IT is beyond measure refreshing, after toiling
through tiresome volumes in which a narrow streamlet of text finds
its way through a perfect quagmire of notes, and which are so full
of facts that they conceal the truth, to turn from them and let the
eye wander through some chapters of ‘The Fortunes of Nigel.' It is
like a draught of sparkling ale after a long and dusty tramp: life
comes dancing back again through the veins; the eye once more has
power to enjoy the glare of heaven’s light. The weary mind is in
touch with something human; it realises the fact that the men who
made history in James I.’s time were made of flesh and blood; that
they did not act like machines, but were partly good and partly
bad—certainly not the fiends that Irish patriots have painted,
devouring the innocent chiefs of Ulster, who, it must be understood,
need to be pictured like lambs in one of Caldecott’s picture-books,
walking on their hind legs, with pink ribbons round their necks.
Read ‘The Fortunes of Nigel,’ and you understand the part which the
Scots took in the great plantation in Ulster; you comprehend, in a
measure, the misshapen little king, although you probably undervalue
his practical ability, when he chose to apply himself to business;
and you see the poverty of the old land north of the Tweed, and the
neediness of the flock of supplicants who followed James to
London,—“wheresoever the carcass is, there will the eagles be
gathered together." As in a mirror, too, you see the baneful power
of the royal favourites, who lived and had their being by reason of
James’s vanity and laziness. One sighs in vain for some similar
guiding light to assist in the understanding of the men who made
history in Ireland; for it is strange that in a country which is
bubbling over with humour, the writers on history seem to divide
themselves into the stupid people who try to write the truth, and do
it stupidly, and the clever people, who do not much trouble to seek
the draw-well in which truth takes refuge. And yet the men who
played the great parts in this strange drama cannot have been dull
uninteresting men. We know partly what the leaders of the English
interest were,—Chichester, Carew, Davies,—and they have in them that
mixture of good and bad parts which tempts the pencil of the
historical painter. Even after kneeling in alabaster in the little
church of Carrickfergus for two centuries and a half, with no
company but his wife and baby, Chichester looks a capable,
many-sided man, in whom there must have been the play of light and
shade. But what the Irish chiefs were who made so strange an exit
from their own land we know not, unless we are able to believe the
theory that they were innocent lambs, who always wore pretty bows of
pink ribbon. It is unfortunate that no Irishman has arisen with the
deep historical knowledge, the strong sympathy with the past, the
sunny humour,' of Sir Walter Scott, to throw the clear noonday light
of genius on the dark places of the path—to illumine the Ireland of
Chichester, as Scott has made bright the England of James I. and
Salisbury.
There is much material recently made available, by
the publication of the Irish State Papers, for forming some
conception of Ireland in the beginning of the seventeenth century.
One thing is very evident—that the English Scots of the time looked
on the Irish just as the white settler? regard Kaffirs in Cape
Colony. In the official documents they are invariably termed the
“mere Irish.” They were treated as an inferior and subject race, who
would do a graceful act if they would only disappear from history.
The official reports by Government servants made in the end of the
sixteenth and beginning of the seventeenth century, also give clear
and vivid pictures of the state of Ulster. They may be taken as
essentially correct, as the writers had means of observing, and no
reasons for writing anything that, although Elizabeth had waged
fierce and devastating wars against the Ulster chiefs during most of
her long reign, English authority was scarcely recognised in the
north of Ireland. It was represented by the commanders of the ten
districts into which Ulster was divided; but their rule was little
more than a military one, and scarce extended beyond the buildings
which composed their military posts,1 and by the bishops of the
Episcopal Church, who had probably even fewer followers in spiritual
things than the district governors had in temporal. The country
still enjoyed its native laws and customs—still obeyed its native
chiefs. There were no towns in Ireland to play the part which the
English and Scottish burghs had done in the middle ages, to be the
homes of free institutions, the centres from which civilisation
might spread. Belfast scarcely existed even in name, and Derry and
Carrickfergus consisted but of small collections of houses round the
English forts. The whole country, like our Scottish Highlands, was
inhabited by clansmen, obeying tribal laws and usages, and living in
some measure on agriculture, but mainly on the produce of their
herds and flocks. The land was held by the chiefs nominally for the
clans, but really for their own benefit. The tillers of the soil had
no sure hold over the lands which they worked, no certain portion of
land being let to any tenant; so that “the more careful and
industrious the tenant, the more liable to oppression of all
kinds—the more likely to be turned out of his holding.” In fact, the
chief might deprive the clansman of his holding, just as the
clansman might pass from one chief to another.8 Rent was paid to the
chief mainly in kind—in oats, oatmeal, butter, hogs, and mutton;
partly in money, the amount of cash paid depending on the number of
cattle fed. Nor was the civic rule more satisfactory than the land
tenure. The different clans of Ulster recognised the chief of the
great O’Neill family as fitting of Ulster, when “The O’Neill” of the
time was strong enough to enforce his claims. The chiefs of all the
clans and septs of clans seem to have been elected from the families
of the chiefs—all the sons, legitimate and illegitimate, and the
brothers of the deceased being eligible. A vacancy was therefore the
signal for fierce contention, which frequently ended in faction -
fight, and almost certainly in one party intriguing with the English
authorities, to whom he promised faithful allegiance—a promise
surely broken when the end of the assistance was attained. In
addition, as was the fact in our Scottish Highlands, clan hatred and
war between the clans was common; for each chief had his body-guard
of “swordsmen”—the cadets of the noble houses, who were far too
noble to labour, and had therefore to be provided with fighting, and
with plunder too, which it was preferable to take from men of
another name rather than from the humble members of their own
clan. Readers are very much accustomed at present to be served with
roseate pictures of the happiness of Irish pastoral life before the
“black shadow” of English rule fell on it. To those who enjoy such
imaginative writing, the summing up of the men who have laboured to
calendar the Irish State Papers will sound cold and hard and
unsympathetic. “In all the State Papers the system is represented as
resulting, for the tenants, in the most painful uncertainty of
tenure and great social insecurity and discontent. In a political
point of view the result was most formidable to the English
interest, as it rendered the Creaghts (the wandering herdsmen)
entirely dependent on the heads of the sept and the inferior chiefs,
and placed the whole power of the community unreservedly in their
chiefs hands for all purposes of war or of peace.” It is evident
too, that, although the long wars of the sixteenth century had not
tended to civilise Ulster, they had had the baneful effect of
desolating it to a frightful extent; for both sides conducted the
war with terrible cruelty, so that the accounts of the ruin of the
country and the loss of population are most heartrending. All
authorities agree that there were great tracts of country, once
fruitful, now uncultivated and without population.
The plantations in County Down and County Antrim,
thorough as they were as far as they went, were limited in scope in
comparison with the “Great Plantation in Ulster,” for which James
I.’s reign will be for ever remembered in Ireland. It is extremely
difficult to make out the circumstances which led up . to this
remarkable measure, or to understand the - action of the Ulster
chiefs, who, to all appearance, played so thoroughly into the hands
of the Government. The agreement concluded in the end of 1602
between the Government and the Earl of Tyrone, as the head of the
Ulster chiefs, may or may not have been made in good faith. It was
one which could not, in the nature of things, last, for the rights
which the chiefs claimed, and the system which their rule
represented, were directly opposed to the authority of any civilised
government, and rendered such government impossible. James had done
good service to the cause of civilisation in Scotland when he broke
the power of the Scottish nobles, put a stop to clan feuds, and
instituted regular circuits for the administration of justice all
over the country. It was his endeavour to carry out a similar policy
in Ireland, which was, in some part at least, the reason for the
discontent of the Ulster chiefs. Which side first was false to the
peace, it is impossible now to say. One party declares that the
chiefs began to conspire against the Government; the other, that the
Government drove the chiefs to conspire in self-defence. This only
is plain—that the Government was Protestant, the Ulster Irish,
Catholic; that the two parties hated each other intensely; and that
during these very years, all over Westem Europe—in Holland, in
France, and in Germany—Catholic was fighting against Protestant, or
keeping truce only soon to be broken. Wherever the two religions
came into contact, there was war. The Ulster chiefs began to
correspond with Spain once more, as if in preparation for a new
outbreak; the Government intercepted the letters, and O’Neill, Earl
of Tyrone, and Macdonnell, Earl of Tyrconnel, confessed, if not
guilt, at least fear of punishment, by leaving their country, and
sailing from Lough Swilly, along with a number of adherents, on the
3d September 1607. The Government at once took advantage of the
opportunity. It had long been the dream of the English Government to
make a great “ settlement" in Ulster; the whole of the governing
class in England and Ireland warmly advocated the idea, because they
scented plunder; and King James possessed in Sir Arthur Chichester,
the Lord-Deputy, a man with vigour, ability, and determination
sufficient for the task. The plan of the Plantation in Ulster bears
evident marks of being the conception in its main outline and in its
details of able men.
The lawyers of Elizabeth’s reign had for years been
labouring in order to vest in the chiefs, as personal holdings, the
lands which they had formerly held—at least nominally—for the
benefit of the tribes; and even those Ulster chiefs who were most
opposed to English rule had taken out royal grants for their lands,
though they declined to acknowledge English authority in other
ways. They had now rebelled against the King and been proclaimed
traitors, and their lands were therefore “escheated” to the Crown.
Estates were constantly changing hands in this way in Scotland
during the sixteenth century. The more important of the chiefs had
gone into voluntary exile with Tyrone; against the rest it was not
difficult for the Crown lawyers to find sufficient proof of
treason. Thus all Northern Ireland—Londonderry, Donegal, Tyrone,
Cavan, Armagh, and Fermanagh—passed at one fell swoop into the hands
of the Crown; while, as we have seen, Down and Antrim had been
already, to a great extent, taken possession of and colonised by
,English and Lowland Scotch. The plan adopted by King James for the
colonisation of the six “ escheated” counties was to take possession
of the finest portions of this great tract of country, amounting in
all to nearly four millions of acres; to divide it into small
estates, none larger than two thousand acres; and to grant these to
men of known wealth and substance. Those who accepted grants were
bound to live on their lands themselves, to bring with them English
and Scottish settlers, and to build for themselves and for their
tenants fortified places for defence, houses to live in, and
churches in which to worship. The native Irish were assigned to the
poorer lands and less accessible districts; while the allotments to
the English and Scots were kept together, so that they might form
communities and not mix or intermarry with the Irish. The errors of
former Irish “plantations” were to be avoided—the mistake of placing
too much land in one hand, and of allowing nonresident proprietors.
The purpose was not only to transfer the ownership of the land from
Celt to Saxon, but to introduce a Saxon population in place of a
Celtic to bring about in Ulster exactly what has happened without
design during the last half-century in New Zealand, the introduction
of an English-speaking race, the natives being expected to
disappear, as have perished the Maori.
In 1608, a Commission, consisting of the Lord-Deputy
and other well-known civilians, made a survey of the counties to be
“planted,” and drew up a report regarding them, which they sent over
to the English Council, who then proceeded to ask for offerers for
the land. The description given by the Privy Council of the
fertility of Ulster is preserved. It paints in tempting colours the
great natural capabilities of the country. It is stated that the
soil is suitable for the growth of all kinds of com, of hops and
madder; that it is well watered and well wooded, and its forests are
accessible by water; that parts are very suitable for the breeding
of horses, and for the feeding of sheep and cattle; and that it
contains everything needed for shipbuilding save tar. Nor are the
sporting propensities of Englishmen forgotten, for districts are
pointed out which afford cover for red-deer, foxes, martens,
squirrels, &c. The English Council requested the Scottish Privy
Council to draw up a list of Scotsmen willing to settle in Ulster;
and a proclamation, dated “Edinburgh, 28th March 1609,” is
preserved, as well as the list of the Scotsmen who had responded,
each man stating the amount of land he is prepared to take up, and
giving the name of a “cautioner,” who becomes security for the
“undertaker” fulfilling the conditions of settlement. The list is a
long one, and some of the entries amusing—Edinburgh burgesses, for
instance, having a decided “hankering” after Irish estates. The
names obtained by both English and Scottish Councils were held over,
and inquiry made regarding the ability of the applicants to perform
their contracts; eventually very few of these Scottish offerers were
accepted. The King seems to have taken the duty of selecting the
Scottish undertakers into his own hands, the men who got grants
being of higher social standing and wider influence than those who
first offered. A second and more careful survey having been made in
1609, the Commission proceeded, in the summer of 1610, to divide up
the land. This second survey may have been better than the first,
but it was very inaccurate after all, as it mapped out for division
only 500,000 acres of land suitable for “plantation,” out of a total
acreage of 3,800,000 contained in the six counties. What is now
called Londonderry County was reserved for the city of London, whose
different guilds undertook its colonisation. A broad tract of
country was devoted to the Church and for schools, a considerable
portion for Trinity College, and portions in each county were laid
out for the foundation of boroughs. The rest was divided among the
old proprietors, the Irish public servants, and the English and
Scottish undertakers. It is with the Scotsmen only that we are
concerned. Fifty-nine Scotsmen were chosen, and to them 81,000 acres
were allotted in estates scattered over the five counties,
Londonderry, as has been said, being reserved for the city of
London. A careful examination of the list of Scottish
undertakers enables us to see the plan which was finally adopted for
securing proper colonists. There was, of course—as was always the
case at this time—a certain number of the hangers-on about the Court
who got grants, which they at once sold to raise money. But as a
whole, the plan of distribution was thoroughly well conceived and
well carried out. It must be remembered that James I. was a
clear-headed man of business when he chose to apply himself; that he
was so much in earnest with regard to the settlement of Ulster, that
he really did apply himself to the arrangements connected with it;
and that he was well acquainted with his “ancient kingdom” of
Scotland, and with its people. James seems to have seen that the
parts of Scotland nearest Ireland, and which had most intercourse
with it, were most likely to yield proper colonists. He resolved,
therefore, to enlist the assistance of the great families of the
southwest, trusting that their feudal power would enable them to
bring with them bodies of colonists. Thus grants were made to the
Duke of Lennox, who had great power in Dumbartonshire; to the Earl
of Aber-corn and his brothers, who represented the power of the
Hamiltons in Renfrewshire. North Ayrshire had been already largely
drawn on by Hamilton and Montgomery, but one of the sons of Lord
Kilmarnock, Sir Thomas Boyd, received a grant; while from South
Ayrshire came the Cunninghams and Crawfords, and Lord Ochiltree and
his son; the latter were known in Galloway as well as in the county
from which their title was derived. But it was on Galloway men that
the greatest grants were bestowed. Almost all the great houses of
the time are represented,—Sir Robert Maclellan, Laird Bomby as he is
called, who afterwards became Lord Kirkcudbright, and whose great
castle stands to this day; John Murray of Broughton, one of the
Secretaries of State; Vans of Bambarroch, Sir Patrick M'Kie of Laerg;
Dunbar of Mochrum; one of the Stewarts of Garlies, from whom
Newtown-Stewart in Tyrone takes its name. Some of these failed to
implement their bargains, but the best of the undertakers proved to
be men like the Earl of Abercorn and his brothers, and the Stewarts
of Ochiltree and Garlies; for while their straitened means led them
to seek fortune in Ireland, their social position enabled them
without difficulty to draw good colonists from their own districts,
and so fulfil the terms of the “plantation” contract, which bound
them to “plant” their holdings with tenants. With the recipient of
2000 acres the agreement was that he was to bring “forty-eight able
men of the age of eighteen or upwards, being born in England or the
inward parts of Scotland.” He was further bound to grant farms to
his tenants, the sizes of these being specified, and it being
particularly required that these should be “feus,” or on lease for
twenty-one years or for life.-A stock of muskets and hand weapons to
arm himself and his tenants was to be provided. The term used, “the
inward parts of Scotland,” refers to the old invasions of Ulster by
the men of the Western Islands. No more of these Celts were wanted,
there were plenty of that race already in North Antrim j it was the
Lowland Scots, who were peace-loving and Protestants, whom the
Government desired. The phrase, “the inward parts of Scotland,”
occurs again and again.
The progress of the colonies in the different
counties is very accurately described in a series of reports by
Government inspectors, and in the letters of Chichester himself. The
Deputy believed that the “plantation” was to be the greatest
blessing ever conferred on Ireland, and he did his best to make it
successful. When he found that the scheme was to be thwarted in some
respects, he writes very bitterly of the mistakes which the English
Council was making. It had allowed far too little land to those
“natives” who were willing to adopt English civilisation, and it was
giving grants to men who were of no use as colonists. Of the
Scottish undertakers, and of the manner in which they were doing
their work, there is a special report; and, on the whole, Chichester
is favourably impressed with them. “The Scottishmen come with
greater port [show], and better accompanied and attended, but, it
may be, with less money in their purses.” A return is made of what
work each undertaker has accomplished, and of the colonists he has
brought with him. It is exceedingly interesting to note how some of
the planters are proceeding vigorously to carry out the terms of
their contract; others more slowly; while there are a certain number
who evidently from the first intend to break all the conditions
under which they hold their lands. The first class have come
themselves, with their wives and families. They are accompanied by
servants, and by colonists to whom they have already given lands on
lease. They have begun to build stone houses, with fortified courts
round them, called in the country “bawns,” into which cattle can be
driven in cases of alarm. Trees have been felled, too ; and, in one
or two cases, mills erected. The tenants have not been idle, for
they have put up temporary houses, and broken ground, and already
they have taken a crop from the ground, “and sowed oats and barley
this last year upon his land, and reaped this harvest forty
hogsheads of corn.” The stock of cattle is given also—“70 cows
brought out of Scotland, which belong to the tenants;” or “brought
over a dozen horses and mares for work;” or “hath 8 mares and 8 cows
with their calves, and 5 oxen, with swine and other small cattle.”
The record of other planters is not so satisfactory. They have
crossed from Scotland, with one or two tenants, looked at the land,
and gone home again; while in one or two cases there are
entries—“has not appeared, and nothing done;” or, “sent an agent to
take possession, who set the same to the Irish, returned into
Scotland, and performed nothing.”
The most interesting reports of all are those
regarding undertakers who took possession in this year (1610), made
up their minds to remain and to thrive in Ulster, and who founded
families, whose names were afterwards to be well known in Ireland.
In Donegal, on Lough Swilly, will be found on the map the names of
two villages, Manor Cunningham and Newtown Cunningham. The men who
introduced so Scottish a name into so Irish a county are thus
noticed in the report of 1611: “Sir James Cunningham, Knight, Laird
Glangarnoth, 2000 acres, took possession, but returned into
Scotland. Three families of British resident, preparing to build.”
“John Cunningham of Cranfield, 1000 acres, resident with one family
of British.” “Cuthbert Cunningham, 1000 acres, resident with two
families of British ; built an Irish house of copies, and prepared
materials to re-edify the Castle of Coole-M'Etreen; hath a plow of
garrons, and 80 head of cattle in stock." Here, too, is a delightful
picture of the first settlement of one whose descendant is
considered a model Irish landowner: “The Earl of Abercome, chief
undertaker in the precinct in the county of Tyrone, has taken
possession, resident with lady and family, and built for the present
near the town of Strabane some large timber houses, with a court 116
foot in length and 87 foot in breadth. Has built a great brewhouse
without his court. His followers and tenants have since May last
built 28 houses of fair copies, and before May by his tenants, who
are all Scottish men, the number of 32 houses of like goodness.
There are 120 cows in stock for his own use.” Then here is the
record of what was most probably a colony of Galloway men: “The Lo.
Uchelrie [Lord Ochiltree], 3000 acres in the county of Tyrone, being
stayed by contrary winds in Scotland, arrived in Ireland at the time
of our being in Armagh, upon our return home, accompanied with
thirty-three followers, gent, of sort, a minister, some tenants,
freeholders, and artificers. Hath built for his present use three
houses of oak timber—one of 50 foot long and 22 foot wide, and two
of 40 foot long, within an old fort, about which he is building a
bawn. There are two ploughs going upon his demesne, with some fifty
cows and three score young heifers landed at Island Magy, in Clan-deboy,
which are coming to his proportion, and some fifteen working mares,
and he intends to begin residence upon his land next spring, as he
informs us.” There were many Scotsmen who were not showing the same
activity as Abercorn and Ochiltree; but, in the main, they must have
been the right kind of colonists; for most of them at once proceeded
to build houses and provide food for themselves and their families.
On the whole, the Scottish settlers seem to have done best, and the
London undertakers the worst. The enthusiasm for colonisation was in
exact reverse to the home comfort. The Scottish undertakers were
poor men, many of them with estates deeply burdened with debt, and
they belonged to a poor country. They were the men whom Scott has
painted in ‘The Fortunes of Nigel' They had everything to gain by
going to Ulster, and so had their relatives and humbler neighbours.
Besides, Ireland was only across a narrow channel, and it was a
country which they could see on any clear day. If James had enlisted
the men of the northwest of England to aid in the settlement of
Ulster, as he did the people of the south-west of Scotland, the
history of Ulster would have been materially altered. To London
citizens, on the other hand, Ireland was a far-off savage country,
for which they did not feel at all inclined to give up the comforts
and the civilised activities of the metropolis. Thus the Londoners’
colony was, for the first half-century at any rate, a failure, and
the “Companies” let their lands to the “mere Irish,” breaking the
terms of their contract, and involving themselves in ever-recurring
quarrels with the Irish authorities. One good thing the “Irish
Society,” which managed the London settlement, did for Ireland: it
founded Londonderry and Coleraine, which in course of long years
grew up to be two main bulwarks of Protestantism in Ireland. |