The Man from Sutherland - A
Cottage at Gargunnock - Twilight in the Vale of Menteith - Forward to
Bannockburn - The Old House at Larbert - The Shepherd in Falkirk - Through
the Gap in the Roman Wall - A Night Attack - Dusk in Linlithgow Palace
Grounds - I Sleep in "Dreamthorp" - The Murder of the Regent.
SO confused are the old
boundaries in this district that I was not certain whether I had entered
Stirlingshire or was still in the county of Perth. I believe there is a
little island of Perthshire soil tucked away by itself in Stirlingshire,
and they say that the dividing-line runs through the minister's garden at
Kippen, so that while his dinner is cooked in Perthshire he eats it in the
county of Stirling. The present road beside the Forth was made within
living memory, and the old road followed by the Prince's army lay several
hundreds of yards up on the hillside on my right. I made for Leckie House,
where the Prince arrived on the afternoon of Friday 13th September and was
entertained to a banquet which George Moir had prepared for him.
Unfortunately, Moir himself was not there to give him a welcome. Word of
his intentions to entertain the Prince had leaked out, and on the previous
night he had been seized by the dragoons and imprisoned in the castle at
Stirling, so his wife (the owner of Leckie House) presided at the table.
From there the Prince wrote to the city of Glasgow ordering it to provide
the sum of £15,000 and all available weapons for his use. Andrew Cochrane,
the Provost, would no doubt have made haste to comply, but information
came through to him that it was Edinburgh and not Glasgow the Prince was
making for, and he decided to ignore the letter. From Leckie the old house
is now used as quarters for estate workers-Charles marched eastward to
Touch, where his army encamped for the night. Touch House belonged to a
member of the ancient family of Seton of Abercorn, the hereditary armour-bearers
of the king in Scotland, and the present representative is Sir Alexander
Hay Seton, Bart., whose tapestries I had admired at the monastery in Fort
Augustus the week before. [It was Sir Alexander's father, Sir Bruce Gordon
Seton, who compiled The Prisoners of the Forty-five.]
Darkness was beginning to
fall when I reached the hamlet of Gargunnock on the hillside, and I
wondered if there was such a thing as an inn at that small place. On the
road, I stopped a man and enquired about accommodation. When he told me
there was only a public-house in Gargunnock, and he doubted if the
landlord could put me up for the night, I asked if he knew of a cottage
where I could find a lodging.
He thought for a moment. "I
won't see you stretched out beside the dyke," he said in his deep pleasing
voice. "There's a spare bed in my house, and you're welcome to it."
Without another word, he
led me to a small whitewashed cottage, with thick walls, tiny windows, and
a red-tiled roof. The kettle was boiling on the kitchen grate, and the man
spoke quietly to his wife in Gaelic. I could not help interrupting ; I had
been certain, when he first spoke to me, that he had a Gaelic tongue.
"Yes," he said, "I'm from Assynt in Sutherland." His wife hurried to the
door. "Come in ; you are very welcome; everything is poor; we didna expect
a visitor, but you can have what we've got."
Taking off my pack, I sat
down beside the kitchen fire. The welcome of these people had been so
spontaneous that I found it difficult to tell them of my gratitude. The
woman infused the tea, and put the tea-pot in front of the grate, then
shook out a white table-cloth and spread it on the table. I watched her as
she set down a plate of home-baked scones and a loaf of bread, some
butter, cheese, honey, and homemade gooseberry jam. "The village shop is
shut," she said, with a little sigh, "and we have no meat in the house." I
told her I wanted no meat when there were scones like those on the table,
and I asked her if she also had come from Assynt.
"No, I am a Cameron from
Rannoch," she replied, "but we have lived in many places." She began to
tell me how her husband's work had taken them far afield. He had been with
Lord Cowdray on construction work in his early days, and had helped to
build the Bakerloo Tube in London. Later, he had worked on the West
Highland Railway; and at this point the man himself leaned forward and
asked if I knew a certain famous Scottish preacher. "I gave him his first
job on the railway," he said. "It was near Fort William. He was working
his way through college. I saw by his hands he wasn't used to rough work,
and I got him a job in the office. Ah, he was a fine lad, and a fine
Gaelic student ..."
I asked my host if he had
ever lived near the Border.
"I do not like the
Borderer," he said emphatically. "He's hard and dour, and takes a lot of
knowing. I get on better with the English, much better. Yes, I like the
English-they are a friendly people-and, man, I like the Cockney. I would
go back to London tomorrow if I could get a job there. They say an English
husband and a Highland wife is a good mixture." He laughed quietly. "But
not the other way round!.. I've been out of a job for nearly six months,
but I've heard of something in Lanarkshire, so we may not be in Gargunnock
long . . . My son lives near here - he herds five hundred sheep on the
Touch Hills, and he'll miss us if we go. The wife helps to make clothes
for his children."
During the meal, he told me
about the old basket-makers of Gargunnock. The War killed the industry,
and it has never been revived. They made creels for fishwives, and a
regular supply went out each year to farmers for the potatoes. Each basket
took three quarters of an hour to make, and oak or ash brushwood was used.
At first it had been cut from the neighbouring woods, but later some men
of the village would go to Loch Lomond and send back supplies by the
truckload. One old man living in a small cottage left over a thousand
pounds when he died-every penny of it earned at the basket-making.
Now-a-days, Gargunnock is a happy little community, mostly of retired
people, and the only work to be had is on the farms. Although it was
almost dark by the time we had finished our meal, I went with my host a
little way along the road and looked down at the lights that twinkled here
and there in the Vale of Menteith. Beyond the strath lay Aberfoyle, where
Rob Roy lived, and north of it is the little town of Callander between a
mountain and a loch. My host spoke, not without emotion, about his young
days in Sutherland, and he repeated some of the stories his father had
told him, stories that were continued for an hour beside the kitchen fire;
and at nine o'clock my candle was lit, and I was taken into my
low-ceilinged bedroom. It was very simple, with linoleum on the floor, but
everything had a fresh smell, and the sheets were clean and fragrant. I
opened the tiny window and looked out on the peace of the village street
and tried to picture the Highlanders marching down that slope on the
evening of Friday 13th September 1745 on their way to the Touch Hills and
the house of the Setons where the Prince slept. But the imagination can be
a perverse thing, and the present moment was too vivid for fancy to play
freely. A man passed slowly in the darkness; I could smell his tobacco
smoke. Perhaps he was the minister out for a last stroll before turning
in, perhaps the schoolmaster. A puppy whimpered in a back garden; and high
on the lonely hills a bird called, and then there was silence. One after
another, the lights in the village street went out, until the candle on
the chair by my bedside was the only thing that broke the darkness. When
at last I got into bed and extinguished the candle, I could hear my host
and hostess stirring in the kitchen; they were moving quietly so that I
should not be disturbed. But I could see no slit of light below the door,
and I thought they must have been going to bed in frugal darkness. Perhaps
the embers of the fire gave them light enough.
Next morning, as I walked
down the tree-lined road to Cambusbarron, I passed Touch House in its
wooded ravine. It was not yet nine o'clock, an hour at which it would have
been a trifle bold to call upon strangers, so I left unvisited the house
where the Prince was entertained by Lady Seton. The army encamped on the
moor ; and in his journal, Duncan Macgregor tells how Locheil and
Glencarnoch were sitting at breakfast next morning when they heard a gun
being fired on the hill. Glencarnoch amiably taunted Locheil with the
remark that, as like as not, it was a Cameron killing sheep. Locheil
retorted that if any sheep were being shot, it was the work of the
Macgregors; and at this, Glencarnoch laid a hundred guineas it was the
Camerons. The two men rushed out of the house, each swearing that if any
of his own people were guilty there would be trouble. To Locheil's
disgust, a Cameron passed with a dead sheep on his back, and Locheil fired
at him point-blank, bringing down the raider with a bullet in the
shoulder. This story may not be true, but we have Lord George Murray's
word for it that many a sheep was taken in this district.
If the hungry Highlanders
looked upon the property of the Lowlander as something Providence had
thoughtfully put in their way, I wonder how some of the Border clans or
the Englishmen would have behaved if they had been marching triumphantly
into the North.
The castle of Stirling is a
brave sight on a fine autumn morning, and so is the Wallace Monument on
its hillside of pine trees. I was tempted to go off my road to climb up to
its high crown of stone, from which I had been told one can have a view
that takes in Ben Lomond, Ben Venue, Ben Ledi, Ben More, and Ben Vorlich,
and nearly a dozen battlefields ; but I decided to push on before the heat
of the day made the road like the floor of an oven, and came at ten
o'clock to St. Ninian's.
In marching by this way,
the Highlanders had been too far south for the guns of Stirling Castle to
find a mark with accuracy, but General Blakeney let them have a round or
two, and managed to drop a shot near enough to the Prince for several
chroniclers to record the incident afterwards. The Highlanders did not
pass through the present village of Bannockburn, but bore to the west of
it and halted near the ground. where Robert Bruce had lain with his army
on the day before Bannockburn was fought. The Prince had ordered food to
be purchased in Stirling and the country round about, and the Highlanders
were given a good meal. At Bannockburn House, which is near the road,
Charles himself was entertained by Sir Hugh Paterson, a brother-in-law of
the Earl of Mar who had made such a mess of things in 'Fifteen. Sir Hugh's
niece was the plain-faced Clementina Walkinshaw who seven years afterwards
became the Prince's mistress and shared some of his long exile, but it was
not on this visit that he met her. At dinner, word came that Gardiner's
dragoons, which had bolted from the Ford of Frew, were now encamped at
Linlithgow; and hastily finishing his meal, the Prince hurried on in the
hope of meeting them next day.
Flat farmland lay around
me. On the right I could see the end of the Kilsyth Hills, on the north
the Ochils were dappled in sunlight and shadow; and after eating the food
I had bought in St. Ninian's, I got a lift on a lorry which took me past
Torwood through a strip of countryside where Wallace and his men had
lurked for many a day and night. Back on the main road it was dull going,
but I, can remember how my heart was uplifted on the outskirts of Larbert
when I left the lorry and saw on my right a beautiful old grey house high
above the road. I believe it is now an industrial school, and I wish I
knew who built it and something of the folk who lived there. It sat like a
gracious old woman among a crowd of cocktail-drinking bright young things
who are neither so bright nor so young as they hope to appear, and I
recalled the house with pleasure, for I had once spent a happy month in
Larbert: happy because a boy can be happy almost anywhere if, as Stevenson
says, he has something craggy to break his mind upon. Ever since, I have
carried with me the picture of a dusty little bustling town, with the sky
at night incarnadined by the blast-furnaces of Carron; and as I went
through it now on foot, I was taken back to those days when I played
cricket upon the manse glebe and spent the evenings writing stories of
preposterous adventure. With the shadow of a sigh, I left the town behind
me; and passing through a grim place with the lovely name of Camelon, I
came to Falkirk.
In Falkirk I lingered for
as few minutes as possible. At the first glance, the only thing I liked
about the place was the causeway-stones of its streets. I tried to assure
myself that if I remained until morning in this unpicturesque town, an
adventure would befall me more wonderful than any in the Arabian Nights.
But it was no use. I disliked the look of the place as heartily as on
second thoughts I began to like the manners of the people, and their
honest Scots faces, and the strong deliberate accent of their speech. I
remembered that Falkirk used to be famous for its trysts, to which cattle
and sheep and ponies were brought down from the North every month of the
summer, and were taken south on the old drove roads over the hills. But
the only hint I got of Falkirk's ancient glory was the sight of a harassed
shepherd trying to drive a couple of sheep down the street. I think a herd
of antelopes might have given him less trouble; for they dived among the
traffic, ducked between the legs of horses, and stared with startled eyes
into the radiators of motor-cars. The shepherd's face was red with shame
as he dodged back and forward like a fast rugby three-quarter; and his
dog, who looked as though he would never hold up his head again, was
almost frantic with despair. The incident closed for me when the shepherd
dashed round a corner after one of the sheep, while a fat citizen of
Falkirk drove the other out of a shop door hooting and waving his
bowler-hat. After the man had replaced his hat and recovered his dignity,
I asked him the way to Callendar House.
Callendar House, to which
the Prince came on the evening of Saturday 14th September, belonged to the
Earl of Kilmarnock. It had previously been the Earl of Linlithgow's, but
after the Rising of 'Fifteen he had been attainted and his estates
forfeited to the crown. The York Buildings Company had bought the
property, but the tenants refused to pay their rent, and with a helpless
gesture the Company had transferred it on a long lease to Lord.
Kilmarnock, whose wife had the first claim on it. If Kilmarnock had sat
tight during the 'Forty-five, the estate would have come to him for good,
but he followed his Prince, was captured at Culloden, and beheaded on the
Tower Hill n London. Nearly forty years afterwards, the York Buildings
Company put the place up for auction. William Forbes, the coppersmith,
intended to bid up to £100,000, and at the "roup" it was knocked down to
him for £80,000. The auctioneer turned to him and said: "Who are you? I
must have a bank reference." At this, the coppersmith whipped out a
bank-note for £100,000, and to the consternation of he auctioneer blandly
asked for £20,000 change. Forbes, who had a curious sense of humour, had
got his bank to print the note specially for the occasion. He had made a
fortune when the Government began to sheathe the bottoms of naval ships in
copper; but like the York Buildings Company, he found the tenants
difficult to deal with, and one day he had a row with a Local minister
about the rent of a park. The minister was forced to give in, but he had
his revenge upon the Laird by preaching for several Sundays from the text,
'Alexander the coppersmith hath done me much evil: the Lord reward him
according to his works." Whatever the Lord may have thought of the
coppersmith, there is still a Forbes at Callendar House.
I walked up the avenue
through a gap in the Roman wall that Lollius Urbicus built in the second
century to link up the old forts of Agricola. This rampart was made of
turf upon a foundation of stone, but from Falkirk to the point where it
finishes at Carriden it was of earth strengthened with clay. It was twenty
feet high, with a wide ditch on the north side and a military road on the
south. The old forts were roughly two miles apart, and their position
determined the line of the wall; if these forts had never been built,
Urbicus in some places would have chosen a different route. Again and
again the Romans retired from their strongholds in Scotland, until they
finally left at the beginning of the fifth century; and while a library of
books has been written about their occupation, to my mind one of the most
interesting things that has been established is that, from the founding of
the line of forts in the first century to the departure of the Romans in
the fifth, the longest time they had a continuous hold upon the country
was little more than half the lifetime of a man. North Britain did not see
much of the grandeur that was Rome.
In Callendar House I was
permitted to look at the room where the Prince slept ; then I was taken
down a great staircase on the south and led to the old wing of the house,
and a door was opened in silence. I wonder if Charles himself visited the
apartment which Queen Mary of Scots is said to have occupied when she came
to a baptism in the Linlithgow family : perhaps his mind was too full of
the immediate future to think then about the Queen whose memory he
revered. When the Earl of Kilmarnock received him on that Saturday night
he told Charles that Gardiner's dragoons were encamped between the Avon
bridge and the town of Linlithgow. Kilmarnock had deserted from the
dragoons, so his information could be relied upon. The Prince decided to
make a night attack. He pretended to go to bed so that news of his
intention would not leak out; and an hour or two later, he slipped away to
meet Lord George Murray, who was waiting for him with Locheil and four
other Highland chiefs and a thousand picked men. Linlithgow Bridge, where
Gardiner had encamped, was four miles distant; the Prince knew it would be
strongly held, so he made for a ford a mile and a half up the river near
the home of his aide-de-camp, Macleod, of Muiravonside. His object was to
cross the Avon, descend on the right bank, and surprise Gardiner on the
flank ; but to his disappointment he learned on reaching Muiravonside that
the dragoons had cleared out at dusk and were by this time far beyond
striking distance.
Day had already broken when
the Prince marched into Linlithgow and took possession of the town. I
myself would have liked to enter it romantically at that brisk hour of the
morning when a man's mind is clear and his body is at the apex of its
daily strength ; but in fact I reached it an hour before sunset, feeling
neither brisk nor romantic, with a raging thirst and a hunger like a
wolf's.
Linlithgow - the old "Dreamthorp"
of Alexander Smith-is a town where a man may comfortably compose his soul
: a good substantial Scottish place with some of the peculiar dignity
which you catch a glimpse of now and then in capital cities and in towns
where there used to be a royal residence. I knew nothing about the hotels
in Linlithgow and chose one because it stood beside the Well of St.
Michael, which had the friendly inscription, "St. Michael is kinde to
strangers." The hotel folk were certainly kinde to me, and after a bath I
sat at a window that looked down into the street, and ate an excellently
cooked meal and drank a pint of claret. I was alone in the little
dining-room, with its white table-cloths, bright glasses, and the
Victorian sideboard of polished mahogany; and I was glad there was no
stranger on that Saturday evening to distract me. Linlithgow is a town
charged with memories of the Royal Stewarts, and it was with the Stewarts,
my thoughts were occupied that evening. A stranger when he comes to this
town naturally turns first of all to the Palace, and the maid who attended
to me at dinner told me I would not be able to see it until Monday : which
meant that I would not see it at all, for I hoped to leave on the morrow.
But after I had finished my meal and had dipped into a book she brought me
with the compliments of the proprietress - one of the best books of local
history I have ever encountered - I began to wonder whether there was some
way of getting into the Palace grounds without knocking up the keeper.
There is, but tell it not
in Gath or to the Office of Works. At the risk of being sent about my
business, I walked through an open gateway in the east of the town,
followed a short avenue, climbed a fence, crossed a stream by stepping
stones, and found myself looking up at the Palace walls, black against the
last glow of daylight in the sky. I went slowly round to the loch (which I
found difficult to believe was 150 feet above sea-level) and watched the
swans and geese and wildduck feeding. Was it possible that the eyes of
Stewart kings had looked upon the ancestors of those swans : and had they
been fed by the hands of Mary Queen of Scots? The twilight was cold and
grey on the water, and I could see the lights of houses in the distance. I
was glad I had ventured to come at this hour, for so often the stark light
of day makes it difficult to evoke the spirit of a place which one has
tried to picture tenderly. On this site (as one may read in the book by
Dr. Ferguson) there had stood the wooden manor-house of David I, that "sair
sanct for the croon," and in the fifteenth century the first James built a
palace of stone and roofed it with tiles from Dundee. The second James
spent part of his honeymoon here, and kept a boat on the loch with a man
to catch fish and eels for the royal table; and the third James and his
queen used it as a sanctuary against the plague that in 1474 was
decimating Scotland. The fourth James spent many busy days here, hunting
and hawking; attending to the gardens and the bees; visiting his "harness
mill" where coats-of-mail were made; studying foreign languages in the
evening; discussing "the fifth essence in nature" with learned alchemists
over quaichs of aqua vitae ; and bleeding sick people with leeches, a
curious hobby for a king. At night he listened to the music of Italian
minstrels; the players of Linlithgow performed before him ; and often he
would finish the day with a game "at the cards, dice, or the tables," at
which he was fond of a flutter, or so one would gather from his
treasurer's accounts. For years, he spent every Easter and Christmas at
the Palace, and an Abbot of Unreason led the fun and games from St.
Nicholas' Eve until Twelfth Day. Much " drink silver" he gave to the
workmen who were making the place fit for his young queen, whose
jointure-house it was to be. When he brought her as a bride, so much gear
did she require that it took eighteen carts to carry it from Holyroodhouse,
and no queen of Scotland had ever been received at Linlithgow with greater
joy than Margaret Tudor. This generous king-he was as open-handed as his
father had been stingy-scattered money in the town ; he was received with
an acclamation always, and the children kissed his hand in the streets.
But ten years later, the clouds were gathering. From Linlithgow, Margaret
wrote to her brother Henry VIII that she was in anxiety about her
husband's state of mind, for she saw war coming. England was preparing to
fight France, and she was afraid James would join in the conflict. She
pleaded , with her husband to ignore the appeals of the Queen of France,
Anne de Bretagne, who had flattered him by proxy and called him her
"chosen knight." Margaret told him she had dreamt of coming disaster, and
the ghost that appeared before him at his prayers in St. Michael's Church
with words of warning was perhaps a ghost of her own devising, while the
voice he heard at midnight after he had joined his army on the Burghmuir
at Edinburgh may have proceeded from the lips of the same substantial
wraith. But if these were Margaret's efforts to stop him, they failed, and
James marched south to Flodden, while she waited in her bower above the
palace walls for news of the battle.
But it is with Queen Mary
of Scots that the Palace will always be associated. Mary kindles the
imagination even of those who call her an immoral harridan. On the 8th day
of December 1542, she was born in an upper room six or seven days before
her father, James V, died in despair at Falkland. In Linlithgow, she spent
the early months of her life, and after she returned from France it became
her half-way house when she travelled between Edinburgh and Stirling. At
Linlithgow Bridge, a little west of the Palace, she was abducted
(willingly or otherwise) by Bothwell, and from that day she never again
set foot in her Palace courtyard. Her son, the unpopular James VI, stayed
often at Linlithgow : sometimes he came to sulk after the folk of
Edinburgh had shown him how little they respected him, and once he came to
fulminate and to declare that he would raze Edinburgh to the ground and
scatter salt upon its ruins. Here, he had some of his many ructions with
the nobility and the clergy ; but after he had scrambled eagerly upon the
throne of England, and remained away for fourteen years, his return was
made the excuse for a tremendous civic spree. He was met at the east gate
of the town by a huge plaster lion, in the belly of which crouched the
local schoolmaster, and through the open jaws the man spouted a poem to
the " thrice royal Sire," a poem of acclamation which ends with the
gorgeous lines:
. . . then, king of men,
The king of beasts speaks to thee from his den,
Who, though he now enclosed be in plaster,
When he was free, was Lithgow's wise schoolmaster.
Nearly a century and a
quarter later, the great-great grandson of King James VI, was given a
reception no less warm, although it was unrehearsed. So great was the
excitement when Prince Charles arrived on a Sunday morning that the
minister decided to hold no service in the church. The Provost, John
Bucknay, was a Jacobite, as his father had been before him, but he was one
of those canny Jacobites who slipped away to leave his womenfolk to salute
the Prince in tartan and white cockades. Mrs. Glen Gordon was the tenant
of the Palace at the time, and the fountain in the courtyard was flowing
with wine. But few of that cheering crowd allowed their excitement to
carry them to the point of joining the Jacobite army which had marched
through the town and encamped near Magdalens ; and as soon as farewells
were exchanged in the afternoon, the Whigs in the town sent a messenger to
Edinburgh with news that the Prince was on his way to the capital. Many
claims were hastily put before the magistrates demanding compensation for
the meal, the cows and the sheep which (it was alleged) the Young
Pretender's rapscallions had lifted, and one ventures to hope that those
claims were carefully investigated: from what we know of the men who were
called the Twenty-seven Gods of Linlithgow, they probably were.
Four and a half months
later, the Palace was in flames. The Butcher Cumberland's soldiers on
their northward march bivouacked there, and the straw they left behind
caught alight. When he saw the smoke rising from the courtyard, Provost
Bucknay is said to have shrugged his shoulders and remarked that those who
kindled the fire had better put it out. So ended as a royal residence this
Palace of the Stewarts : broken like their broken hopes.
I walked slowly round the
building. The darkness had drawn down; lights were among the trees; the
only sound I could hear was the voice of a whaup on the edge of the loch.
Above me were the black, windows of the Palace where, on many a night such
as this, the Stewarts had stood and looked out of their heavy-lidded eyes
upon the darkening countryside: it did not need much imagination to
picture their ghosts among the walls. Retracing my steps, I splashed
across the burn, and made my way back to the little hotel in the main
street of the town.
I had promised myself a
visit to Torphichen and the Priory of the Knights of St. John of
Jerusalem; I had promised myself a view of many things in and about
Linlithgow. But next morning I was eager to get on my way; and after
breakfast, I decided to be content with a glimpse of St. Michael's Church,
which stands within a stone's throw of the Palace. It is among the finest
pre-Reformation parish churches in Scotland, and was probably built by
James IV upon the ruins of the "great church" which Edward I of England
had used as a storehouse for the provisions of his invading army. It was a
borough church in those days, and the magistrates claimed the right of
controlling the clergy. They kept an eye upon the behaviour of the priest,
told him the hours at which he was to perform the services, gave orders
even about the number of candles for the altar and the way he was to robe
himself. Indeed, one would gather from the entries in the Liber Curiae
(quoted by Dr. Ferguson) that the Bishop of the Diocese had little to say
in the parish so long as "the Twenty-seven Gods" were in control; and at
the time of the Reformation when the people in the parish joined in the
tornado of iconoclasm that swept over Scotland, the "Gods" devised a wily
scheme by which they retained the endowments in their own hands. In the
seventeenth century, the church was made hideous with galleries and pews;
the tradesmen of the town were given their own seats ; and the
incorporation of tailors, anxious to outdo their rivals, went so far as to
decorate their gallery with a pair of shears and a smoothing-iron. In the
same century, the church was divided into two by a wall, so that the "Resolutioners"
(the Presbyterian royalists) could worship God untainted by their
brethren, the Protesters, who worshipped at the other end. The church fell
into disrepair, and at the time of the 'Forty-five it was a dirty untidy
place with a great part of the floor broken up. That to-day it is one of
the loveliest examples of Gothic workmanship to be seen in Scotland is due
to the great Dr. Ferguson who spent his life restoring some of its lost
beauty. I had a talk with the beadle, and when he spoke about all that
"the Doctor" had done, tears came into his eyes. "Dr. Ferguson died too
soon," he said. "We need a fine, oak roof in the church-what you see is
but painted plaster. One day, perhaps, Dr. Ferguson's work will be
finished, but I'm thinking it will be a long time yet."
It was the beadle who
suggested that I ought to have a glance at the spot, a few yards down the
street, where the half-brother of Mary Queen of Scots was assassinated:
the crime, brilliantly conceived and daringly carried out, reminds one of
a scene in a modern shocker.
After Mary's flight to
England, Moray became Regent of the kingdom, but Hamilton of Bothwellhaugh
- whose life Moray had spared on the scaffold after Langside - decided
that Scotland would be better without him. That Hamilton's wife had been
turned out of her house by Moray's friends, and sent to wander unclothed
in the snow of a winter's night, used to be given as the motive for the
murder, but the story is apocryphal. According to his lights, Hamilton, in
planning Moray's death, was being loyal to his queen and to his own
family.
The street where the murder
took place is narrow now, but in the sixteenth century it was not much
wider than an alley, and this made Hamilton's task easier. He got into an
empty house where the Sheriff court-house now stands, and took the lintel
from the door in the dyke behind it, so that afterwards he could get away
on horseback without delay. Then he blocked the lane with thorn bushes to
hold up the pursuit. On the floor of the front room, he placed a large
feather-bed, so that his footsteps would be noiseless. To conceal his
shadow, he hung the room with black drapery, and cut a hole below the
lattice for his musket, which he loaded with four bullets.
The Regent Moray left his
lodging, some way down the street, and began to ride through the press of
people that had collected to watch him set out for Edinburgh. When he came
opposite the house, Hamilton fired. A bullet passed through the Regent's
body, killing the horse of the man on his left, and he was helped back to
his lodging, to die during the night. Meantime, Hamilton had rushed to the
back door of the house, leaped on his horse, and escaped.
When the news was taken to
Queen Mary, she was eager to reward him with a pension out of her French
income. In France, he was received as a tremendous fellow-a champion among
assassins-and his admirers selected a French general as his next victim,
but he declined the honour. Far from helping Queen Mary's cause in
Scotland, the murder of the Regent Moray drove the wedge of dissension
deeper into the nation, and gave Queen Elizabeth a chance to continue
playing the double game at which she was so adroit: a game that ended a
few minutes after ten o'clock on a February morning in 1587 upon a
black-draped scaffold built beside the hearth, where a fire of logs was
blazing, in the great hall of Fotheringhay Castle. |