He was not seventeen
years old—this man of many adventures—when he obtained his degree of
Master of Arts at Glasgow; in obedience, as he tells us, to his
father, and not from any desire of his own. For it was never his
intention to make use of a title which he, like many others, had
never deserved. Our Cavalier—afterwards so widely known as Sir James
Turner—then spent a year with his father at Dalkeith, studying
humane letters and history, and the points of controversy between
the Roman and Protestant Churches. To a young man of Turner’s
energetic temper such a course of life soon became intolerable; and
flinging aside Bellarmine and Liguori, he buckled on his sword and
set out for the wars. He hoped to become, if not an actor in, at
least a spectator of, the memorable contention which was then
pending between Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden, the Lion of the North,
and the Catholic princes of the Empire, and secured a pair of
colours in a Scotch regiment levied by Sir James Lumsden for service
under the Swedish King’s flag. Gustavus, however, fell on Liitzen’s
hard-fought field before Lumsden and his Scots arrived in Germany;
and in February 1633, Turner found himself under the command of Duke
George of Brunswick, serving in the trenches before the strong town
of Ham-melln. Late in the following June, an Imperialist army,
twenty thousand strong, advanced to its relief.
“We broke up,” says Turner, “and met them four English miles from
thence, and fought them. This was a battle wherein so much blood was
shed, as was enough to flesh such novices as I was. We gained the
victory, which was a great one to be gained with so little loss on
our side. Near nine thousand of the Imperialists were killed in the
place, three thousand taken, with eighteen cannon, and above eighty
standards and colours." Hammelln afterwards capitulated. During the
remainder of the campaign Turner saw much fighting — of which those
who had a stomach for it could easily get large measure in Turner’s
stirring days! — but suffered not a little from want of provisions
and clothes, lying out in the fields with no, or scanty, shelter,
marching a-foot, and drinking nothing stronger than water—this last
being a privation which Turner and his comrades greatly took to
heart. But he soon learned to love a soldier’s life; and grew so
tough and strong with his hard knocking about, that the hardships of
the camp and the bivouac ceased to trouble him. He came to feel as
if he could always be content with a crust of bread and a bundle of
straw—so true it is that Habitus est altera natnra. [Note that Sir
James occasionally flourishes a Latin quotation to remind you that
he was an M.A. of Glasgow University.
Turner rapidly grew experienced in the ways and methods of a soldier
of fortune. He picked up enough German to understand and be
understood. He acquired the fashions and manners, such as they were,
of the German officers ; and soon became an expert in the science of
living without regular pay, so that during the remainder of his
foreign service he wanted little that daring or ingenuity, force or
stratagem, could furnish him with. In the later months of 1634 he
was temporarily recalled to Scotland by his father’s death and the
family arrangements necessary thereupon ; and owing to the severity
of the winter, was unable to return to the field of war until the
spring, when he proceeded to Hamburg to join a projected expedition
to Persia. But the expedition never came off; and Turner, who had
gone on to Osnaburg, was shut up within its walls by the unwelcome
appearance of an Imperialist army, and had to endure the privations
of a siege until the city was relieved in the summer of 1636 by the
Protestant forces.
There seem to have been occasions when even a soldier of fortune was
moved by the horrors of war. In quite pathetic terms does Turner
describe the cruelties of the Imperialist General, Bigod, who, in
1637, burned three fair towns, Eschvegen, Ollendorp, and
Vitsenshausen, before the eyes of the Protestant leaders. “A
mournful sight it was,” he says, “to see the whole people follow us,
and climb the two high rocks which flanked us. Old and young left
their houses, by the loss of them and their goods to save their
lives. Aged men and women, many above fourscore, most lame or blind,
supported by their sons, daughters, and grandchildren, who
themselves carried their little ones on their backs, were a ruthful
object of pity to any tender-hearted Christian [like James Turner, I
suppose !], and did show us with what dreadful countenance that
bloody monster of war can appear in the world.” Turner, however, did
nothing to avoid the face of that “bloody monster,” but kept to his
trade of fighting, and rose through the successive stages of ensign,
lieutenant, captain-lieutenant, captain.
The Swedish Government owing him a sum of four hundred dollars in
arrears of pay, he repaired to Sweden in 1639 in the hope of getting
it. “Stockholm,” he says, “is the capital city of that kingdom.
There I saw one of the fairest castles, and of the greatest
reception, of any I ever looked on, all covered with copper, of
which metal that kingdom abounds. It stands on a pretty ascending
hill from the sea ; and under it, for most part, rides the navy
royal, composed of great and tall ships, carrying some fifty, some
sixty, some seventy, and some eighty brass guns. The Oueen
[Christina] was then about fourteen years old, applying herself much
to learn foreign languages, and to the study of those sciences,
which by the strength of her great natural endowments she soon
acquired, which has made her so famous all the world over.”
Turner lost most of his four hundred dollars, receiving only a small
gratuity which kept him above water, until he was attracted towards
his native land by the rude echoes of the war which had broken out
between Charles I. and the Puritan party. He confesses, frankly
enough, that, in Germany, he had “swallowed without chewing,” a
maxim of military morals which he admits to be a very dangerous one;
namely, that if a soldier served his master faithfully, it mattered
not who that master was; and circumstances preventing him from going
to England and offering his sword to the King, as he had first
intended, he made up his mind to cross into Scotland and take up the
cause of the Covenant. His skipper landed him at Cove, on the
Aberdeenshire coast. Thence he rode post to Edinburgh, where he
learned that General Leslie had marched across the Border, and
putting Lord Conway- and a loyalist force to defeat at Newburn, had
made himself master of Newcastle and of the whole bishopric of
Durham.
“I found,” says Turner, “this success had elevated the minds of my
countrymen in general to such a height of vanity, that most of them
thought, and many said, they should quickly make a full conquest of
England; but,” he soberly adds, “time hath shown them since that
they made their reckoning without their host, for the very contrary
fell out.”
Our captain followed Leslie to Newcastle, and, through the influence
of the Earl of Rothes, was appointed major of Lord Kirkcudbright’s
regiment. In this capacity he served for two months in the Scots
army, though he had not taken the Covenant; not that he would have
refused, he says with his usual candour, to have sworn to it and
signed it, and have observed it too, but that nobody asked him ; all
supposing, naturally enough, that an officer in the Covenanting army
would be a True Blue ! At the end of the year the army returned to
Scotland, and our doughty Cavalier was condemned to several months
of inaction. In 1641 he was appointed major in Lord Sinclair’s
regiment, included in the army of ten thousand Scots who had been
hired by the English Parliament to assist in putting down the great
Irish Revolt. They landed at Carrickfergus, and leaving a garrison
there, marched inland with fire and sword, inflicting on the Irish
Papists a bloody retaliation for their massacre of the Protestants.
At Newry the rebel soldiery capitulated ; but, next day, with many
merchants and traders of the town, were conveyed to the bridge and
put to death in cold blood, some by shooting, some by hanging, and
some by drowning, the innocent suffering with the guilty. “Our
soldiers,” says Turner, “seeing such pranks played by authority at
the bridge, thought they might do as much anywhere else ; and so ran
upon a hundred and fifty women, or thereby, who had got together in
a place below the bridge, whom they resolved to massacre by killing
and drowning, which villany the sea seemed to favour, it being then
flood. Seeing afar off what a game these godless rogues intended to
play, I got a-horseback and galloped to them with my pistol in my
hand; but before I got at them, they had dispatched about a dozen;
the rest I saved.”
In this Irish campaign Turner had many rough experiences. On one
occasion he was sent to Carrickfergus to fetch up some
reinforcements from Scotland. Marching through the dense woods and
wild hills of Morne, they killed and captured several rebels. On the
route they suffered one of the stormiest and most tempestuous nights
that the oldest among them had ever known. “All the tents were in a
trice blown over. It was not possible for any match to keep fire, or
any soldier to handle his musket, or yet to stand; yea, several of
them died that night of mere cold. So that if the rebels,” says
Turner, “whereof there were five hundred not far from us, had
offered to beat up our quarters with such weapons as they had, which
were half-pikes, swords, and daggers, they would undoubtedly have
had a cheap market of us. Our soldiers, and some of our officers too
(who suppose that nothing that is more than ordinary can be the
product of nature), attributed this hurricane to the devilish skill
of some Irish witches; and if that was true,” says the shrewd old
Cavalier, “then I am sure their master gave us good proof that he
was really prince of the
He tells us also of the sufferings of himself and his men from want
of provisions, and of the irregularity with which they were paid; of
their guerilla-like war with the rebels, and their long and
wearisome marches; all of which he seems to have undergone with the
nonchalance of a good soldier, though as modesty is by no means a
marked feature of his character, we must necessarily accept his
statements with judicious reserve. Early in 1644 he was back in
Scotland ; and finding that the Earl of Leven (the elder Leslie) had
marched into England with twenty thousand foot and two thousand
horse, to the assistance of Parliament, he hastened to follow him. I
suspect his reception was not to his liking; for he soon rode back
to Scotland; and after a fresh study of the Solemn League and
Covenant, came to the sudden conclusion that it was a treacherous
and disloyal combination, and concerted with some other
swashbucklers to join the Marquis of Montrose, who held the King’s
commission. They kept their intention secret, however, until they
had persuaded the Executive to pay up their arrears, and furnish
them with equipment for every private soldier in their commands.
They then sent messengers to Montrose, inviting him to join them at
Stirling, where he would find town, castle, and troops at his
disposal. But Montrose would not advance so far with his small force
into a hostile neighbourhood ; and the opportunity was lost.
Finding himself suspected by the Committee of Estates, Turner made a
virtue of necessity, and to regain their good opinion, solemnly
swore to the Covenant. He gives us to understand, however, that all
the time he was only playing a part. Moralizing as is his wont, when
doing something immoral, he describes this act of treachery as “a
thing (though too much practised in a corrupt world) yet in itself
dishonest, sinful, and disavow-able; for it is certain that no evil
should be done that good may come of it.” Surely James Turner missed
his vocation, and the pulpit would have suited him better than the
saddle! Or he should have been a village dominie, and have written
nice little commonplaces as texts for his scholars to copy.
Unfortunately his moral sense never made itself felt until after the
event. He continued to serve under the Earl of Leven; and at the
storm of Newcastle, in 1644, led the first two companies which
fought their way into the town. He was present at the siege of
Newark in the summer of 1646, when King Charles surrendered himself
to the Scots, who, after they had captured Newark, returned with him
to Newcastle. “At Sherburne,” says Turner, “I spoke with him, and
his Majesty having got some good character of me, bade me tell him
the sense of our army concerning him. I did so, and withal assured
him he was a prisoner, and therefore prayed him to think of his
escape, offering him all the service I could do him.” This was the
only time he had conversation with the King, who, as we know, saw no
necessity to act upon his advice, and did not put Turner’s loyalty
to the test.
During the following
winter Turner was married to Mary White, a beautiful young Irish
girl, whose acquaintance he had made in Ireland. So strong was her
affection and so profound was her confidence in our bold Cavalier,
that she gave up her parents, her friends, her country, and all that
was dear to her, to become his wife. A charming little story might,
I think, be founded on this incident, which casts as it were a
bright gleam of romance on the sombre background of strife and
death. It may well be doubted whether he was really worthy of so
much devotion. He admits that on her arrival she found him “ but in
a bad condition.” Having drunk too freely with a great personage, he
was riding home, somewhat distempered, when he fell in with a
Colonel Wren, against whom he had some cause of quarrel. As the
Colonel was on foot, Turner sprang from his horse that both might be
on an equality, and forced him to draw his sword, which was “two
great handfuls” longer than his own. Truly a monstrous sword!
“Perceiving this,” says Turner, “I gripped his sword with my left
hand and thrust at him with my right; but he, stepping back, avoided
it, and drew his sword away, which left so deep a wound between my
thumb and foremost finger that I had almost lost the use of both.”
Some passers-by interfered, and made the combatants put up their
swords; and Turner could never again meet with his adversary to be
revenged on him, though he sought him far and near. Now comes in the
inevitable bit of moralizing! “This was an effect,” he says, “of
drinking, which, I confess, besides the sin against God, bath
brought me in many inconveniences. This was the first time ever my
blood was drawn, though I have hazarded it and my life very often,
not only in battles, skirmishes, rencontres, sieges, sallies, and
other public duties of service, but also in several private duels.”
After a vain attempt to obtain employment in Ireland, Turner visited
Lieutenant-General Leslie’s quarters at Dunblane, and was “easily
persuaded” to accept the post of Adjutant-General in the
Covenanters’ army, though it was employed in the putting down that
cause of the monarchy with which he professes to have been in
sympathy. He took an active part in all the cruel work that was done
in the Western Highlands and the Hebrides —smoking fugitives out of
the caves to which they had retreated, slaying in cold blood
prisoners who had surrendered on a promise that their lives should
be spared. But in 1648, when a considerable faction in the Scots
Parliament resolved on raising forces to march into England and
effect the King’s release, his inclination coincided with his duty;
and it was with alacrity he obeyed orders to advance upon Glasgow,
which showed a disposition to oppose the new policy. He tells us
that he easily enforced submission upon the Glasgow citizens. The
quartering of a few troopers and musketeers proved argument strong
enough, in two or three nights’ time, to convert the most obstinate
burgher from the cause of the Kirk to that of the Parliament. He
then placed before the citizens a short paper, promising that those
who signed it should be released from the presence of the soldiers.
It was a submission to all orders of the Parliament agreeable to the
Covenant; and “Turner’s Covenant,” as it was thereafter called,
received without delay a crowd of signatures. He was then sent into
Renfrewshire, where he met with the same success; and afterwards
joined the main body of the army, which, under the Duke of Hamilton,
crossed the Border to co-operate with Sir Marmaduke Langdale, who
was still maintaining the King’s cause in the north of England.
Turner relates with much gusto an accident that befell him while he
and his brigade were quartered near Appleby. He was lodged in the
house of a loyal Cavalier who, at the time, was fighting under Sir
Marmaduke, while his wife, through illness, kept her chamber. What
happened shall be told as nearly as possible in Turner’s own
language.
The first night he slept well enough; but on rising next morning,
missed a linen stocking, a half-silk one, and a boot-hose, the
accoutrement under a boot for one leg; neither could they be found
on the most careful search. Being provided with more of the same
kind, he dressed and rode to head-quarters. On his return'—no news
of his stockings. Next morning he found himself used, or rather
misused, in the same manner; missing the three stockings for one
leg, the other three being left entire as they were the day before.
A close search led to no result. As he had got in reserve a pair of
“whole stockings” and a pair of boot-hose larger than the former, he
put them on; but on the third morning, lo and behold! again only the
stockings of one leg were left to him. He and his servants then
concluded that some rats were the nocturnal thieves who showed such
a partiality for a Cavalier’s hose; and the room being carefully
examined, the top of his great boot-hose was found in a hole into
which the rats had dragged the rest of their booty. The boards were
taken up in the presence of a servant of the house, sent for the
purpose by his mistress. On the first plank being partly raised,
Turner’s boy thrust in his hand, and brought out four-and-twenty
pieces of gold and one angel, which the servant immediately claimed
for his mistress. Thereupon Turner repaired to her chamber and told
her that as Lambert, the Puritan General, had formerly been
quartered in the house, the gold had probably been hidden by one of
his domestics, and was therefore Turner’s lawfully, by right of war
; but if she could show it belonged to her he would immediately give
it up. The poor gentlewoman replied, with many tears, that her
husband being none of the frugallest of men, she had, unknown to
him, concealed the money as a reserve when she might have special
occasion; and conjured him, as he loved the King, for whom her
husband and she had suffered much, not to deprive her of it. She
added that the exact quantity she had put there was four-and-twenty
whole pieces and two angels; and that she had placed them in a red
velvet purse. On further search being made, the other angel was
found, and also the purse—gnawed to bits, as the stockings were; and
the gentlewoman’s story being thus confirmed, the money was restored
to her.
Turner’s comments on this episode are too characteristic to be
passed over.
“I have often heard,” he says, “that -the eating or gnawing of
clothes by rats is ominous, and portends some mischance to fall on
these to whom the clothes belong. I thank God I never was addicted
to such divinations, or heeded them. It is true that more
misfortunes than one fell on me shortly after; but I am sure I could
have better foreseen them myself than rats or any such vermin ; and
yet did it not. I have heard, indeed, many fine stories told of
rats; how they abandon houses and ships, when the first are to be
burnt and the second drowned. Naturalists say they are very
sagacious creatures, and I believe they are so; but I shall never be
of the opinion they can foresee future contingencies, which I
suppose the devil himself can neither foreknow nor foretell; these
being things which the Almighty hath kept hidden in the bosom of His
Divine prescience. And whether the great God hath pre-ordained or
predestinated these things, which to us are contingent, to fall out
by an uncontrollable and unavoidable necessity, is a question not
yet decided.” And our Cavalier wisely made no attempt to decide it.
Turner was present at Preston field, where the Scots felt the heavy
hand of Cromwell. Having joined the Puritan army, under General
Lambert, among the Yorkshire hills, he had then moved upon Preston,
and finding the Royalists, under the incompetent authority of the
Duke of Hamilton, loosely scattered over a wide extent of country,
he fell upon their vanguard, led by Sir Marmaduke Langdale, on
Wednesday night, August 16th, and dispersed it to the winds. Next
day he attacked their main body. The English regiments fought well,
though ill supported by their Scotch allies, owing to divisions of
counsel among the commanders; but after a three hours’ struggle,
they were driven across the Ribble in great disorder, with the loss
of a thousand slain and five thousand taken prisoners.
During the night, the Duke of Hamilton, with his Scots, retreated
upon Wigan, pursued by Cromwell, “killing and taking divers all the
way.” Within three miles of Wigan, the Scots made a stand, until the
main body of the Parliament army coming up, they fell back upon the
town, and there spent the night of the 18th. The following day they
resumed their retreat, until at Winwick, three miles from
Warrington, they made a last desperate effort to check Cromwell’s
furious pursuit. But it was in vain; and after sustaining heavy
loss, the infantry surrendered, and the great Puritan soldier pushed
forward into Scotland, leaving Lambert to follow up the cavalry as
far as Uttoxeter, where they too were forced to capitulate. It was
agreed that the officers and privates should be held prisoners of
war, but civilly used, until they could secure their liberty by
exchange or ransom; that they should keep the clothes they wore and
all the money they had about them—the rest of the baggage, with the
arms and horses, going as “booty and prize ” to the victor.
Turner, who was one of the prisoners, was removed to Hull, where he
was kindly treated by the Governor, Colonel Overton, being allowed
the use of paper, pens, ink, and books; to attend the services of
his church; to take exercise on the town walls; and even to receive
visits from some “honest Royalists.” His captivity lasted for about
fourteen months, when he was released by order of Fairfax, on giving
his parole to go beyond the seas, and not return for a twelvemonth
to any one of the three kingdoms. With a joyful heart—for inaction
was a torture to a man of Turner’s temperament— he embarked, early
in November 1649, on board of a ship which landed him safely at the
“rich and flourishing” town of Hamburg. |