There was “dancing and derray” in Scotland among the
laity when the king came to his own again. The darkest page in
the national history seemed to have been turned; the conquering English
were gone with their abominable tolerance, their craze for soap and
water, their aversion to witch-burnings. The nobles and gentry
would recover their lands and compensation for their losses; there would
be offices to win, and “the spoils of office.”
It seems that in Scotland none of the lessons of misfortune had been
learned. Since January the chiefs of the milder party of preachers,
the Resolutioners,-they who had been reconciled with the Engagers,-were
employing the Rev. James Sharp, who had been a prisoner in England,
as their agent with Monk, with Lauderdale, in April, with Charles in
Holland, and, again, in London. Sharp was no fanatic. From
the first he assured his brethren, Douglas of Edinburgh, Baillie, and
the rest, that there was no chance for “rigid Presbyterianism.”
They could conceive of no Presbyterianism which was not rigid, in the
manner of Andrew Melville, to whom his king was “Christ's
silly vassal.” Sharp warned them early that in face of the
irreconcilable Protesters, “moderate Episcopacy” would be
preferred; and Douglas himself assured Sharp that the new generation
in Scotland “bore a heart-hatred to the Covenant,” and are
“wearied of the yoke of presbyterial government.”
This was true: the ruling classes had seen too much of presbyterial
government, and would prefer bishops as long as they were not pampered
and all-powerful. On the other hand the lesser gentry, still more
their godly wives, the farmers and burgesses, and the preachers, regarded
the very shadow of Episcopacy as a breach of the Covenant and an insult
to the Almighty. The Covenanters had forced the Covenant on the
consciences of thousands, from the king downwards, who in soul and conscience
loathed it. They were to drink of the same cup-Episcopacy
was to be forced on them by fines and imprisonments. Scotland,
her people and rulers were moving in a vicious circle. The Resolutioners
admitted that to allow the Protesters to have any hand in affairs was
“to breed continual distemper and disorders,” and Baillie
was for banishing the leaders of the Protesters, irreconcilables like
the Rev. James Guthrie, to the Orkney islands. But the Resolutioners,
on the other hand, were no less eager to stop the use of the liturgy
in Charles's own household, and to persecute every sort of Catholic,
Dissenter, Sectary, and Quaker in Scotland. Meanwhile Argyll,
in debt, despised on all sides, and yet dreaded, was holding a great
open-air Communion meeting of Protesters at Paisley, in the heart of
the wildest Covenanting region (May 27, 1660). He was still dangerous;
he was trying to make himself trusted by the Protesters, who were opposed
to Charles. It may be doubted if any great potentate in Scotland
except the Marquis wished to revive the constitutional triumphs of Argyll's
party in the last Parliament of Charles I. Charles now named his
Privy Council and Ministers without waiting for parliamentary assent-though
his first Parliament would have assented to anything. He chose
only his late supporters: Glencairn who raised his standard in 1653;
Rothes, a humorous and not a cruel voluptuary; and, as Secretary for
Scotland in London, Lauderdale, who had urged him to take the Covenant,
and who for twenty years was to be his buffoon, his favourite, and his
wavering and unscrupulous adviser. Among these greedy and treacherous
profligates there would, had he survived, have been no place for Montrose.
In defiance of warnings from omens, second-sighted men, and sensible
men, Argyll left the safe sanctuary of his mountains and sea-straits,
and betook himself to London, “a fey man.” Most of
his past was covered by an Act of Indemnity, but not his doings in 1653.
He was arrested before he saw the king's face (July 8, 1660),
and lay in the Tower till, in December, he was taken to be tried for
treason in Scotland.
Sharp's friends were anxious to interfere in favour of establishing
Presbyterianism in England; he told them that the hope was vain; he
repeatedly asked for leave to return home, and, while an English preacher
assured Charles that the rout of Worcester had been God's vengeance
for his taking of the Covenant, Sharp (June 25) told his Resolutioners
that “the Protesters' doom is dight.”
Administration in Scotland was intrusted to the Committee of Estates
whom Monk (1650) had captured at Alyth, and with them Glencairn, as
Chancellor, entered Edinburgh on August 22. Next day, while the
Committee was busy, James Guthrie and some Protester preachers met,
and, in the old way, drew up a “supplication.” They
denounced religious toleration, and asked for the establishment of Presbytery
in England, and the filling of all offices with Covenanters. They
were all arrested and accused of attempting to “rekindle civil
war,” which would assuredly have followed had their prayer been
accepted. Next year Guthrie was hanged. But ten days after
his arrest Sharp had brought down a letter of Charles to the Edinburgh
Presbytery, promising to “protect and preserve the government
of the Church of Scotland as it is established by law.”
Had the words run “as it may be established by law” (in
Parliament) it would not have been a dishonourable quibble-as
it was.
Parliament opened on New Year's Day 1661, with Middleton as
Commissioner. In the words of Sir George Mackenzie, then a very
young advocate and man of letters, “never was Parliament so obsequious.”
The king was declared “supreme Governor over all persons and in
all causes” (a blow at Kirk judicature), and all Acts between
1633 and 1661 were rescinded, just as thirty years of ecclesiastical
legislation had been rescinded by the Covenanters. A sum of £40,000
yearly was settled on the king. Argyll was tried, was defended
by young George Mackenzie, and, when he seemed safe, his doom was fixed
by the arrival of a Campbell from London bearing some of his letters
to Lilburne and Monk (1653-1655) which the Indemnity of 1651 did not
cover. He died, by the axe (not the rope, like Montrose), with
dignity and courage.
The question of Church government in Scotland was left to Charles
and his advisers. The problem presented to the Government of the
Restoration by the Kirk was much more difficult and complicated than
historians usually suppose. The pretensions which the preachers
had inherited from Knox and Andrew Melville were practically incompatible,
as had been proved, with the existence of the State. In the southern
and western shires,-such as those of Dumfries, Galloway, Ayr,
Renfrew, and Lanark,-the forces which attacked the Engagers had
been mustered; these shires had backed Strachan and Ker and Guthrie
in the agitation against the king, the Estates, and the less violent
clergy, after Dunbar. But without Argyll, and with no probable
noble leaders, they could do little harm; they had done none under the
English occupation, which abolished the General Assembly. To have
restored the Assembly, or rather two Assemblies-that of the Protesters
and that of the Resolutionists,-would certainly have been perilous.
Probably the wisest plan would have been to grant a General Assembly,
to meet after the session of Parliament; not, as had been the
custom, to meet before it and influence or coerce the Estates.
Had that measure proved perilous to peace it need not have been repeated,-the
Kirk might have been left in the state to which the English had reduced
it.
This measure would not have so much infuriated the devout as did
the introduction of “black prelacy,” and the ejection of
some 300 adored ministers, chiefly in the south-west, and “the
making of a desert first, and then peopling it with owls and satyrs”
(the curates), as Archbishop Leighton described the action of 1663.
There ensued the finings of all who would not attend the ministrations
of “owls and satyrs,”-a grievance which produced two
rebellions (1666 and 1679) and a doctrine of anarchism, and was only
worn down by eternal and cruel persecutions.
By violence the Restoration achieved its aim: the Revolution of 1688
entered into the results; it was a bitter moment in the evolution of
Scotland-a moment that need never have existed. Episcopacy
was restored, four bishops were consecrated, and Sharp accepted (as
might have long been foreseen) the See of St Andrews. He was henceforth
reckoned a Judas, and assuredly he had ruined his character for honour:
he became a puppet of Government, despised by his masters, loathed by
the rest of Scotland.
In May-September 1662, Parliament ratified the change to Episcopacy.
It seems to have been thought that few preachers except the Protesters
would be recalcitrant, refuse collation from bishops, and leave their
manses. In point of fact, though they were allowed to consult
their consciences till February 1663, nearly 300 ministers preferred
their consciences to their livings. They remained centres of the
devotion of their flocks, and the “curates,” hastily gathered,
who took their places, were stigmatised as ignorant and profligate,
while, as they were resisted, rabbled, and daily insulted, the country
was full of disorder.
The Government thus mortally offended the devout classes, though
no attempt was made to introduce a liturgy. In the churches the
services were exactly, or almost exactly, what they had been; but excommunications
could now only be done by sanction of the bishops. Witch-burnings,
in spite of the opposition of George Mackenzie and the Council, were
soon as common as under the Covenant. Oaths declaring it unlawful
to enter into Covenants or take up arms against the king were imposed
on all persons in office.
Middleton, of his own authority, now proposed the ostracism, by parliamentary
ballot, of twelve persons reckoned dangerous. Lauderdale was mainly
aimed at (it is a pity that the bullet did not find its billet), with
Crawford, Cassilis, Tweeddale, Lothian, and other peers who did not
approve of the recent measures. But Lauderdale, in London, seeing
Charles daily, won his favour; Middleton was recalled (March 1663),
and Lauderdale entered freely on his wavering, unscrupulous, corrupt,
and disastrous period of power.
The Parliament of June 1663, meeting under Rothes, was packed by
the least constitutional method of choosing the Lords of the Articles.
Waristoun was brought from France, tried, and hanged, “expressing
more fear than I ever saw,” wrote Lauderdale, whose Act “against
Separation and Disobedience to Ecclesiastical Authority” fined
abstainers from services in their parish churches. In 1664, Sharp,
who was despised by Lauderdale and Glencairn, obtained the erection
of that old grievance-a Court of High Commission, including bishops,
to punish nonconformists. Sir James Turner was intrusted with
the task of dragooning them, by fining and the quartering of soldiers
on those who would not attend the curates and would keep conventicles.
Turner was naturally clement and good-natured, but wine often deprived
him of his wits, and his soldiery behaved brutally. Their excesses
increased discontent, and war with Holland (1664) gave them hopes of
a Dutch ally. Conventicles became common; they had an organisation
of scouts and sentinels. The malcontents intrigued with Holland
in 1666, and schemed to capture the three Keys of the Kingdom-the
castles of Stirling, Dumbarton, and Edinburgh. The States-General
promised, when this was done, to send ammunition and 150,000 gulden
(July 1666).
When rebellion did break out it had no foreign aid, and a casual
origin. In the south-west Turner commanded but seventy soldiers,
scattered all about the country. On November 14 some of them mishandled
an old man in the clachan of Dalry, on the Ken. A soldier was
shot in revenge (Mackenzie speaks as if a conventicle was going on in
the neighbourhood); people gathered in arms, with the Laird of Corsack,
young Maxwell of Monreith, and M‘Lennan; caught Turner, undressed,
in Dumfries, and carried him with them as they “went conventicling
about,” as Mackenzie writes, holding prayer-meetings, led by Wallace,
an old soldier of the Covenant. At Lanark they renewed the Covenant.
Dalziel of Binns, who had learned war in Russia, led a pursuing force.
The rebels were disappointed in hopes of Dutch or native help at Edinburgh;
they turned, when within three miles of the town, into the passes of
the Pentland Hills, and at Bullion Green, on November 28, displayed
fine soldierly qualities and courage, but fled, broken, at nightfall.
The soldiers and countryfolk, who were unsympathetic, took a number
of prisoners, preachers and laymen, on whom the Council, under the presidency
of Sharp, exercised a cruelty bred of terror. The prisoners were
defended by George Mackenzie: it has been strangely stated that he was
Lord Advocate, and persecuted them! Fifteen rebels were hanged:
the use of torture to extract information was a return, under Fletcher,
the King's Advocate, to a practice of Scottish law which had been
almost in abeyance since 1638-except, of course, in the case of
witches. Turner vainly tried to save from the Boot
the Laird of Corsack, who had protected his life from the fanatics.
“The executioner favoured Mr Mackail,” says the Rev. Mr
Kirkton, himself a sufferer later. This Mr Mackail, when a lad
of twenty-one (1662), had already denounced the rulers, in a sermon,
as on the moral level of Haman and Judas.
It is entirely untrue that Sharp concealed a letter from the king
commanding that no blood should be shed (Charles detested hanging people).
If any one concealed his letter, it was Burnet, Archbishop of Glasgow.
Dalziel now sent Ballantyne to supersede Turner and to exceed him in
ferocity; and Bellenden and Tweeddale wrote to Lauderdale deprecating
the cruelties and rapacity of the reaction, and avowing contempt of
Sharp. He was “snibbed,” confined to his diocese,
and “cast down, yea, lower than the dust,” wrote Rothes
to Lauderdale. He was held to have exaggerated in his reports
the forces of the spirit of revolt; but Tweeddale, Sir Robert Murray,
and Kincardine found when in power that matters were really much more
serious than they had supposed. In the disturbed districts-mainly
the old Strathclyde and Pictish Galloway-the conformist ministers
were perpetually threatened, insulted, and robbed.
According to a sympathetic historian, “on the day when Charles
should abolish bishops and permit free General Assemblies, the western
Whigs would become his law-abiding subjects; but till that day they
would be irreconcilable.” But a Government is not always
well advised in yielding to violence. Moreover, when Government
had deserted its clergy, and had granted free General Assemblies, the
two Covenants would re-arise, and the pretensions of the clergy to dominate
the State would be revived. Lauderdale drifted into a policy of
alternate “Indulgences” or tolerations, and of repression,
which had the desired effect, at the maximum of cost to justice and
decency. Before England drove James II. from the throne, but a
small remnant of fanatics were in active resistance, and the Covenants
had ceased to be dangerous.
A scheme of partial toleration was mooted in 1667, and Rothes was
removed from his practical dictatorship, while Turner was made the scapegoat
of Rothes, Sharp, and Dalziel. The result of the scheme of toleration
was an increase in disorder. Bishop Leighton had a plan for abolishing
all but a shadow of Episcopacy; but the temper of the recalcitrants
displayed itself in a book, ‘Naphtali,' advocating the right
of the godly to murder their oppressors. This work contained provocations
to anarchism, and, in Knox's spirit, encouraged any Phinehas conscious
of a “call” from Heaven to do justice on such persons as
he found guilty of troubling the godly.
Fired by such Christian doctrines, on July 11, 1668, one Mitchell-“a
preacher of the Gospel, and a youth of much zeal and piety,” says
Wodrow the historian-shot at Sharp, wounded the Bishop of Orkney
in the street of Edinburgh, and escaped. This event delayed the
project of conciliation, but in July 1669 the first Indulgence was promulgated.
On making certain concessions, outed ministers were to be restored.
Two-and-forty came in, including the Resolutioner Douglas, in 1660 the
correspondent of Sharp. The Indulgence allowed the indulged to
reject Episcopal collation; but while brethren exiled in Holland denounced
the scheme (these brethren, led by Mr MacWard, opposed all attempts
at reconciliation), it also offended the Archbishops, who issued a Remonstrance.
Sharp was silenced; Burnet of Glasgow was superseded, and the see was
given to the saintly but unpractical Leighton. By 1670 conventiclers
met in arms, and “a clanking Act,” as Lauderdale called
it, menaced them with death: Charles II. resented but did not rescind
it. In fact, the disorders and attacks on conformist ministers
were of a violence much overlooked by our historians. In 1672
a second Indulgence split the Kirk into factions-the exiles in
Holland maintaining that preachers who accepted it should be held men
unholy, false brethren. But the Indulged increased in numbers,
and finally in influence.
To such a man as Leighton the whole quarrel seemed “a scuffle
of drunken men in the dark.” An Englishman entering a Scottish
church at this time found no sort of liturgy; prayers and sermons were
what the minister chose to make them-in fact, there was no persecution
for religion, says Sir George Mackenzie. But if men thought even
a shadow of Episcopacy an offence to Omnipotence, and the king's
authority in ecclesiastical cases a usurping of “the Crown Honours
of Christ”; if they consequently broke the law by attending armed
conventicles and assailing conformist preachers, and then were fined
or imprisoned,-from their point of view they were being persecuted
for their religion. Meanwhile they bullied and “rabbled”
the “curates” for their religion: such was Leighton's
“drunken scuffle in the dark.”
In 1672 Lauderdale married the rapacious and tyrannical daughter
of Will Murray-of old the whipping-boy of Charles I., later a
disreputable intriguer. Lauderdale's own ferocity of temper
and his greed had created so much dislike that in the Parliament of
1673 he was met by a constitutional opposition headed by the Duke of
Hamilton, and with Sir George Mackenzie as its orator. Lauderdale
consented to withdraw monopolies on salt, tobacco, and brandy; to other
grievances he would not listen (the distresses of the Kirk were not
brought forward), and he dissolved the Parliament. The opposition
tried to get at him through the English Commons, who brought against
him charges like those which were fatal to Strafford. They failed;
and Lauderdale, holding seven offices himself, while his brother Haltoun
was Master of the Mint, ruled through a kind of clique of kinsmen and
creatures.
Leighton, in despair, resigned his see: the irreconcilables of the
Kirk had crowned him with insults. The Kirk, he said, “abounded
in furious zeal and endless debates about the empty name and shadow
of a difference in government, in the meanwhile not having of solemn
and orderly public worship as much as a shadow.”
Wodrow, the historian of the sufferings of the Kirk, declares that
through the riotous proceedings of the religious malcontents “the
country resembled war as much as peace.” But an Act of Council
of 1677 bidding landowners sign a bond for the peaceable behaviour of
all on their lands was refused obedience by many western lairds.
They could not enforce order, they said: hence it seemed to follow that
there was much disorder. Those who refused were, by a stretch
of the law of “law-burrows,” bound over to keep the peace
of the Government. Lauderdale, having nothing that we would call
a police, little money, and a small insufficient force of regulars,
called in “the Highland Host,” the retainers of Atholl,
Glenorchy, Mar, Moray, and Airlie, and other northern lords, and quartered
them on the disturbed districts for a month. They were then sent
home bearing their spoils (February 1678). Atholl and Perth (later
to be the Catholic minister of James II.) now went over to “the
Party,” the opposition, Hamilton's party; Hamilton and others
rode to London to complain against Lauderdale, but he, aided by the
silver tongue of Mackenzie, who had changed sides, won over Charles,
and Lauderdale's assailants were helpless.
Great unpopularity and disgrace were achieved by the treatment of
the pious Mitchell, who, we have seen, missed Sharp and shot the Bishop
of Orkney in 1668. In 1674 he was taken, and confessed before
the Council, after receiving from Rothes, then Chancellor, assurance
of his life: this with Lauderdale's consent. But when brought
before the judges, he retracted his confession. He was kept a
prisoner on the Bass Rock; in 1676 was tortured; in January 1678 was
again tried. Haltoun (who in a letter of 1674 had mentioned the
assurance of life), Rothes, Sharp, and Lauderdale, all swore that, to
their memory, no assurance had been given in 1674. Mitchell's
counsel asked to be allowed to examine the Register of the Council,
but, for some invisible technical reasons, the Lords of the Justiciary
refused; the request, they said, came too late. Mackenzie prosecuted;
he had been Mitchell's counsel in 1674, and it is impossible to
follow the reasoning by which he justifies the condemnation and hanging
of Mitchell in January 1678. Sharp was supposed to have urged
Mitchell's trial, and to have perjured himself, which is far from
certain. Though Mitchell was guilty, the manner of his taking
off was flagrantly unjust and most discreditable to all concerned.
Huge armed conventicles, and others led by Welsh, a preacher, marched
about through the country in December 1678 to May 1679. In April
1679 two soldiers were murdered while in bed; next day John Graham of
Claverhouse, who had served under the Prince of Orange with credit,
and now comes upon the scene, reported that Welsh was organising an
armed rebellion, and that the peasants were seizing the weapons of the
militia. Balfour of Kinloch (Burley) and Robert Hamilton, a laird
in Fife, were the leaders of that extreme sect which was feared as much
by the indulged preachers as by the curates, and, on May 2, 1679, Balfour,
with Hackstoun of Rathillet (who merely looked on), and other pious
desperadoes, passed half an hour in clumsily hacking Sharp to death,
in the presence of his daughter, at Magus Moor near St Andrews.
The slayers, says one of them, thanked the Lord “for leading
them by His Holy Spirit in every step they stepped in that matter,”
and it is obvious that mere argument was unavailing with gentlemen who
cherished such opinions. In the portraits of Sharp we see a face
of refined goodness which makes the physiognomist distrust his art.
From very early times Cromwell had styled Sharp “Sharp of that
ilk.” He was subtle, he had no fanaticism, he warned his
brethren in 1660 of the impossibility of restoring their old authority
and discipline. But when he accepted an archbishopric he sold
his honour; his servility to Charles and Lauderdale was disgusting;
fear made him cruel; his conduct at Mitchell's last trial is,
at best, ambiguous; and the hatred in which he was held is proved by
the falsehoods which his enemies told about his private life and his
sorceries.
The murderers crossed the country, joined the armed fanatics of the
west, under Robert Hamilton, and on Restoration Day (May 29) burned
Acts of the Government at Rutherglen. Claverhouse rode out of
Glasgow with a small force, to inquire into this proceeding; met the
armed insurgents in a strong position defended by marshes and small
lochs; sent to Lord Ross at Glasgow for reinforcements which did not
arrive; and has himself told how he was defeated, pursued, and driven
back into Glasgow. “This may be accounted the beginning
of the rebellion in my opinion.”
Hamilton shot with his own hand one of the prisoners, and reckoned
the sparing of the others “one of our first steppings aside.”
Men so conscientious as Hamilton were rare in his party, which was ruined
presently by its own distracted counsels.
The forces of the victors of Drumclog were swollen by their success,
but they were repulsed with loss in an attack on Glasgow. The
commands of Ross and Claverhouse were then withdrawn to Stirling, and
when Livingstone joined them at Larbert, the whole army mustered but
1800 men-so weak were the regulars. The militia was raised,
and the king sent down his illegitimate son, Monmouth, husband of the
heiress of Buccleuch, at the head of several regiments of redcoats.
Argyll was not of service; he was engaged in private war with the Macleans,
who refused an appeal for help from the rebels. They, in Glasgow
and at Hamilton, were quarrelling over the Indulgence: the extremists
called Mr Welsh's party “rotten-hearted”-Welsh
would not reject the king's authority-the Welshites were
the more numerous. On June 22 the Clyde, at Bothwell Bridge, separated
the rebels-whose preachers were inveighing against each other-from
Monmouth's army. Monmouth refused to negotiate till the
others laid down their arms, and after a brief artillery duel, the Royal
infantry carried the bridge, and the rest of the affair was pursuit
by the cavalry. The rival Covenanting leaders, Russel, one of
Sharp's murderers, and Ure, give varying accounts of the affair,
and each party blames the other. The rebel force is reckoned at
from five to seven thousand, the Royal army was of 2300 according to
Russel. “Some hundreds” of the Covenanters fell, and
“many hundreds,” the Privy Council reported, were taken.
The battle of Bothwell Bridge severed the extremists, Robert Hamilton,
Richard Cameron and Cargill, the famous preachers, and the rest, from
the majority of the Covenanters. They dwindled to the “Remnant,”
growing the fiercer as their numbers decreased. Only two ministers
were hanged; hundreds of prisoners were banished, like Cromwell's
prisoners after Dunbar, to the American colonies. Of these some
two hundred were drowned in the wreck of their vessel off the Orkneys.
The main body were penned up in Greyfriars Churchyard; many escaped;
more signed a promise to remain peaceful, and shun conventicles.
There was more of cruel carelessness than of the deliberate cruelty
displayed in the massacres and hangings of women after Philiphaugh and
Dunaverty. But the avaricious and corrupt rulers, after 1679,
headed by James, Duke of York (Lauderdale being removed), made the rising
of Bothwell Bridge the pretext for fining and ruining hundreds of persons,
especially lairds, who were accused of helping or harbouring rebels.
The officials were rapacious for their own profit. The records
of scores of trials prosecuted for the sake of spoil, and disgraced
by torture and injustice, make miserable reading. Between the
trials of the accused and the struggle with the small minority of extremists
led by Richard Cameron and the aged Mr Cargill, the history of the country
is monotonously wretched. It was in prosecuting lairds and peasants
and preachers that Sir George Mackenzie, by nature a lenient man and
a lover of literature, gained the name of “the bluidy advocate.”
Cameron and his followers rode about after issuing the wildest manifestoes,
as at Sanquhar in the shire of Dumfries (June 22, 1680). Bruce
of Earlshall was sent with a party of horse to pursue, and, in the wild
marshes of Airs Moss, in Ayrshire, Cameron “fell praying and fighting”;
while Hackstoun of Rathillet, less fortunate, was taken, and the murder
of Sharp was avenged on him with unspeakable cruelties. The Remnant
now formed itself into organised and armed societies; their conduct
made them feared and detested by the majority of the preachers, who
longed for a quiet life, not for the establishment of a Mosaic commonwealth,
and “the execution of righteous judgments” on “malignants.”
Cargill was now the leader of the Remnant, and Cargill, in a conventicle
at Torwood, of his own authority excommunicated the king, the Duke of
York, Lauderdale, Rothes, Dalziel, and Mackenzie, whom he accused of
leniency to witches, among other sins. The Government apparently
thought that excommunication, to the mind of Cargill and his adherents,
meant outlawry, and that outlawry might mean the assassination of the
excommunicated. Cargill was hunted, and (July 12, 1681) was captured
by “wild Bonshaw.” It was believed by his party that
the decision to execute Cargill was carried by the vote of Argyll, in
the Privy Council, and that Cargill told Rothes (who had signed the
Covenant with him in their youth) that Rothes would be the first to
die. Rothes died on July 26, Cargill was hanged on July 27.
On the following day James, Duke of York, as Royal Commissioner,
opened the first Parliament since 1673-74. James secured an Act
making the right of succession to the Crown independent of differences
of religion; he, of course, was a Catholic. The Test Act was also
passed, a thing so self-contradictory in its terms that any man might
take it whose sense of humour overcame his sense of honour. Many
refused, including a number of the conformist ministers. Argyll
took the Test “as far as it is consistent with itself and with
the Protestant religion.”
Argyll, the son of the executed Marquis, had recovered his lands,
and acquired the title of Earl mainly through the help of Lauderdale.
During the religious troubles from 1660 onwards he had taken no great
part, but had sided with the Government, and approved of the torture
of preachers. But what ruined him now (though the facts have been
little noticed) was his disregard of the claims of his creditors, and
his obtaining the lands of the Macleans in Mull and Morven, in discharge
of an enormous debt of the Maclean chief to the Marquis, executed in
1661. The Macleans had vainly attempted to prove that the debt
was vastly inflated by familiar processes, and had resisted in arms
the invasion of the Campbells. They had friends in Seaforth, the
Mackenzies, and in the Earl of Errol and other nobles.
These men, especially Mackenzie of Tarbet, an astute intriguer, seized
their chance when Argyll took the Test “with a qualification,”
and though, at first, he satisfied and was reconciled to the Duke of
York, they won over the Duke, accused Argyll to the king, brought him
before a jury, and had him condemned of treason and incarcerated.
The object may have been to intimidate him, and destroy his almost royal
power in the west and the islands. In any case, after a trial
for treason, in which one vote settled his doom, he escaped in disguise
as a footman (perhaps by collusion, as was suspected), fled to England,
conspired there with Scottish exiles and a Covenanting refugee, Mr Veitch,
and, as Charles would not allow him to be searched for, he easily escaped
to Holland. (For details, see my book, ‘Sir George Mackenzie.')
It was, in fact, clan hatred that dragged down Argyll. His
condemnation was an infamous perversion of justice, but as Charles would
not allow him to be captured in London, it is most improbable that he
would have permitted the unjust capital sentence to be carried out.
The escape was probably collusive, and the sole result of these intricate
iniquities was to create for the Government an enemy who would have
been dangerous if he had been trusted by the extreme Presbyterians.
In England no less than in Scotland the supreme and odious injustice
of Argyll's trial excited general indignation. The Earl
of Aberdeen (Gordon of Haddo) was now Chancellor, and Queensberry was
Treasurer for a while; both were intrigued against at Court by the Earl
of Perth and his brother, later Lord Melfort, and probably by far the
worst of all the knaves of the Restoration.
Increasing outrages by the Remnant, now headed by the Rev. Mr James
Renwick, a very young man, led to more furious repression, especially
as in 1683 Government detected a double plot-the wilder English
aim being to raise the rabble and to take or slay Charles and his brother
at the Rye House; while the more respectable conspirators, English and
Scots, were believed to be acquainted with, though not engaged in, this
design. The Rev. Mr Carstares was going and coming between Argyll
and the exiles in Holland and the intriguers at home. They intended
as usual first to surprise Edinburgh Castle. In England Algernon
Sidney, Lord Russell, and others were arrested, while Baillie of Jerviswoode
and Carstares were apprehended-Carstares in England. He
was sent to Scotland, where he could be tortured. The trial of
Jerviswoode was if possible more unjust than even the common run of
these affairs, and he was executed (December 24, 1684).
The conspiracy was, in fact, a very serious affair: Carstares was
confessedly aware of its criminal aspect, and was in the closest confidence
of the ministers of William of Orange. What his dealings were
with them in later years he would never divulge. But it is clear
that if the plotters slew Charles and James, the hour had struck for
the Dutch deliverer's appearance. If we describe the Rye
House Plot as aiming merely at “the exclusion of the Duke of York
from the throne,” we shut our eyes to evidence and make ourselves
incapable of understanding the events. There were plotters of
every degree and rank, and they were intriguing with Argyll, and, through
Carstares who knew, though he refused a part in the murder plot, were
in touch at once with Argyll and the intimates of William of Orange.
Meanwhile “the hill men,” the adherents of Renwick, in
October 1684, declared a war of assassination against their opponents,
and announced that they would try malignants in courts of their own.
Their manifesto (“The Apologetical Declaration”) caused
an extraordinary measure of repression. A test-the abjuration
of the criminal parts of Renwick's declaration-was
to be offered by military authority to all and sundry. Refusal
to abjure entailed military execution. The test was only obnoxious
to sincere fanatics; but among them must have been hundreds of persons
who had no criminal designs, and merely deemed it a point of honour
not to “homologate” any act of a Government which was corrupt,
prelatic, and unholy.
Later victims of this view of duty were Margaret Lauchleson and Margaret
Wilson-an old woman and a young girl-cruelly drowned by
the local authorities at Wigtown (May 1685). A myth represents
Claverhouse as having been present. The shooting of John Brown,
“the Christian Carrier,” by Claverhouse in the previous
week was an affair of another character. Claverhouse did not exceed
his orders, and ammunition and treasonable papers were in Brown's
possession; he was also sheltering a red-handed rebel. Brown was
not shot merely “because he was a Nonconformist,” nor was
he shot by the hand of Claverhouse.
These incidents of “the killing time” were in the reign
of James II.; Charles II. had died, to the sincere grief of most of
his subjects, on February 2, 1685. “Lecherous and treacherous”
as he was, he was humorous and good-humoured. The expected invasion
of Scotland by Argyll, of England by Monmouth, did not encourage the
Government to use respective lenity in the Covenanting region, from
Lanarkshire to Galloway.
Argyll, who sailed from Holland on May 2, had a council of Lowlanders
who thwarted him. His interests were in his own principality,
but he found it occupied by Atholl and his clansmen, and the cadets
of his own House as a rule would not rally to him. The Lowlanders
with him, Sir Patrick Hume, Sir John Cochrane, and the rest, wished
to move south and join hands with the Remnant in the west and in Galloway;
but the Remnant distrusted the sudden religious zeal of Argyll, and
were cowed by Claverhouse. The coasts were watched by Government
vessels of war, and when, after vain movements round about his own castle,
Inveraray, Argyll was obliged by his Lowlanders to move on Glasgow,
he was checked at every turn; the leaders, weary and lost in the marshes,
scattered from Kilpatrick on Clyde; Argyll crossed the river, and was
captured by servants of Sir John Shaw of Greenock. He was not
put to trial nor to torture; he was executed on the verdict of 1681.
About 200 suspected persons were lodged by Government in Dunottar Castle
at the time and treated with abominable cruelty.
The Covenanters were now effectually put down, though Renwick was
not taken and hanged till 1688. The preachers were anxious for
peace and quiet, and were bitterly hostile to Renwick. The Covenant
was a dead letter as far as power to do mischief was concerned.
It was not persecution of the Kirk, but demand for toleration of Catholics
and a manifest desire to restore the Church, that in two years lost
James his kingdoms.
On April 29, 1686, James's message to the Scots Parliament
asked toleration for “our innocent subjects” the Catholics.
He had substituted Perth's brother, now entitled Earl of Melfort,
for Queensberry; Perth was now Chancellor; both men had adopted their
king's religion, and the infamous Melfort can hardly be supposed
to have done so honestly. Their families lost all in the event
except their faith. With the request for toleration James sent
promises of free trade with England, and he asked for no supplies.
Perth had introduced Catholic vestments and furnishings in Holyrood
chapel, which provoked a No Popery riot. Parliament would not
permit toleration; James removed many of the Council and filled their
places with Catholics. Sir George Mackenzie's conscience
“dirled”; he refused to vote for toleration and he lost
the Lord Advocateship, being superseded by Sir James Dalrymple, an old
Covenanting opponent of Claverhouse in Galloway.
In August James, by prerogative, did what the Estates would not do,
and he deprived the Archbishop of Glasgow and the Bishop of Dunkeld
of their Sees: though a Catholic, he was the king-pope of a Protestant
church! In a decree of July 1687 he extended toleration to the
Kirk, and a meeting of preachers at Edinburgh expressed “a deep
sense of your Majesty's gracious and surprising favour.”
The Kirk was indeed broken, and, when the Revolution came, was at last
ready for a compromise from which the Covenants were omitted.
On February 17, 1688, Mr Renwick was hanged at Edinburgh: he had been
prosecuted by Dalrymple. On the same day Mackenzie superseded
Dalrymple as Lord Advocate.
After the birth of the White Rose Prince of Wales (June 10, 1688),
Scotland, like England, apprehended that a Catholic king would be followed
by a Catholic son. The various contradictory lies about the child's
birth flourished, all the more because James ventured to select the
magistrates of the royal burghs. It became certain that the Prince
of Orange would invade, and Melfort madly withdrew the regular troops,
with Claverhouse (now Viscount Dundee) to aid in resisting William in
England, though Balcarres proposed a safer way of holding down the English
northern counties by volunteers, the Highland clans, and new levies.
Thus the Privy Council in Scotland were left at the mercy of the populace.
Of the Scottish army in England all were disbanded when James fled
to France, except a handful of cavalry, whom Dundee kept with him.
Perth fled from Edinburgh, but was taken and held a prisoner for four
years; the town train-band, with the mob and some Cameronians, took
Holyrood, slaying such of the guard as they did not imprison; “many
died of their wounds and hunger.” The chapel and Catholic
houses were sacked, and gangs of the armed Cameronian societies went
about in the south-west, rabbling, robbing, and driving away ministers
of the Episcopalian sort. Atholl was in power in Edinburgh; in
London, where James's Scots friends met, the Duke of Hamilton
was made President of Council, and power was left till the assembling
of a Convention at Edinburgh (March 1689) in the hands of William.
In Edinburgh Castle the wavering Duke of Gordon was induced to remain
by Dundee and Balcarres; while Dundee proposed to call a Jacobite convention
in Stirling. Melfort induced James to send a letter contrary to
the desires of his party; Atholl, who had promised to join them, broke
away; the life of Dundee was threatened by the fanatics, and on March
18, seeing his party headless and heartless, Dundee rode north, going
“wherever might lead him the shade of Montrose.”
Mackay now brought to Edinburgh regiments from Holland, which overawed
the Jacobites, and he secured for William the key of the north, the
castle of Stirling. With Hamilton as President, the Convention,
with only four adverse votes, declared against James and his son; and
Hamilton (April 3) proclaimed at the cross the reign of William and
Mary. The claim of rights was passed and declared Episcopacy intolerable.
Balcarres was thrown into prison: on May 11 William took the Coronation
oath for Scotland, merely protesting that he would not “root out
heretics,” as the oath enjoined.
This was “the end o' an auld sang,” the end of
the Stuart dynasty, and of the equally “divine rights” of
kings and of preachers.
In a sketch it is impossible to convey any idea of the sufferings
of Scotland, at least of Covenanting Scotland, under the Restoration.
There was contest, unrest, and dragoonings, and the quartering of a
brutal and licentious soldiery on suspected persons. Law, especially
since 1679, had been twisted for the conviction of persons whom the
administration desired to rob. The greed and corruption of the
rulers, from Lauderdale, his wife, and his brother Haltoun, to Perth
and his brother, the Earl of Melfort, whose very title was the name
of an unjustly confiscated estate, is almost inconceivable.
Few of the foremost men in power, except Sir George Mackenzie and Claverhouse,
were free from personal profligacy of every sort. Claverhouse
has left on record his aversion to severities against the peasantry;
he was for prosecuting such gentry as the Dalrymples. As constable
of Dundee he refused to inflict capital punishment on petty offenders,
and Mackenzie went as far as he dared in opposing the ferocities of
the inquisition of witches. But in cases of alleged treason Mackenzie
knew no mercy.
Torture, legal in Scotland, was used with barbarism unprecedented
there after each plot or rising, to extract secrets which, save in one
or two cases like that of Carstares, the victims did not possess.
They were peasants, preachers, and a few country gentlemen: the nobles
had no inclination to suffer for the cause of the Covenants. The
Covenants continued to be the idols of the societies of Cameronians,
and of many preachers who were no longer inclined to die for these documents,-the
expression of such strange doctrines, the causes of so many sorrows
and of so many martyrdoms. However little we may sympathise with
the doctrines, none the less the sufferers were idealists, and, no less
than Montrose, preferred honour to life.
With all its sins, the Restoration so far pulverised the pretensions
which, since 1560, the preachers had made, that William of Orange was
not obliged to renew the conflict with the spiritual sons of Knox and
Andrew Melville.
This fact is not so generally recognised as it might be. It
is therefore proper to quote the corroborative opinion of the learned
Historiographer-Royal of Scotland, Professor Hume Brown. “By
concession and repression the once mighty force of Scottish Presbyterianism
had been broken. Most deadly of the weapons in the accomplishment
of this result had been the three Acts of Indulgence which had successively
cut so deep into the ranks of uniformity. In succumbing to the
threats and promises of the Government, the Indulged ministers had undoubtedly
compromised the fundamental principles of Presbyterianism. . . .
The compliance of these ministers was, in truth, the first and necessary
step towards that religious and political compromise which the force
of circumstances was gradually imposing on the Scottish people,”
and “the example of the Indulged ministers, who composed the great
mass of the Presbyterian clergy, was of the most potent effect in substituting
the idea of toleration for that of the religious absolutism of Knox
and Melville.” >
It may be added that the pretensions of Knox and Melville and all
their followers were no essential part of Presbyterial Church government,
but were merely the continuation or survival of the clerical claims
of apostolic authority, as enforced by such popes as Hildebrand and
such martyrs as St Thomas of Canterbury.