The Covenanters'
Graves—The Battle of Kilsyth—Scottish Army in England — Montrose —
Famine— Pestilence— The Story of Bessie Bell and Mary Gray—Montrose's
Victories—A Hot Day—Strength of the Armies—The Decoy—The Snare— Charge
of Covenanting Dragoons—Onset of M'Leans and M‘Donalds—General
Engagement—Fearful Carnage—A Romance of the Battle—Gordon's Gravestone.
Scattered throughout the
length and breadth of Scotland, by the side of busy roads and streets
where the strong tide of our modern life is ever ebbing and flowing, in
the midst of waste moors where there is nothing but moss and heather and
the scream of the lapwing and the curlew, in lonely and rocky mountain
glens where the bleating of sheep and the roar of the river are the only
sounds that invade the silence, among the islands that stud our coasts,
and close to shores ever lashed by the surge of the Atlantic and
Northern Oceans, are to be found sometimes a grey boulder, sometimes a
rude cairn, sometimes a simple slab, and sometimes a costly monument,
marking the resting-place of some of our Covenanting forefathers who
fought and bled and died, that their sons might participate in that
religious freedom they now so richly enjoy.
Amongst all the places
consecrated in the memory of the devout and pious Scotsman, there is
none filled with such a mournful interest as the battle-field of Kilsyth.
The reason of this is easily understood, for if the numbers that
perished in the “killing time” of our history be estimated at 18,000,
then not less than one-third of that number perished in the battle of
Kilsyth ! Not the Bass Rock—that Patmos of Scottish history—not
Dunnottar Castle, not Airds Moss nor St. Andrews, cluster memories more
strongly suggestive of the sufferings of our ancestors in that troublous
time.
To understand the battle
aright, it is absolutely necessary to grasp intelligently the political
situation, and realise the social conditions of the people. It is to be
noted, in the first place, that the Covenanting troops, of which General
Baillie was the nominal, but Argyll the real, head, cannot be taken as
fairly representing the martial ardour or fighting capability of the
national army. At that time the Scottish army, to the number of 20,000
men, had been sent to England to prosecute the war against the King, and
in defence of the religion so dear to Scotland. On various occasions the
English Government thanked this army for their discipline, their
gallantry, and heroic achievements. At that juncture the Royalist cause
in Scotland seemed entirely crushed. Montrose, however, taking
cognisance of the defenceless state of the country, suddenly appeared in
the Highlands, and rallying to his standard a very considerable force,
rushed down on the Lowlands, carrying everything before him with the
impetuosity of a mountain torrent. The question remains, could Montrose,
with all his dash, have won a single victory if the Scottish army had
been at home to meet him? The field of Philiphaugh, where David Leslie
fell upon him like an avalanche, is a perfectly sufficient reply.
Her army in England, and
anticipating no internal disturbance, such was the unprotected state of
Scotland at this crisis in her chequered history. We must observe,
however, in the second place, that at this period the land was groaning
under the double Providential visitation of famine and pestilence. The
potato and turnip were yet unknown, artificial grasses were not to be
introduced for many years yet to come. Slight patches of wheat were
grown in one or two fertile straths. Bere and oats were the chief
cereals. The year before, the crops had proved a total failure, and in
the Annals of Sir James Balfour, Lord Lyon King-at-Arms, there are
repeatedly chronicled the petitions addressed to Parliament by the
starving people, praying for bread. They came from such far-separated
places as Leith, Argyll, and Inverness. The people eked out a wretched
subsistence by feeding on slugs and snails. The famine was sore in the
land, but there was a greater ill The plague everywhere was following
hard on its footsteps. The pestilence walked at noon-day, and neither
gentle nor simple, soldier nor civilian, was free from its foul touch.
Parliament ordered the dead to be buried away from the abodes of the
living in barren moors and solitary spots. The fumigation of garments
and furniture was resorted to, and an order of men—“smeekers”— appointed
for the purpose. When a member of a family was seized, all communication
between him and other members ceased. Society was driven, in self-defence,
to exercise this most fearful act of excommunication. The patients had
to stay in their homes, and no person was permitted to visit them.
Parliament thus thought to stamp out the disease, but it was only very
partially successful. On the very month when the battle of Kilsyth was
fought, the plague had reached its greatest height.
A more pathetic
illustration of the severity and remorselessness of the pestilence there
could not be than the romantic story of “Bessie Bell and Mary Gray.” The
daughters of two neighbouring lairds near the city of Perth, they were
young in years, and all the country round rang with their beauty. The
plague having entered the town and neighbourhood, to free themselves
from the chance of contamination they retired to a lonely and romantic
spot not far from the banks of the Almond, and built themselves a rude
bower, where, in seclusion and secrecy, they resolved to stay till the
Providential visitation was overpast. Nor can we wonder at their action.
They were young and admired, life was sweet to them, and it was but
natural they should wish to live. A young gentleman of Perth city was
the only one who shared their counsels. He brought food to their hut,
and was perplexed which he could regard the more, so highly did he
esteem them both. The curious pestilence found the secret bower, and
Bessie Bell and Mary Gray perished in their pride. The Parliament, which
was then sitting in Perth, refused them sepulture in the public
bury-grounds, and so they had to be buried where they died. In Scottish
literature I know not a more touching story than theirs, nor a more
pathetic ballad than that which celebrates it:—
“O, Bessie Bell and Mary
Gray,
They were twa bonnie lasses;
They biggit a bower on yon burn brae
And theekit it ower wi’ rashes.
“They theekit it ower wi'
tho rashes green—
They theekit it ower wi' heather;
But the pest cam* frae the borough’s town
And slew them baith thegither.
“They thocht to lie in
Methven Kirkyard,
Amang their noble kin;
But they maun lie in Dronoch Haugh,
And beek foment the sun.
“And Bessie Bell and Mary
Gray,
They were twa bonnie lasses,
They biggit a bower on yon burn brae,
And theekit it ower wi* rashes.”
We can well understand
the feelings of men called to battle from the midst of such gloomy
scenes. There must have been throughout the whole army a diffused sense
of oppression, and the spirits of the soldiers must have been possessed
as by some dismal foreboding, or close-pressing calamity. The battle of
Kilsyth is a favourite theme for partisan writers, but a temperate and
impartial mind will attribute the overthrow of the Covenanters neither
wholly to the military genius of Montrose nor the incompetency of the
Field Committee of Baillie’s army, but to other and deeper causes. These
men of the Covenant, drawn from scenes of starvation and misery, were no
men at this juncture to encounter the clansmen of Athole and Badenoch,
of Rannoch and Aberfeldy, who, in the enjoyment of florid health,
impiously jeered at the plague-stricken inhabitants of the Lowland towns
they had passed in their march.
When Montrose appeared at
Kilsyth he had a series, if not of brilliant, at least dashing and
spirited, victories on his banners. Having chosen his time well, he won
battle after battle. In the September of 1644 he defeated the
Covenanters at Tibbermuir. A fortnight later he was equally successful
at the Bridge of Dee. Crossing the Argyll mountains, when they were clad
with winter snow, he crushed the Campbells at Inver-lochy. Afterwards he
captured Elgin and ravaged Aberdeenshire and Kincardineshire. On the 3rd
May 1645, he won the victory of Auldearn, and a month later he added to
it the victory of Alford. Let him now crush Baillie, whose army is
encamped against him at Holland Bush, in the parish of Denny, and
Scotland is at his feet.
The day on which the
battle of Kilsyth was fought was the 15th August, 1645. The autumn had
been dry and fine. On the eventful morning of the battle there was no
change. The sun rose in unclouded splendour. When he reached meridian,
the hills and hamlet, the knolls and streams, the fields and cottages
were swooning in the heat. The crops were rapidly ripening. The frugal
husbandman was calculating that in a few days more they would be ready
for the sickle. Owing to the dryness of the season the straw was short,
but, notwithstanding, the fields gave promise that the time of famine
had now come to an end.
Montrose planted his
standard a little to the east above Colzium House. The actual spot was
known to the curious at the beginning of this century, but cannot now be
identified with accuracy. His munitions and transports were gathered on
the Baggage Knowe in the same immediate locality. His numbers were four
thousand infantry and five hundred cavalry. The latter were not of much
account as a genuine arm of the service. Montrose's strength lay in his
foot. At Holland Bush Baillie had under command over six thousand men
and a thousand horse. Baillie was strong where Montrose was weak, and
weak where he was strong. Baillie’s power lay in his splendidly mounted
mail-clad cavalry. His foot were raw levies, untried in battle for the
most part. The arms of Montrose’s Highlanders were the basket-hilted
claymore, a target with a pike in its orb borne on the left arm, a pair
of steel pistols, a dirk and a skean-dhu in the right garter. A
considerable number of trusted veterans were armed with the long-barrelled
inusket. The army of the Covenant contained three regiments from Fife,
one regiment of Argyllshire Highlanders, and besides Argyll and Baillie
had for subordinate commanders Tullibardine, Balcarris, Burleigh ,and
Elcho —every one of whom Montrose had beaten. The battle will be best
understood by dividing it into the four prominent sections into which,
upon a close scrutiny, it readily devolves.
I The Decoy.
Ever since the
Covenanting army had crossed the Carron, Montrose's scouts had been
watching its every movement. Montrose clearly saw the strength of the
enemy’s cavalry, a strength which struck his army with consternation. He
took an ingenious method of breaking this strength. He chose as the
place whereon he would try conclusions with his antagonist as hillocky
and hammocky a piece of ground as could anywhere be found. The loch
which now fills one of the hollows was not yet in existence. The
“Slaughter Howe,” where a fierce struggle took place, lies between the
"Baggage Knowe” and Upper Banton. It is the hollow through which flows
the Drum Burn. Looking down on the field from the heights above Colzium
it seems the most unlikely place in the world for a battle to be fought,
and the difficulty of using horsemen with effect is at once apparent. To
this place Montrose stuck tenaciously— like the war-leech he was—and
into some cottages—the Hougomont of the battle—he threw some picked
marksmen. Having made his cage, the difficulty was to get the big bird
into it. He sent forward to Auchencloach a company of his army to deploy
before the enemy, and gave out he was retreating. Baillie, the scholar
of Gustavus Adolphus, was too wary a bird to be caught. He determined to
stick to the flat fields about Holland Bush. But his fussy Committee
crowded about him* overruled his verdict, and determined him to march
forward on the retreating foe and capture him before he eluded their
grasp. They were confident in their superior strength, and were eager to
wipe out past defeats* Baillie was both irritated and exasperated. The
decoy succeeded. They marched forward, and Montrose felt sure the big
bird had fallen prey to the fowler when he saw the blue-bonneted
regiments, their pikes glancing in the rays of the sun, their matches
lighted, their drums beating, and their colours flying, pouring forward
to the very place he wanted them to occupy.
II. The Charge of the
Covenanting Dragoons on the Cottages.
The moment Baillie got
into his new position he at once planted a few pieces of artillery to
command the little glen or “Slaughter Howe.” Again he was interfered
with by his ignorant and meddlesome Committee. They were of opinion they
should occupy a position more to the right. The general considered the
new ground objectionable, and angrily warned them against making any
move in that direction. He was supported by Lord Balcarris and Alexander
Lyndsay, the General of the Horse. The Committee were inexorable, and so
the line was stretched out, the right wing touching the hill and the
left Dullatur Bog, then a much more extensive swamp than now, for the
Forth and Clyde Canal was not then made nor the Kelvin cut. It seemed to
Montrose as if he was to be surrounded, but he hailed with pleasure the
new and most disorderly development, as he saw that it meant fatal
weakness in his enemy's centre. Gathering his clansmen close together
under his own command, with one portion facing the east and the other
inclined to the south, he determined to concentrate his strength on the
enemy's weakest part and strike him there a staggering blow. Baillie
kept his 3000 Fife men in reserve, but he bit his lip with rage,
believing that through the new movement the battle was lost before it
was begun.
The hearts of the
clansmen quailed when they saw the splendidly accoutred horsemen of the
Covenant wheeling into position, their steel breast-plates, helmets, and
greaves glancing in the rays of the sun. Montrose was equal to the
occasion. He exhorted them that their officers could not get these men,
whom they had beaten at Auldearn and Tibbermuir, to come before them
without encasing them in mail. Let them show their contempt for them by
fighting them in their shirts. Then he threw off his cuirass and richly
laced buff doublet and rode along the line, sword in hand, waving his
plumed beaver. His enthusiasm ran along the lines like wildfire, and his
warriors, nothing loath, in the burning heat, unbuckled their baldricks,
and, standing in their shirts, gave their dashing commander a lusty
cheer. Still, though his clansmen were growing irrepressible, he would
not budge an inch from his chosen ground. Seeing they could not,
however, be long restrained, he sent forth a trumpeter to blow as near
to Baillie’s ranks as he was able, an insulting and taunting challenge.
The blast was answered by a roar of rage and hatred. Stung by the gibe,
but without their general's orders, a regiment of cavalry charged down
on the thatch-roofed cottages—Hougomont—where the Highland marksmen were
concealed. The windows, sheds, walls, the impromptu trenches and
defences, spat fire. Every.bullet found its billet. Saddles were emptied
in scores as the cavalry surged up to the enclosures.
The place could not be
taken by horse, and there was nothing for them but to wheel back again
to the body of the army. It was a mad charge, and a bad beginning for
the army of the Covenant.
III. The Onset of the
M'Leans and M'Donalds.
A similar piece of folly
was perpetrated on the side of Montrose, and was like to have cost him
dear. As the cavalry fell back, Baillie pushed forward three regiments
of infantry, flanked by two troops of horse and one of lancers. Seeing
the movement, the M‘Leans of the Isles and the M'Donalds of Clan Ranald,
who had been disputing as to precedence, and as to which should have the
honour of first closing with the enemy, rushed forward from the ranks
without Montrose's command. They passed through the enclosures, and with
heads bent down behind their targets, their claymores drawn and their
warpipes shrilling wildly, they swept through the haugh, having their
ranks torn by Baillie’s cannon. Sir Lachlan of Duairt and John of
Moidart, two noted clansmen, fell. Having found their foemen, in their
wild rage, they attacked the horse and foot of the Covenanters
indiscriminately. In a very brief space every man of them would have
been overpowered and cut to pieces. Montrose, however, determined he
would do what he could to rescue them from the fatal results of their
own rashness. He commanded that aged veteran, the Earl of Airlie, to
march out with all speed and arrest the horsemen, who were preparing a
flank movement to surround and engulf the hapless clansmen. Airlie got
his men— the Ogilvies—in the very nick of time into action. He arrested
the onset of the horse, who were threatening the rear of the M‘Leans and
M'Donalds. He next charged the infantry, but was repulsed by a withering
fire. Bravety and well did the old officer execute his commission. He
rescued the clansmen before they had ever become aware of the deadly
peril of their position.
IV The General Engagement
After these desperate
sallies and charges the engagement became general. When Montrose saw
that Airlie had saved the impetuous clansmen, a load was lifted from his
heart, and he now struck at his foe with all the strength he could
command. For a time the air was filled with the clangour of the weapons
and the shouts of the warriors. The Campbells stood firm, and fell where
they fought. The Lowland spearmen made a good defence, but were at
length borne back. The horsemen also lost ground before the nimble,
shirt-clad Highlanders. At this juncture Baillie rode to the rear to
bring up the reserves. The Fife men, instead of answering their
general's call, when they saw those in front of them recoiling, deemed
the day lost. The fainthearted cowards broke and fled without ever
firing a shot Then began a scene of unparalleled and hideous carnage.
The cavalier horse, still fresh,, under Sir Nathaniel Gordon, charged
forward in a mass. That August afternoon the claymore, the dirk, the
clubbed musket, and the Lochaber axe did a fearful and bloody work. The
Highlanders were as strong as lions, and in their shirts they were as
fleet as deer. Very few foot soldiers escaped. They were butchered in
the fields; they were smothered in the bog. In the heat of the victory
fearful acts were committed. A poor Covenanter clung to the stirrup of
the venerable Earl of Airlie begging for mercy, but a passing trooper
clove him down. Many peasantry perished. A farmer and his four sons were
hacked to pieces. In Kirkcaldy 200 women were made widows. It was a
terrible sight on which that August sun set, for over 6000 dead lay
strewn on the battlefield.
The only chance of escape
lay with the well-mounted horsemen. Even they, however, were not always
fortunate. We may be well assured that wherever men are toiling and
suffering there will be found many a romantic story of broken hearts and
lacerated affections. And the battle of Kilsyth is no exception to the
rule. Amongst the thousand horsemen of Baillie there was not one more
finely equipped than young Francis Gordon, a cadet of a noble
Covenanting family. His burnished armour, his richly-caparisoned steed,
awakened the rapacity of one of Montrose’s troopers. Singling him out he
gave chase, and lay hard on his track. The pursuit was hot; but, coming
up with the young Covenanter near the Bonny-Water, the clansman slew his
foeman and appropriated his armour and trappings. The body was buried in
the field where he fell, and the year following a slab was placed over
his grave. His death was all the sadder that he was about to be married
to a young lady of uncommon personal attractions and his equal in
station. This lady was unconsolable, and never ceased to bewail her
lover’s untimely fate. The people of the district cherish the careful
tradition, how there came to the locality a young lady, who, during the
longest days was to be seen keeping her vigil by the graveside. The long
years went by, the bloom faded from her cheek, the form became bowed,
her hair became white as snow, she leant on a staff the very picture of
tottering decrepitude, but still the peasants saw her keeping her holy
watch and intruded not upon her. Then when she had attained an unusually
long age, one day she disappeared as quietly as she had come; and no one
was ever able to tell who she was, or where she came from, or what had
befallen her.
The stone which the young
lady erected to the memory of Francis Gordon is now placed within the
grounds of Kilsyth Parish Church. |