The other side of the Reciprocity—Contrast between the
Scot in France and Le Français en Ecosse—An Ambassador snubbed—French
Chevaliers treated to a Border Raid—The Admiral Vienne’s Expedition, and
how it fared with him and his followers—The Gladiatorial Spectacle on the
Inch of Perth—Ferdinand of Spain’s Dealings with Scotland—Rule of Albany,
and its results—A Story of Ecclesiastical Patronage—The foreign Friar of
Tongueland— The Slaughter of La Bastie.
BEFORE coming to the later history of the League, let
us take a glance at the reciprocity from the other side, and having seen
what a good thing our wandering Scots made of it in France, see how the
French got on in Scotland.
We must prepare for differences which are not unlike
some that we now see in ordinary social life. Suppose the common case of
two friends, each having an independent position, and each useful to the
other, but, from specialties in his private affairs, the one keeps a
dinner-giving house, the other does not. It need not necessary follow that
the one is the other’s inferior or dependant—he who goes to dinner perhaps
thinks he is giving more favour and honour than he receives; but the
conditions on which the friends will meet each other in their respective
dwelling-houses will take a decided colour from the distinction. In the
one house all will be joviality and social enjoyment—in the other, hard
business, not perhaps altogether of the most agreeable kind. For centuries
the French could expect no enjoyment in Scotland. The country was, on the
whole, not poorer than their own—perhaps not quite so poor—but there was
no luxurious class in it; all was rough, hard, and ungenial. Some of them
had to come over on embassies and warlike expeditions, but they would as
soon have sought Kamtschatka or Iceland, as a place wherein to pitch their
tabernacle and pursue their fortune.
Many a Scot had sought his fortune in France; and names
familiar to us now on shop-signs and in street-directories had been found
among the dead at Poitiers, before we have authentic account of any
Frenchmen having ventured across the sea to visit the sterile territory of
their allies. Froissart makes a story out of the failure of the first
attempt to send a French ambassador here. The person selected for the duty
was the Lord of Bournezel or Bournaseau, whose genealogy is disentangled
by M. Michel in a learned note. He was accredited by Charles V. in the
year 1379, and was commanded to keep such state as might become the
representative of his august master.
Bournezel set off to embark at Sluys, and there had to
wait fifteen days for a favourable wind. The ambassador thought there was
no better way of beguiling the time than a recitation among the Plat
Deutsch of the splendours which he was bound in the way of public duty to
exhibit in the sphere of his mission. Accordingly, "during this time be
lived magnificently; and gold and silver plate were in such profusion in
his apartments as if he had been a prince. He had also music to announce
his dinner, and caused to be carried before him a sword in a scabbard
richly blazoned with his arms in gold and silver. His servants paid well
for everything. Many of the townspeople were much astonished at the great
state this knight lived in at home, which he also maintained when he went
abroad."
This premature display of his diplomatic glories
brought him into a difficulty highly characteristic of one of the
political specialties of France at that period. It was the time already
spoken of when the nobles of the blood-royal were arrogating to themselves
alone certain prerogatives and ceremonials distinguishing them from the
rest of the territorial aristocracy, however high these might be.
The Duke of Bretagne and the Count of Flanders, who
were near at hand, took umbrage at the grand doings of Bournezel, and sent
for him through the bailiff of Sluys. That office; after the manner of
executive functionaries who find themselves sufficiently backed, made his
mission as offensive as possible, and, tapping Bournezel on the shoulder,
intimated that he was wanted.
The great men had intended only to rebuke him for
playing a part above his commission, but the indiscretion of their
messenger gave Bournezel a hold which he kept and used sagaciously. When
he found the princes who had sent for him lounging at a window looking
into the gardens, he fell on his knees and acknowledged himself the
prisoner of the Count of Flanders. To take prisoner an ambassador, and the
ambassador of a crowned king, the feudal lord of the captor, was one of
the heaviest of offences, both against the law of nations and the spirit
of chivalry. The Earl was not the less enraged that he felt himself
caught; and after retorting with, "How, rascal, do you dare to call
yourself my prisoner, when I have only sent to speak with you?" He
composed himself to the delivery of the rebuke he had been preparing in
this fashion: "It is by such talkers and jesters of the Parliament of
Paris and of the King’s chamber as you, that the kingdom is governed; and
you manage the King as you please, to do good or evil according to your
wills: there is not a prince of the blood, however great he may be, if he
incur your hatred, who will be listened to; but such fellows shall yet be
hanged until the gibbets be full of them." Bournezel carried this pleasant
announcement and the whole transaction to the throne, and the King took
his part, saying to those around, "He has kept his ground well: I would
not for twenty thousand francs it had not so happened."
The embassy to Scotland was thus for the time
frustrated. It was said that there were English cruisers at hand to
intercept the ambassador, and that he himself had no great heart for a
sojourn in the wild unknown northern land. Possibly the fifteen days
lording it at Sluys may have broken in rather inconveniently on his
outfit; but the most likely cause of the defeat of the first French
embassy to our shores was, the necessity felt by Bournezel to right
himself at once at court, and turn the flank of his formidable enemies;
and Froissart says, the Earl of Flanders lay under the royal displeasure
for having, in his vain vaunting, defeated so important a project as the
mission to the Scots.
A few years afterwards our country received a visit,
less august, it is true, than the intended embassy, but far more
interesting. In 1384, negotiations were exchanged near the town of
Boulogne for a permanent peace between England and France. The French
demanded concessions of territory which could not be yielded, and a
permanent peace, founded on a final settlement of pending claims, was
impossible. A truce even was at that time, however, a very important
conclusion to conflict; it sometimes lasted for years, being in reality a
peace under protest that each party reserved certain claims to be kept in
view when war should again break out. Such a truce was adjusted between
England on the one side and France on the other—conditional on the
accession of her allies Spain and Scotland. France kept faith
magnanimously, in ever refusing to negotiate a separate peace or truce for
herself; but, as the way is with the more powerful of two partners, she
was apt to take for granted that Scotland would go with her, and that the
affair was virtually finished by her own accession to terms.
It happened that in this instance the Duke of Burgundy
took it on him to deal with Scotland. He had, however, just at that
moment, a rather important piece of business, deeply interesting to
himself on hand. By the death of the Earl of Flanders he succeeded to that
fair domain—an event which vastly influenced the subsequent fate of
Europe. So busy was he in adjusting the affairs of his succession, that it
was said he entirely overlooked the small matter of the notification of
the truce to Scotland. Meanwhile, there was a body of men-at-arms in the
French service at Sluys thrown out of employment by the truce with
England, and, like other workmen in a like position, desirous of a job.
They knew that the truce had not yet penetrated to Scotland, and thought a
journey thither, long and dangerous as it was, might be
a promising speculation. There were about thirty of them, and Froissart
gives a head-roll of those whose names he remembered, beginning with
Sir Geoffry
de Charny, Sir John de Plaissy, Sir Hugh de Boulon, and so on. They dared
not attempt, in face of the English war-ships, to land at a southern
harbour, but reached the small seaport called by Froissart Monstres, and
not unaptly supposed by certain sage commentators to be Montrose, since
the adventurers rode on to Dundee and thence to Perth.
They were received with a deal of
rough hospitality, and much commended for the knightly spirit that induced
them to cross the wide ocean to try their lances against the common enemy,
England. Two of them were selected to pass on to Edinburgh, and explain
their purpose at the Court of Holyrood. Here they met two of their
countrymen on a mission which boded no good to their enterprise. These
were ambassadors from France, come at last to notify the truce. It was at
once accepted by the peaceable King Robert, but the Scots lords around him
were grieved in heart at the prospect that these fine fellows should come
so far and return without having any sport of that highly flavoured kind
which the Border wars afforded. The truce they held had been adjusted not
by Scotland but by France; and here, as if to contradict its sanction,
were Frenchmen themselves offering to treat it as naught.
There was, however, a far stronger
reason for overlooking it. Just before it was completed, but when it was
known to be inevitable, the Earls of Northumberland and Nottingham
suddenly and secretly drew together two thousand men-at-arms and six
thousand bowmen, with which they broke into Scotland, and swept the
country as far as Edinburgh with more than the usual ferocity of a Border
raid; for they made it to the Scots as if the devil had come among them,
having great wrath, for he knew that his time was short. It was said even,
that the French ambassadors, sent to Scotland to announce the truce, had
been detained in London to allow time for this raid coming off
effectively. "To say the truth," says Froissart, mildly censorious, "the
lords of England who had been at the conference at Bolinghen, had not
acted very honourably when they had consented to order their men to march
to Scotland and burn the country, knowing that the truce would speedily be
concluded: and the best excuse they could make was, that it was the French
and not they who were to signify such truce to the Scots."
Smarting from this inroad, the Scots
lords, and especially the Douglases and others on the border, were in no
humour to coincide with their peaceful King. They desired to talk the
matter over with the representatives of the adventurers in some quiet
place; and, for reasons which were doubtless sufficient to themselves,
they selected for this purpose the Church of St Giles in Edinburgh. The
conference was highly satisfactory to the adventurers, who spurred
back to Perth to impart the secret
intelligence, that though the King had accepted the truce, the lords were
no party to it, but would immediately prepare an expedition to avenge
Nottingham’s and Northumberland’s raid. This was joyful intelligence,
though in its character rather surprising to followers of the French
Court. A force was rapidly collected, and in a very few days the
adventurers were called to join it in the Douglases’ lands.
So far Froissart. This affair is not, so far
as I remember, mentioned in detail by any of our own annalists writing
before the publication of his Chronicles. Everything, however, is there
set forth so minutely, and with so distinct and accurate a reference to
actual conditions in all the details, that few things in history can be
less open to doubt. We come to a statement inviting question, when he says
that the force collected so suddenly by the Scots lords contained fifteen
thousand mounted men; nor can we be quite reconciled to the statement
though their steeds were the small mountain horses called hackneys. The
force, however, was sufficient for its work. It found the English border
trusting to the truce, and as little prepared for invasion as Nottingham
and Northumberland had found
Scotland.
The first object was the land of the
Percies, which the Scots, in the laconic language of the chronicler,
"pillaged and burnt." And so
they went onwards; and where peasants had been peacefully tilling the land
or tending their cattle amid the comforts of rude industry, there the
desolating host passed—the crops were trampled down—their owners left dead
in the ashes of their smoking huts — and a few widows and children,
fleeing for safety and food, was all of animal life left upon the scene.
The part taken in it by his
countrymen was exactly after Froissart’s own heart, since they were not
carrying out any of the political movements of the day, nor were they even
actuated by an ambition of conquest, but were led by the sheer fun of the
thing and the knightly spirit of adventure to partake in this wild raid.
To the Scots it was a substantial affair, for they came back heavy-handed,
with droves and flocks driven before them—possibly some of them recovered
their own.
The King had nothing to say
in his vindication touching this little affair, save that it had occurred
without his permission, or even knowledge. The Scots lords, in fact, were
not the only persons who had broken that truce. It included the Duke of
Burgundy and his enemies, the Low Country towns; yet his feudatory, the
Lord Destournay, taking advantage of the defenceless condition of
Oudenarde during peace, took it by a clever stratagem. The Duke of
Burgundy, when appealed to, advised Destournay to abandon his capture; but
Destournay was wilful: he had conquered the city, and the city was his—so
there was no help for it, since the communities were not strong enough to
enforce their rights, and Burgundy would only demand them on paper.
What occasioned the raid of the Scots
and French to be passed over, however, was that the Duke of Lancaster,
John of Gaunt, who had the chief authority over the English councils, as
well as the command over the available force, was taken up with his own
schemes on the crown of Castile, and not inclined to find work for the
military force of the country elsewhere. The truce, therefore, was
cordially ratified; bygones were counted bygones; and the French
adventurers bade a kindly farewell to their brethren-in-arms, and crossed
the seas homewards.
Driven from their course, and
landing at the Brille, they narrowly escaped hanging at the hands of the
boorish cultivators of the swamp; and after adventures which would make
good raw materials for several novels, they reached Paris.
There they explained to their own
Court how they found that the great enemy of France had, at the opposite
extremity of his dominions, a nest of fighting fiends, who wanted only
their help in munitions of war to enable them to rush on the vital parts
of his dominions with all the fell ferocity of men falling on their
bitterest feudal enemy. Thus could France, having under consideration the
cost and peril of galleying an invading army across the Straits, by money
and management, do far more damage to the enemy than any French invading
expedition was likely to accomplish.
In an hour which did not prove
propitious to France, a resolution was adopted to invade England at both
ends. Even before the truce was at an end, the forges of Henault and
Picardy were hard at work making battle-axes; and all along the coast,
from Harfleur to Sluys, there was busy baking of biscuits and purveyance
of provender. Early in spring an expedition of a thousand men-at-arms,
with their followers, put to sea under John of Vienne, the Admiral of
France, and arrived at Leith, making a voyage which must have been
signally prosperous, if we may judge by the insignificance of the chief
casualty on record concerning it. In those days, as in the present, it
appears that adventurous young gentlemen on shipboard were apt to attempt
feats for which their land training did not adapt them— in nautical
phrase, "to swing on all top-ropes." A hopeful youth chose to perform such
a feat in his armour, and with the most natural of all results. "The
knight was young and active, and, to show his agility, he mounted aloft by
the ropes of his ship, completely armed; but his feet slipping he fell
into the sea, and the weight of his armour, which sank him instantly,
deprived him of any assistance, for the ship was soon at a distance from
the place where he had fallen."
The expedition soon found itself to
be a mistake. In fact, to send fighting men to Scotland was just to supply
the country with that commodity in which it superabounded. The great
problem was how to find food for the stalwart sons of the soil, and arms
to put in their hands when fighting was necessary. A percentage of
the cost and labour of the expedition, had it been spent in sending money
or munitions of war, would have done better service. The scene before the
adventurers was in lamentable contrast to all that custom had made
familiar to them. There were none of the comfortable chateaux, the
abundant markets, the carpets, down beds, and rich hangings which
gladdened their expeditions to the Low Countries, whether they went as
friends or foes. Nor was the same place for them in Scotland, which
the Scots so readily found in France, where a docile submissive peasantry
only wanted vigorous and adventurous masters.
"The lords and their men," says Froissart, "lodged
themselves as well as they could in Edinburgh, and those who could not
lodge there were quartered in the different villages thereabout.
Edinburgh, notwithstanding that it is the residence of the King, and is
the Paris of Scotland, is not such a town as Touniay and Valenciennes, for
there are not in the whole town four thousand houses. Several of the
French lords were therefore obliged to take up their lodgings in the
neighbouring villages, and at Dunfermline, Kelso, Dunbar, Dalkeith, and in
other towns." When they had exhausted the provender brought with them,
these children of luxury had to endure the miseries of sordid living, and
even the pinch of hunger. They tried to console themselves with the
reflection that they had, at all events, an opportunity of experiencing a
phase of life which their parents had endeavoured theoretically to impress
upon them, in precepts to be thankful to the Deity for the good things
they enjoyed, but which might not always be theirs in a transitory world.
They had been warned by the first little band of adventurers that Scotland
was not rich; yet the intense poverty of the country whence so many daring
adventurers had gone over to ruffle it with the flower of European
chivalry, astonished and appalled them. Of the extreme and special nature
of the poverty of Scotland, the great war against the English invaders was
the cause. It has been estimated, indeed, by those devoted to such
questions, that Scotland did not recover fully from the ruin caused by
that conflict until the Union made her secure against her ambitious
neighbour. It was the crisis referred to in that pathetic ditty, the
earliest specimen of our lyrical poetry, when
"Away was sonse of ale and bread,
Of wine and wax, of gaming and glee;
Our gold was changed into lead;
Cryst borne into virginity.
Succour poor Scotland and remede,
That stad is in perplexity."
The alliance between the two powers was not so unequal
in the fourteenth as it became in the sixteenth century. On the map of
Europe the absolute dominions to which the house of Valois succeeded
occupied but a small space in comparison with the
kingdom of Francis I. Scotland, on the other hand, had a respectable
position among the European powers. It was larger than many of them; and
although the contest with England was bringing it to beggary, it had still
the repute of recent wealth and prosperity. Not a long period had passed
since Berwick-upon-Tweed, the capital, took rank with Ghent, Rotterdam,
and the other great cities of the Low Countries, and was almost the rival
of London in mercantile enterprise. Stately edifices, baronial and
ecclesiastical, still stood, testifying to a people equal in wealth to the
English when they were built, though they were doomed to fall into decay
and be succeeded by sordid hovels, when the weight of a long war against a
powerful and oppressive empire had impoverished the people. Before the
French came over and made acquaintance with their allies at home, that
poverty had set its desolating mark all over the land, and the French saw
and felt it.
The poverty of the Scots proceeded
from a cause of which they need not have been ashamed; yet, with the
reserve and pride ever peculiar to them, they hated that it should be seen
by their allies, and when these showed any indications of contempt or
derision, the natives were stung to madness. Froissart renders very
picturesquely the common talk about the strangers, thus :—" What devil has
brought them here? or, who has sent for them? Cannot we carry on our wars
with England without their assistance? We shall never do any good as long
as they are with us. Let them be told to go back again, for we are
sufficient in Scotland to fight our own battles, and need not their aid.
We neither understand their language nor they ours, so that we cannot
converse together. They will very soon cut up and destroy all we have in
this country, and will do more harm if we allow them to remain among us
than the English could in battle. If the English do burn our houses, what
great matter is it to us? We can rebuild them at little cost, for we
require only three days to do so, so that we but have five or six poles,
with boughs to cover them."
The French knights, accustomed to
abject submission among their own peasantry, were unable to comprehend the
fierce independence of the Scots common people, and were ever irritating
them into bloody reprisals. A short sentence of Froissart’s conveys a
world of meaning on this specialty: "Besides, whenever their servants went
out to forage, they were indeed permitted to load their horses with as
much as they could pack up and carry, but they were waylaid on their
return, and villanously beaten, robbed, and sometimes slain, insomuch that
no varlet dare go out foraging for fear of death. In one month the French
lost upwards of a hundred varlets; for when three or four went out
foraging, not one returned, in such a hideous manner were they treated."
As we have seen, a not unusual incident of purveying in France was,
that the husbandman was hung up by the heels and roasted before his own
fire until he disgorged his property. The Scots peasantry had a decided
prejudice against such a process, and, being accustomed to defend
themselves from all oppression, resisted even that of their allies, to the
extreme astonishment and wrath of those magnificent gentlemen.
There is a sweet unconsciousness in Froissart’s
indignant denunciation of the robbing of the purveyors, which meant the
pillaged peasantry recovering their own goods. But the chronicler was of a
thorough knightly nature, and deemed the peasantry of a country good for
nothing but to be used up. Hence, in his wrath, he says: "In Scotland you
will never find a man of worth; they are like savages, who wish not to be
acquainted with any one, and are too envious of the good fortune of
others, and suspicious of losing anything themselves, for their country is
very poor. When the English make in-roads thither, as they have very
frequently done, they order their provision; if they wish to live, to
follow close at their backs; for nothing is to be had in that country
without great difficulty. There is neither iron to shoe horses, nor
leather to make harness, saddles, or bridles; all these things come
ready-made from Flanders by sea; and should these fail, there is none to
be had in the country." What a magnificent contrast to such a picture is
the present relative condition of Scotland and the Low Countries! and yet
these have not suffered any awful reverse of fortune—they have merely
abided in stagnant respectability.
It must be remembered, in estimating the chronicler’s
pungent remarks upon our poor ancestors, that he was not only a worshipper
of rank and wealth, but thoroughly English in his partialities, magnifying
the feats in arms of the great enemies of his own country. The records of
the Scots Parliament of 1395 curiously confirm the inference from his
narrative, that the French were oppressive purveyors, and otherwise
unobservant of the people’s rights. An indenture, as it is termed—the
terms of a sort of compact with the strangers—appears among the records,
conspicuous among their other Latin and vernacular contents as being set
forth in French, in courtesy, of course, to the strangers. It expressly
lays down that no goods of any kind shall be taken by force, under pain of
death, and none shall be received without being duly paid for—the dealers
having free access to come and go. There are regulations, too, for
suppressing broils by competent authority, and especially for settling
questions between persons of unequal degrees; a remedy for the practice of
the French, who left the settlement entirely with the superior.
This document is one of many showing that, in Scotland,
there were arrangements for protecting the personal freedom of the humbler
classes, and their rights of property, the fulness of which is little known, because the like did not exist in other
countries, and those who have written philosophical treatises on the
feudal system, or on the progress of Europe from barbarism to
civilisation, have generally lumped all the countries of Europe together.
The sense of personal freedom seems to have been rather stronger in
Scotland than in England; it was such as evidently to astound the French
knights. At the end of the affair, Froissart expresses this surprise in
his usual simple and expressive way. After a second or third complaint of
the unreasonable condition that his countrymen should pay for the victuals
they consumed, he goes on, "The Scots said the French had done them more
mischief than the English;" and when asked in what manner, they replied,
"By riding through the corn, oats, and barley on their march, which they
trod under foot, not condescending to follow the roads, for which damage
they would have a recompense before they left Scotland, and they should
neither find vessel nor mariner who would dare to put to sea without their
permission."
Of the military events in the short
war following the arrival of the French, an outline will be found in the
ordinary histories; but it was attended by some conditions which curiously
bring out the specialties of the two nations so oddly allied. One
propitiatory gift the strangers had brought with them, which was far more
highly appreciated than their own presence; this was a thousand stand of
accoutrements for men-at-arms. They were of the highest excellence, being
selected out of the store kept in the Castle of Beauté for the use of the
Parisians. When these were distributed among the Scots knights, who were
but poorly equipped, the chronicle; as if he had been speaking of the
prizes at a Christmas-tree, tells how those who were successful and got
them were greatly delighted.
The Scots did their part in their
own way: they brought together thirty thousand men, a force that drained
the country of its available manhood. But England had at that time nothing
to divert her arms elsewhere, and the policy adopted was to send
northwards a force sufficient to crush Scotland for ever. It consisted of
seven thousand mounted men-at-arms, and sixty thousand bow and bill men—a
force three or four times as large as the armies that gained the memorable
English victories in France. Of these, Agincourt was still to come off,
but Crecy and Poitiers were over, along with many other affairs that might
have taught the French a lesson. The Scots, too, had suffered two great
defeats—Neville’s Cross and Halidon Hill—since their great national
triumph. The impression made on each country by their experiences brought
out their distinct national characteristics. The French knights were all
ardour and impatience; they clamoured to be at the enemy without
ascertaining the amount or character of his force. The wretched internal
wars of their own country had taught them to look on the battle-field as
the arena of distinction in personal conflict, rather than the great
tribunal in which the fate of nations was to be decided, and communities
come forth freed or enslaved.
To the Scots, on the other hand, the
affair was one of national life or death, and they would run no risks for
distinction’s sake. Picturesque accounts have often been repeated of a
scene where Douglas, or some other Scots leader, brought the Admiral to an
elevated spot whence he could see and estimate the mighty host of England;
but the most picturesque of all the accounts is the original by Froissart,
of which the others are parodies. The point in national tactics brought
out by this incident is the singular recklessness with which the French
must have been accustomed to do battle. In total ignorance of the force he
was to oppose, and not seeking to know aught concerning it, the
Frenchman’s voice was still for war. When made to see with his own eyes
what he had to encounter, he was as reluctant as his companions to risk
the issue of a battle, but not so fertile in expedients for carrying on
the war effectively without one.
The policy adopted was to clear the
country before the English army as it advanced, and carry everything
portable and valuable within the recesses of the mountain-ranges, whither
the inhabitants not fit for military service had gone with their effects.
A desert being thus opened for the progress of the invaders, they were
left to wander in it unmolested, while the Scots army went in the opposite
direction, and crossed the Border southwards. Thus the English army found
Scotland empty — the Scots army found England full. The one wore itself
out in a fruitless march, part of it straggling, it was said, as far as
Aberdeen, and returned thinned and starving, while the other was only
embarrassed by the burden of its plunder. Much destruction there was,
doubtless, on both sides, but it fell heaviest where there was most to
destroy, and gratified at last in some measure the French, who "said among
themselves they had burned in the bishopries of Durham and Carlisle more
than the value of all the towns in the kingdom of Scotland."
But havoc does not make wealth, and
whether or not the Scots knew better from experience how to profit by such
opportunities, the French, when they returned northward were starving.
Their object now was to get out of the country as fast as they could.
Froissart, with a touch of dry humour, explains that their allies had no
objection to speed the exit of the poorer knights, but resolved to hold
the richer and more respectable in a sort of pawn for the damage which the
expedition had inflicted on the common people. The Admiral asked his good
friends the Lords Douglas and Moray to put a stop to those demands; but
these good knights were unable to accommodate their brethren in this
little matter, and the Admiral was obliged to give effectual
pledges from his Government for the payment of the creditors.
There is something in all this that seems utterly
unchivalrous and even ungenerous; but it had been well for France had
Froissart been able to tell a like story of her peasantry. It merely shows
us that our countrymen of that day were of those who "know their rights,
and, knowing, dared maintain them;" and was but a demonstration on a
humbler, and, if you will, more sordid shape, of the same spirit that had
swept away the Anglo-Norman invaders. The very first act which their
chronicler records concerning his knightly friends, after he has exhausted
his wrath against the hard and mercenary Scot, is thoroughly suggestive.
Some of the knights tried other fields of adventure, "but the greater
number returned to France, and were so poor they knew not how to remount
themselves, especially those from Burgundy, Champagne, Bar, and Lorraine,
who seized the labouring horses wherever they found them in the
fields," so impatient were they to regain their freedom of action.
So ended this affair, with the aspect of evil auspices
for the alliance. The adventurers returned "cursing Scotland, and the hour
they had set foot there. They said they had never suffered so much in any
expedition, and wished the King of France would make a truce with the
English for two or three years, and then march to Scotland and utterly
destroy it; for never had they seen such wicked people, nor such ignorant
hypocrites and traitors." But, the impulsive denunciation of the
disappointed adventurers was signally obliterated in the history of the
next half century. Ere many more years had passed over them, that day of
awful trial was coming when France had to lean on the strong arm of her
early ally; and, in fact, some of the denouncers lived to see adventurers
from the sordid land of their contempt and hatred commanding the armies of
France, and owning her broad lordships. It was just after the return of
Vienne’s expedition that the remarkable absorption of Scotsmen into the
aristocracy of France, already spoken of, began to set in. |