abbey Church, and known as the
Abbey Churchyard. The other is called the West Churchyard, and adjoins the
West Kirk—an old ruined church situated on the old road, now in great
measure disused, leading from Culross through the moor to Kincardine. It is
a lonely and sequestered but not unromantic locality—a veritable “God’s
acre,” such as might have inspired Gray to the composition of his “ Elegy.”
Much speculation has prevailed regarding the West Church, of which little
more now exists than a portion of the walls, enclosing what must have been
an edifice of very small dimensions. Scarcely an authentic record of it has
been preserved beyond the following extract from an Act of the Scottish
Parliament passed in 1633:—
“Attoure Oure said Soverane
lord and estates forsaids of this present Parliament, considering that the
abbay kirk of Culrois hes beine the kirk quhairine the cure hes beine servit,
be preatching of the Word of God, celebrating the Holy Coffiwnion, and
exercising and vsing of vther ecclesiastical discipline sen the Reformatione,
and that the kirk callit the paroche kirk of Culrois is ane old kirk
quhairine service is not nor hes not beine vsit since memorie of man, and is
altogether ruinous, decayit, and falline down in divers pairts, swa that the
, said pblpay kirk of Culrois is the most apt and fitt kirk for serving of
the cure thairat in tyme coming, and be reputt and haldine the ordinar
paroche kirk for that effect in all tyme heireftir: Thairfor Our said
Soverane lord and estates forsaids, in this present Parliament hes erected,
and be thir presents erects, the said kirk callit the abbay kirk in ane frie
paroche kirk, to the said burgh of Culrois parochiners, and inhabitants
within the said parochine thairof, to be callit in all tyme coming the
paroche kirk of Culrois, swa that the inhabitants within the bounds thairof
sail nawayes be astricted heirefter to the said auld kirk callit the paroche
kirk of Culrois, nor discipline thairof, and vphald the samyne to that
effect, bot sail onlie be subject to the discipline to be vsit at the said
abbay kirk of Culrois, now to be callit the paroche kirk thairof in all tyme
coming; and wills and grants, and for his hienes and his successors decemes
and ordaines, that the said abbay kirk, now to be callit the said paroche
kirk of Culrois, sail have, bruik, and joyse the like priweledge, jmmwuitie,
and libertie as the said auld kirk callit the paroche kirk had at the
foundatione thairof, or grantit thereto in any tyme bygaine, with the
stipend dew to the said auld paroche kirk, to be payit to the minister
present, and to come serving the cure at the said new erectit kirk, and
vthers friedomes, liberties, easments, and priweledges quhatsumever, sick as
mans and gleib, apperteining to the said auld kirk in tyme coming for now
and ever, bot con-tradictione or impediment.”
The ABBEY CHURCH of Culross, with Ruins of Monastery. From the Lower Manse
Garden.
The West Kirk of Culross.
We know from various sources
that the West Church was the same as that described above as “the paroche
kirk of Culrois.” Such, indeed, was its history and character. Previous to
the Reformation it was the real parish church — what is now known as the
Abbey or parish Church of Culross being then merely the church of the
monastery. The above passage in the Act of 1633 is indeed a very interesting
and important one, and may almost be said to be exhaustive as regards the
original destination of the West Kirk. It appears that at this date no
remembrance existed of its having been used as a place of Worship—that no
Protestant service had ever been held in it, and that probably even at the
Reformation it only existed in a ruined and dilapidated condition. It seems
determined, also, that ever since the Reformation the Abbey Church —which
prior to that event was only the church of the monastery—had been regularly
used as the parish church; that prior to the Reformation and up to 1633 the
West Kirk was legally the parish church of Culross, and that the Act of
Charles I.’s Parliament above quoted finally deprived it of that character,
and transferred its endowments to the Abbey Church, which thus for the first
time became de jure —what since the Reformation it had been de facto— the
parish church.
On the 25th of February 1631,
Mr Colville died rather suddenly—it would seem, in consequence of being
“stricken with a deadly palsie.” A great disputation ensued regarding the
election of his successor. The heritors and kirk-sesBion were very anxious
to procure the Bishop’s sanction to the appointment of a Mr John Murray, who
had intimated his readiness to accept the charge provided a suitable “
helper ” were appointed, “whose maintenance he was most -willing himself for
the most part to yield, and not to lay burdens on the people, since
hithertill now he had never sought for one earthlie reward nor stipend.” In
this offer we have the first intimation of the idea, which was now coming to
be generally entertained, of the desirability of having a colleague
appointed to the minister, and a double charge established, in the church of
Culross. But notwithstanding this liberal proposal on his part, the
commissioners appointed by the kirk-session to transact the business
reported “that it was an impossibilitie to gett Mr Johne Murray, for reasons
known by the Bishope and them, which were not thought expedient to express
in write.” They next proceed to say that they had “ sett their mindes on Mr
John Duncan, present minister of Sauling [Saline], whom, with the Bishop’s
consent (being both qualified and of good report), they had sought, who also
condition-alle had wealnew yielded and consented to be their minister.”
A hitch in the proceedings
was threatened by a manoeuvre on the part of the laird of Earlshall, who
contrived to procure on behalf of his son, Mr Robert Bruce, a presentation
from the Crown to the living of Culross, notwithstanding that another had
already been obtained in favour of Mr Duncan. In these circumstances the
Bishop of Dunblane left the decision of the matter in the hands of the
heritors and kirk-session, who, on the question being put to the vote,
almost unanimously declared their adhesion to the appointment of Mr Duncan;
and to this deliverance, though not without considerable difficulty, effect
was ultimately given.
Culross was episcopally in
the diocese of Dunblane, and, as we have seen, subject to the government of
its bishop. But it was also in the Presbytery of Dunfermline—though this
does not seem to have been the case originally, and for a considerable
period after the Reformation. It had then belonged to the Presbytery of
Dunblane, like the adjoining parish of Tulliallan; and the disjunction had
taken place about the time when Mr Colville was appointed minister. Just
before the Revolution, as we find from the * Register of the Diocesan Synod
of Dunblane,’ recently edited by Dr Wilson, a movement was made to have it
again united with the old confederation ; but the overthrow of Episcopacy
stopped all further action in the matter. Culross has always regarded
Dunfermline as her metropolis in all social and domestic concerns—though, as
regards civil and criminal jurisdiction, her capital is Dunblane.
Having thus got Mr Duncan
finally settled as minister, in opposition to the scion of the Earlshall
family, we shall not, for some time to come, find much to disturb the
tranquillity of the parish. The chronicles are chiefly of the small-beer
order.
“22 April 1632.
“Quo die, with uniforme
consent, it was ordained that if any man his horse, kow, or beast shall be
found aither by night or by day eating grass in either of kirkyairds, both
West Kirkyaird and Abbey Kirkyaird, the master or owner to pay ad pios urns;
and for this cause, the dykes to be repaired with diligence.”
“13 May 1632.
“Item, compeired James
Peacock, and being accused for his kow eating in the kirkyaird—confessit—ordained
to pay 40 8h., according to the late Act maid thereanent.”
“24 June 1638.
“The said day it was ordained
that all who had not brought stones to the West Kirkdyk, to be warned, and
in time to bring the same."
“8 July 1632.
“The said day ordained James
Peacock to pass throw the rest of the parochiners who had not ledd in stones
for a mending of the West Kirkyaird, and to warn them to bring their stones,
under pain of disobedience.”
“22 of Julie 1632.
“Isabell Cowston called for
buying and selling butter with James Benny in tyme of sermon, compeared
both, who confessed their fault, and after admonition, were pardoned for the
first fault.”
Some scolds, male and female,
are called up and reproved. Scolding or “flyting” seems, from both the
parochial and burgh records, to have been a very besetting sin with our
ancestors—more especially the fair sex—for whose accommodation and
reformation the branks and ducking-stool were in frequent requisition. Even
Sunday shone no Sabbath-day, for such explosions. The authorities considered
it as a delinquency which they were bound to inquire into and punish; but
Witty Eppie, the famous alewife of Buckhaven, of chap-book notoriety, took a
more sensible view of the matter. In her house we are told that the wives
“had their fill o’ flytin’”; but no blows were allowed, for, as Eppie used
to declare, “Aff hands was fair-play.”
“18 August 1632.
"Item, called Archd.
Tailyeour, with his wyf Margaret Smythe, and accused for continued stryving
and flyting on the Lord’s Bay with James Sinclair and his wyf Bessie
Tailyeour. Continued to the next meeting.”
“26 Auguit 1632.
“The quhilk day called Archd.
Buckham, with his wyf Margaret Izatt, and Cecil Brunston, as also Archd.
Tailzeour, with his wyf Margaret Smythe, and James Sinclair, with his wyf
Bessie Tailzeour, who, all accused of scolding and flyting on the Lord’s
Day, could not deny; but the matter being cleared by Thomas Izat, butcher,
that the men were not so in the fault as thrie of the women—vizt., Bessie
Tailzeour, Margaret Ezat, and Cecil Brunton—therefore the men were gravelie
admonished not to committ the lyk, and dimitted. But the women were ordained
to be brought to the market cross the next Saturday, and to stand there in
the space of one hour for examplis sake, and that for their scolding on the
Lord’s Day.”
The following extract is
interesting as showing the names and designations at this early period of
the elders in the church of Culross. The list is most beautifully written in
the original, and proves that the old reputation of the monks of Culross in
caligraphy was still admirably maintained in the hands of their Presbyterian
successors. One or two of the names, it will be observed, have been
subsequently deleted, but the complement was probably made up by the
substitution of others. At the present day, one is surprised to find such a
multitude of elders or officebearers in the church—thirty in all, or fifteen
for the town and fifteen for the country. And afterwards, as we shall see,
this number was increased. The fact is, that under the old Presbyterian
polity the office of elder was regarded as a very serious and responsible
one. Along with one or two others, he had a special district assigned him,
within which he was expected to act as the deputy or assistant of the
minister—to visit at stated times every household, and see that its members
were exemplary in their conduct and diligent in the fulfilment of their
religious duties. He was to rebuke and exhort, be diligent in detecting the
existence of any sin or delinquency, and was bound to report all such, or
even rumours of such, to the minister and kirk-session. In short, the posse
of elders acted very much as a sort of moral policemen, or ecclesiastical
detectives, and we shall have many instances of their unwearied vigilance in
ferreting out scandals and haling offenders to justice. Whatever may be
thought now of the inquisitorial nature of the sway which they exercised, or
the ridiculous nature of the charges which as members of the kirk-session
they solemnly investigated and adjudicated upon, it must always be
remembered that they took the great majority of the country along with them,
and had the support of almost all the respectable and God-fearing portion of
the community. Toleration and indifference were, with our earnest-minded
ancestors, convertible terms; and neither Episcopalians nor Presbyterians
had yet attained to any proper ideas of the rights of private judgment and
liberty of conscience—at least to any idea of the right of exercising
individual liberty in matters of religious worship and practice. We may
smile now at the extravagances of the Puritans and Covenanters—and nothing
is more open to ridicule than an excess of religious zeal, or extravagance
in religious phraseology; but we ought always to bear in mind the infinite
debt of gratitude which we lie under to those men for the determined and
self-sacrificing resistance which they made to the pretensions of tyranny
ecclesiastical and civil, and the foundation which they thereby laid of all
our present liberty and independence. Nor even, as Dr M'Crie has very well
shown in the review of the ‘ Tales of My Landlord,’ had the Scottish
Presbyterians any such monopoly in the art of saying and doing ridiculous
things as it has commonly been the fashion to credit them with. Some
specimens which he gives of the discourses of Episcopalian divines are about
as absurd as any of those recorded in that curious and somewhat apocryphal
volume, entitled ‘ Scottish Presbyterian Eloquence Displayed.’ And generally
it will be well to recollect, that in the change of manners and fashions,
what in one age appears serious and becoming, may in a following one only
seem ludicrous and reprehensible.
“7 October 1632.
“Elders on lete nominat be
chosen for the
Land. |
|
Toume. |
John Colvile of
Comrie |
1 |
George Bruce of
Camock. |
John Erskine of
Balgownie |
|
(James Aikine of
Middle |
2 |
[ Grange. |
John Hamiltone of
Blaire |
3 |
M. Edward Blaw
[deleted]. |
S. John Prestoune of
Valefield 4 |
Adam Primrose
[deleted]. |
Robert Bruce of
Blairhall |
5 |
Thomas Ezate. |
Gilbert Gourlay of
Wester ) Grange . . . j |
6 |
John Haliday. |
James Bruce of Bordie
. |
7 |
Robert Forret. |
Adam Mastertoune of
East 1 |
• 8 |
John Sands. |
Grange . . . j |
Allane Blaw of
Castell Hill |
9 |
Mr Robert Gourlay. |
Wm. Sands of
Birkenhead |
10 |
Patrick Rowane. |
Patrick Bruce |
11 |
Patrick Keir
[deleted]. |
John Turcane |
12 |
Andrew Gibsone. |
John Gray |
13 |
Alexander Ezate. |
Hendrie Cowey |
14 |
Andrew Brande. |
John Kalender |
15 |
James Sands. |
“Item, this roll was ordained
to be intimat out of pulpit the 14 of October, and that, (if any of the
congregation wald pretend lawful cause why these may not ruell, they would
come upon the 18 of October, and gif them in, with assurance to be heard.”
It is evident from the above,
that so far from the members of the kirk-session belonging to an inferior
class of the community, as has sometimes been imagined, they comprised
really—at least in the older days of Presbytery—the most influential persons
of the town and adjoining country. With two exceptions all the elders
mentioned have special duties and districts assigned them, and the deletion
of three of the names must have been made at a subsequent date. As concerns
the two exceptions in question —that is to say, John Erskine of Balgownie
and George Bruce of Camock—it is not improbable that for them, as the most
distinguished of the company, the honourable and comparatively light duty of
presiding over the collections at the church door was reserved; whilst it is
also extremely likely that on all solemn occasions, such as the celebration
of the Communion, they took precedence of the others.
Reference has already been
made to John Colville of Comrie, who heads the list of elders in 1632, and
who must now have been a man advanced in years, seeing that more than forty
years had elapsed since he, as the eldest son and heir of Alexander Colville
the Commendator, had made over the estates of Culross Abbey to his unde, Sir
James Colville of Easter Wemyss, afterwards the first Lord Colville of
Culross. We know almost nothing personally of John Colville of Comrie, but
his wife, Elizabeth Melville of Halhill, has achieved a considerable
reputation under the designation of “Lady Culross,” so renowned as a devout
Presbyterian, and the authoress of a poem entitled “Ane Godlie Dream,” or
“Lady Culross’s Dream.” She was the friend and correspondent of Mr
Livingstone, the minister of Ancrum, in whose autobiography, edited by Mr
Tweedie for the Wodrow Society, her religious fervour is referred to as of
the most wonderful description. One scene in particular, on the night
following a Communion occasion at the Kirk of Shotts in June 1630, when she
displayed an extraordinary gift of prayer, forms a remarkable chapter in the
records of Presbyterian enthusiasm.
A number of letters are
preserved addressed by Lady Culross to Mr Livingstone, chiefly in or about
the year 1631. Her “Dream,” first published, it would appear, at Aberdeen in
1644, displays a moderate degree of ability on the favourite theme of a
visit to the unseen world, but is by no means of so appalling or sensational
a description as has been sometimes reported. She had three sons, Alexander,
James, and Samuel. The first of these seems to have studied for the Church,
went abroad to France, became professor of divinity at Sedan, and married a
French lady, Anne le Blanc. James, the second son, is said to have
occasioned his mother great uneasiness by his conduct; and a similar feeling
seems to have possessed her regarding her youngest son Samuel, of whom, in
one of her letters, she speaks as going to the College of St Andrews, “ bot
I fear him deadly.” How far Samuel may have given her serious cause for
apprehension we know not, but he certainly did not inherit the strong
Presbyterian proclivities of his mother. On the contrary, he has attained
some reputation as the author of ‘ The Scots Hudibras,’ or ‘The Whigs’
Supplication,’ a burlesque narrative of a supposed expedition of the Scotch
Presbyterians to London to implore the clemency of Charles II., and a
mitigation of the oppressive measures against the Covenanters. It is not
altogether destitute of merit, and displays some coarse wit, but falls far
short in general ability of the celebrated work of Butler, on which it is
modelled. I do not know when the first edition was published, but a reprint
appeared at St Andrews in 1796 by James Morison, the University printer. It
had evidently been issued before the Revolution. Samuel Colville refers to
his mother’s poem, “Lady Culross’s Dream,” but gives no indication of his
belongings or relationship beyond the following quotation in his preface or
“Apology to the Reader,” from “John Cockburn —
“Samuel was sent to France,
To learn to sing and dance,
And play upon a fiddle:
Now he’s a man of great esteem,—
Hia mother got him in a dream,
At Culross on a girdle.”
So much for Jphn Colville of
Comrie and his family. The title/ assumed by his wife of “ Lady Culross,” or
“Ljkdy Culross the younger,” occasions some perplexity. I have already given
some account of th<fe first lord, and mentioned that he was succeeded foy
his grandson James, as the second Lord Colv/iUe of Culross. The latter is
commonly stated u4 the Peerages to have died in 1640 without issue, and the
succession to the title is then, said to have devolved on his father's
cousin, the above-mentioned John Colville, Laird of Comrie, who, however,
never claimed it, as did neither his son, grandson, nor great-grandson. It
was first again taken up in 1723 by John Colville, an officer in the army,
great-grandson of Alexander Colville, the professor of divinity at Sedan,
and great-great-grandson of John Colville, the son of the Commendator, and
husband of the authoress of “Lady Culross’s Dream.”
Now in some important
particulars the above account is wholly erroneous, and its recent
rectification is due to the researches of a member of the family, who has
obJjjingly communicated to me the result of his investigation. It appears
from these that, so far from James, ihe second Lord Colville of Culross,
dying in 1640 without issue, he survived till about 1655, was three times
married, and left by his second wife two sons, Wiliam and John, who seem
both to have died young, fcut to have nevertheless borne successively the
tiiips of third and fourth Lords Culross. On the death of the last, about
1667, the peerage became dorm^t till 1723, when it was claimed by and
awarded to the above-mentioned John Colville, great - grand8011 °f the
divinity professor at Sedan. From him, and consequently also from Lady
Culross and her husband John Colville of Comrie, the eldest son of the
Commendator, the present Lord Colville of Culross is lineally descended. He
owns no property, however, of any kind about Culross, the extensive
possessions of his ancestors in that district having apparently all been
disposed of before the dose of the seventeenth century.
James, second Lord Colville
of Culross, seems to have been a man of very doubtful character. In 1639 he
figures in the kirk-session records of Culross on an arraignment of
immorality brought against him by a certain Catherine Turcan, whose charge,
however, is not found proven, and his lordship is ultimately purged of it by
his own oath before the congregation. He seems to have left the country
shortly afterwards, and passed over to Ireland, where during Cromwell’s
expedition he served with considerable distinction, and had a grant of lands
made to him in Kilkenny. His first wife had died before he left Scotland,
and he seems to have married his second and third in Ireland, where he
ultimately himself died about 1655. Before the birth of his two sons,
however, by his second marriage, John Colville of Comrie was
heir-presumptive to the peerage, and he and his wife may consequently have
enjoyed by courtesy the respective titles of Lord and Lady Culross the
younger. I can devise, at least, no more feasible explanation. It is certain
that neither of them could ever have held the title by legal right.
As regards the second on the
list of elders, John Erskine of Balgownie, he was a lineal descendant of
Robert, fourth Earl of Mar, whose son, James Erskine, acquired the estate of
Balgownie, and was on his mother’s side descended from John Campbell of New
Milns and Loudoun, one of the thirty Lollards who were prosecuted by
Archbishop Blackadder, and only escaped by the favour of James IV. He
espoused with great zeal the cause of the Reformation, and transmitted his
Presbyterian zeal to his descendants. One of these appears frequently in the
kirk-session and burgh records in the early part of the last century as Sir
John Erskine of Balgownie, having been raised to the rank of knighthood. The
male representation terminated in his son, Mr John Erskine, advocate, who
was succeeded in the estate of Balgownie by his sister Hannah. She married
in 1736 John Cunningham, younger of Comrie, and their only son was the Rev.
Robert Cunningham, minister of the Antiburgher congregation at East Bams, in
East Lothian. The circumstance of his being connected with that Church seems
to have arisen from his mother having married, as her second husband, Mr
Adam Gibb, one of the leading Secession ministers of Edinburgh. Mr
Cunningham was the great-grandfather of the late Captain John Cunningham of
Balgownie, who was thus a lineal descendant of the Earls of Mar.
The third elder on the list,
John Hamilton of Blair—or as it is now called, Blair Castle—was a
descendant, probably a grandson, of the famous Archbishop Hamilton, who was
hanged at Stirling after the capture of Dumbarton Castle in 1571. This
unfortunate Churchman is said to have built the old house of Blair, which
was ill existence to the end of the last century. Among his illegitimate
offspring, besides the father of John Hamilton, was a daughter Margaret, who
married Robert Bruce of Blairhall, elder brother of the first Lord Kinloss,
and father of the Robert Bruce who figures fifth in our list. This
last-named Robert Bruce of Blairhall married Catherine, daughter of Sir John
Preston of Valleyfield, also recorded there. They were the parents of Thomas
Bruce of Blairhall, and his brother Sir William Bruce of Kinross, the
celebrated architect.
I shall not trouble my
readers at present with any further remarks on the individuals whose names
are recorded in the above list, as I have already diverged rather unduly
from my main subject, and opportunities will again occur of referring to
them, as well as to the localities of which they axe appointed supervisors.
Returning to the kirk-session records, we find noted the occurrence of a
destructive Btorm which has rendered the repair of the church necessary:—
“16 February 1633.
“Item, since upon the 8 of
Feb. 1633 that most impetuous storm of wind had spoiled and tyrred manie
pieces both of stiple, kirk, and queire, Gilbert Gourlay, Adam Primrose,
John Haliday, John Sands, Alexander Ezat, together with Andro Broun, wright,
and John Anderson, slatter, were ordained to sight the edifice of the kirk,
and to give their judgment both for the cost and most commodious way to
repair the same, as also to consider what expenses the same would require
for amending of the said rooffe, and to report.”
Here is a specimen of Sabbath
desecration which would scarcely happen at the present day, though we are
much less strict than our ancestors on the question of Sunday observance:—
“17 April 1633.
"Playaris at the goffe were
given to the session, playing in tyme of sermon—viz., Rt. Gray, Et.
Primrose, Wm. Inche, and John Sandis in Sands. Ordained to compeir next
meeting.”
“28 April 1633.
“Compeared Rt. Gray,
confessed playing in time of sermon—ordained to pay 12/: cautioner Patrick
Bruce. Item, Wm. Inche ordained to pay 12/: cautioner Andrew Brand. Item,
Rt. Primrose ordained to pay 12/-: cautioner Pat. Bruce.”
An ordinance is issued
against “ outlandish drunkards ”—that is to say, strangers who frequented
the Culross market on Saturday and protracted their convivialities into the
Sunday:—
“4 May 1634.
“Quo die the session being
frequently convened, and some outlanders being found drunk in tyme of
sermon—viz., Wm. Huison and Wm. Day, indwellers in the Kruk of Devoun3
—after regrat made that certain mealmen, fieashers, and others marketmen did
tarry all night fra their dwelling-houses and paroch kirk, drinking all the
Saturday overnight till Sonday in the morning, yea and till afternoon upon
the Lord His Day, drinking the wholl tyme, and so thereafter departing
drunk, to the great offence of God and His people: Therefore, for redress of
the premises, it was uniformlie statute and ordained that first inquirie be
made of such persons by the magistrates and searchers, and such like
outlandish drunkards being apprehendit personallie be the foresaid
magistrates, or that they be detained in firmancie till they satisfie or
find sufficient caution to obey accordingly; and that all sellers of drink
to such, and accepters of them, shall pay ad pios usus 40 sh. how often
soever they sal be found guiltie, whether those accepters be toune folk or
par-ochiners in any other part whatsoever of the parochine of Culross. And
thir presents to be intimat out of pulpit the next Sabboth, and at the
market-cross the Saturday preceding, that none pretend ignorance; quhilk was
done accordingly.”
“18 January 1635.
“Quo die compeared David
Clerk, and accused of shooting doves in tyme of sermon, confessed the samen;
ordered to pay 12s., or else to be punished in body.”
“8 March 1635.
“James Hunter's house at the
new mylne delated to be a common receptacle of drunkards in time of sermon.”
The reader may be reminded
here of Tam o’ Shanter’s misdoings:—
“That at the Lord's house,
even on Sunday,
Thou drank wi’ Kirkton Jean
till Monday.” “Act anent Vaigeries tba the Kirk.
“22 May 1636.
“Be reason of John Oat,
Donald Glass, and James Porteous, or any other, walking, talking, lying, or
sleeping in any pairt or place whatsomever, but namlie in the kirkyaird, in
tyme of sermon, herefore it is statute and ordained that whosoever person or
persons shall be found so doing in tyme of sermon as said is, that those
guilty and violators of the premisses, shall pay ad pios usus six shillings
toties guoties ; and same Act to be intimate out of the pulpit without
delay.”
It took a long time to train
the Scottish people to Sabbath observance, after the laxity to which they
had been accustomed in Popish times. People would persist in continuing
their ordinary vocations on Sunday, notwithstanding all the denunciations of
the kirk-session. A whimsically severe warning is recorded in the
following:—
“29 May 1636.
"Quo die compeared Wm.
Tulloch, who inacted himself that if it should be proven that he or anie of
his were working at the saltpans in time of divyne service, he should be
content to be put in waird, and to live there 8 dayes on bread and watter on
his own charges.”
“Act anent Brydell Lawings.
“17 July 1636.
“Item, anent brydell lawings,
it is ordained that ther shall be at brydells invited but 24 persons on both
the sydes, and the lawing to be only ten shillings for each person. And if
it shall happen that either the number of persons be mor or over the pryce
for ilk person greater than is above sett down and modified, that then thes
failzie and penaltie shall be 10 lbs. toties quoties; and the
transgressors—viz., makeris of such brydells—to be punished in exacting the
foresaid onlay (without respect of persons), be the bailyees in the toun,
and be the land bailyies in the land; and the same penalties to be delyvered
be them ad pios 1pus”
The next extract is of a very
interesting kind, as showing the tenacity with which the common people clung
to the old Popish superstitions in connection with pilgrimages to chapels,
holy wells, and other places, presided over by certain saints, who were
supposed to exercise a benign influence in the cure of various maladies. The
Reformed Church set its face strenuously against such practices, but all its
endeavours were for a long time futile:—
"16 Julie 1637.
“Jhon Ker and Jhon Duncan,
websters, called in for going with Hearie Wannan, he distracted in his
wittes, to the chappell of Stuthle, in Stratherne, he confessed, because
they wer informed that ther he might recover his health. It was judged a
great scandall and offence; and therefore ar ordered to mak ther repentance
publicklie before the congregation, and to pay ad pios urns each of them
half a dollar, and to be imprisoned 24 hours.
"For this cause an Act was
made that whosoever in the parishe should presume to goe to such suspect
places for to sek ther health, or sould accompanie thos that under sickness
to use such suspect means, to be banished the parishe.”
The chapel of “Stuthle” is
evidently the same as that of Struthell, in the parish of Muthil in
Perthshire, regarding which and its well, which attracted hosts of pilgrims;
interesting corroborative testimony is furnished in the Appendix to the ‘
Register of the Diocesan Synod of Dunblane ’ already quoted.
Just one week after the
deliverance of the Culross kirk-session regarding the superstitious weavers
and. their friend Harry Wannan, Charles I. made his illr judged and abortive
attempt to force the Service-book on the Scottish people. The Dean of
Edinburgh began to read the collect for the day in St Giles’s Church,
Edinburgh; Jenny Geddes threw her stool at his head, and the Service-book
never again was brought forward, even in the terrible persecuting days
between the Restoration and the Revolution. A commotion was produced in
Scotland that resulted in the complete triumph of Presbytery for a time.
Great exertions were made by the leaders of the movement to secure the
general concurrence of country congregations in protesting against the
introduction of a liturgy. The appeal was readily responded to. Here are the
utterances of the kirk-session of Culross on the subject:—
“1 October 1637.
“This day was proponed the
fear that we were in about this Service-book now intending and urging
against all order, and which all full of superstition and Popery, and that
others already troubled for the same—it was therefore agreed upon for to
give in a supplication in name of this paroch to the Counsell against the
said book.”
“14 Octr. 1637.
“ The session frequently
convened, did deliberat what wes most expedient to be done anent the matter
of this Service-book, since ther wes a counsell day the week following;
whereupon it wes resolved that for the land there should go to Edinr. to
attend the counsell ther for this busines as commissioners from the said
parishe, Sir John Prestoun of Yaleyfield, Robert Bruce of Blairhall, and Mr
David Gourlay, to joyne with others in giving in supplication, and using any
other mean in their wisdom that should be found expedient, whereto all with
one consent agreed right willingly.”
The famous Tables have been
constituted, and the National Covenant is being subscribed in the Greyfriars
Churchyard, Edinburgh. Culross appoints commissioners :—
"March 11,1638
“Lykwyse this day the session
appoints ther commissioners to concur with the Presbytrie for subscriving of
the Covenant of the land, according as wes appointed by the tables in Edinr.:
commissioners for the lands wer, Jhon Erskine of Balgownie, Sir John
Prestoun of Yaleyfield, Robert Bruce of Blairhall; for the toun, Jho.
Haliday, Archd. Anderson, and Rot. Forret, clerk.” |