While Claverhouse hovered in the north the Convention (declared to
be a Parliament by William on June 5) took on, for the first time in
Scotland since the reign of Charles I, the aspect of an English Parliament,
and demanded English constitutional freedom of debate. The Secretary
in Scotland was William, Earl of Melville; that hereditary waverer,
the Duke of Hamilton, was Royal Commissioner; but some official supporters
of William, especially Sir James and Sir John Dalrymple, were criticised
and thwarted by “the club” of more extreme Liberals.
They were led by the Lowland ally who had vexed Argyll, Hume of Polwarth;
and by Montgomery of Skelmorley, who, disappointed in his desire of
place, soon engaged in a Jacobite plot.
The club wished to hasten the grant of Parliamentary liberties which
William was anxious not to give; and to take vengeance on officials
such as Sir James Dalrymple, and his son, Sir John, now Lord Advocate,
as he had been under James II. To these two men, foes of Claverhouse,
William clung while he could. The council obtained, but did not
need to use, permission to torture Jacobite prisoners, “Cavaliers”
as at this time they were styled; but Chieseley of Dalry, who murdered
Sir George Lockhart, President of the College of Justice, was tortured.
The advanced Liberal Acts which were passed did not receive the touch
of the sceptre from Hamilton, William's Commissioner: thus they
were “vetoed,” and of no effect. The old packed committee,
“The Lords of the Articles,” was denounced as a grievance;
the king was to be permitted to appoint no officers of State without
Parliament's approbation. Hamilton offered compromises,
for William clung to “the Articles”; but he abandoned them
in the following year, and thenceforth till the Union (1707) the Scottish
was “a Free Parliament.” Various measures of legislation
for the Kirk--some to emancipate it as in its palmy days, some
to keep it from meddling in politics-were proposed; some measures
to abolish, some to retain lay patronage of livings, were mooted.
The advanced party for a while put a stop to the appointment of judges,
but in August came news of the Viscount Dundee in the north which terrified
parliamentary politicians.
Edinburgh Castle had been tamely yielded by the Duke of Gordon; Balcarres,
the associate of Dundee, had been imprisoned; but Dundee himself, after
being declared a rebel, in April raised the standard of King James.
As against him the Whigs relied on Mackay, a brave officer who had been
in Dutch service, and now commanded regiments of the Scots Brigade of
Holland. Mackay pursued Dundee, as Baillie had pursued Montrose,
through the north: at Inverness, Dundee picked up some Macdonalds under
Keppoch, but Keppoch was not satisfactory, being something of a freebooter.
The Viscount now rode to the centre of his hopes, to the Macdonalds
of Glengarry, the Camerons of Lochiel, and the Macleans who had been
robbed of their lands by the Earl of Argyll, executed in 1685.
Dundee summoned them to Lochiel's house on Loch Arkaig for May
18; he visited Atholl and Badenoch; found a few mounted men as recruits
at Dundee; returned through the wilds to Lochaber, and sent round that
old summons to a rising, the Fiery Cross, charred and dipped in a goat's
blood.
Much time was spent in preliminary manœuvring and sparring
between Mackay, now reinforced by English regulars, and Dundee, who
for a time disbanded his levies, while Mackay went to receive fresh
forces and to consult the Government at Edinburgh. He decided
to march to the west and bridle the clans by erecting a strong fort
at Inverlochy, where Montrose routed Argyll. A stronghold at Inverlochy
menaced the Macdonalds to the north, and the Camerons in Lochaber, and,
southwards, the Stewarts in Appin. But to reach Inverlochy Mackay
had to march up the Tay, past Blair Atholl, and so westward through
very wild mountainous country. To oppose him Dundee had collected
4000 of the clansmen, and awaited ammunition and men from James, then
in Ireland. By the advice of the great Lochiel, a man over seventy
but miraculously athletic, Dundee decided to let the clans fight in
their old way,-a rush, a volley at close quarters, and then the
claymore. By June 28 Dundee had received no aid from James,-of
money “we have not twenty pounds”; and he was between the
Earl of Argyll (son of the martyr of 1685) and Mackay with his 4000
foot and eight troops of horse.
On July 23 Dundee seized the castle of Blair Atholl, which had been
the base of Montrose in his campaigns, and was the key of the country
between the Tay and Lochaber. The Atholl clans, Murrays and Stewarts,
breaking away from the son of their chief, the fickle Marquis of Atholl,
were led by Stewart of Ballechin, but did not swell Dundee's force
at the moment. From James Dundee now received but a battalion
of half-starved Irishmen, under the futile General Cannon.
On July 27, at Blair, Dundee learned that Mackay's force had
already entered the steep and narrow pass of Killiecrankie, where the
road skirted the brawling waters of the Garry. Dundee had not
time to defend the pass; he marched his men from Blair, keeping the
heights, while Mackay emerged from the gorge, and let his forces rest
on the wide level haugh beside the Garry, under the house of Runraurie,
now called Urrard, with the deep and rapid river in their rear.
On this haugh the tourist sees the tall standing stone which, since
1735 at least, has been known as “Dundee's stone.”
From the haugh rises a steep acclivity, leading to the plateau where
the house of Runraurie stood. Mackay feared that Dundee would
occupy this plateau, and that the fire thence would break up his own
men on the haugh below. He therefore seized the plateau, which
was an unfortunate manœuvre. He was so superior in numbers
that both of his wings extended beyond Dundee's, who had but forty
ill-horsed gentlemen by way of cavalry. After distracting Mackay
by movements along the heights, as if to cut off his communications
with the south, Dundee, who had resisted the prayers of the chiefs that
he would be sparing of his person, gave the word to charge as the sun
sank behind the western hills. Rushing down hill, under heavy
fire and losing many men, the clans, when they came to the shock, swept
the enemy from the plateau, drove them over the declivity, forced many
to attempt crossing the Garry, where they were drowned, and followed,
slaying, through the pass. Half of Hastings' regiment, untouched
by the Highland charge, and all of Leven's men, stood their ground,
and were standing there when sixteen of Dundee's horse returned
from the pursuit. Mackay, who had lost his army, stole across
the Garry with this remnant and made for Stirling. He knew not
that Dundee lay on the field, dying in the arms of Victory. Precisely
when and in what manner Dundee was slain is unknown; there is even a
fair presumption, from letters of the English Government, that he was
murdered by two men sent from England on some very secret mission.
When last seen by his men, Dundee was plunged in the battle smoke, sword
in hand, in advance of his horse.
When the Whigs-terrified by the defeat and expecting Dundee
at Stirling with the clans and the cavaliers of the Lowlands-heard
of his fall, their sorrow was changed into rejoicing. The cause
of King James was mortally wounded by the death of “the glory
of the Grahams,” who alone could lead and keep together a Highland
host. Deprived of his leadership and distrustful of his successor,
General Cannon, the clans gradually left the Royal Standard. The
Cameronian regiment, recruited from the young men of the organised societies,
had been ordered to occupy Dunkeld. Here they were left isolated,
“in the air,” by Mackay or his subordinates, and on August
21 these raw recruits, under Colonel Cleland, who had fought at Drumclog,
had to receive the attack of the Highlanders. Cleland had fortified
the Abbey church and the “castle,” and his Cameronians fired
from behind walls and from loopholes with such success that Cannon called
off the clansmen, or could not bring them to a second attack: both versions
are given. Cleland fell in the fight; the clans disbanded, and
Mackay occupied the castle of Blair.
Three weeks later the Cameronians, being unpaid, mutinied; and Ross,
Annandale, and Polwarth, urging their demands for constitutional rights,
threw the Lowlands into a ferment. Crawford, whose manner of speech
was sanctimonious, was evicting from their parishes ministers who remained
true to Episcopacy, and would not pray for William and Mary. Polwarth
now went to London with an address to these Sovereigns framed by “the
Club,” the party of liberty. But the other leaders of that
party, Annandale, Ross, and Montgomery of Skelmorley, all of them eager
for place and office, entered into a conspiracy of intrigue with the
Jacobites for James's restoration. In February 1690 the
Club was distracted; and to Melville, as Commissioner in the Scottish
Parliament, William gave orders that the Acts for re-establishing Presbytery
and abolishing lay patronage of livings were to be passed. Montgomery
was obliged to bid yet higher for the favour of the more extreme preachers
and devotees,-but he failed. In April the Lords of the Articles
were abolished at last, and freedom of parliamentary debate was thus
secured. The Westminster Confession was reinstated, and in May,
after the last remnants of a Jacobite force in the north had been surprised
and scattered or captured by Sir Thomas Livingstone at Cromdale Haugh
(May 1), the alliance of Jacobites and of the Club broke down, and the
leaders of the Club saved themselves by playing the part of informers.
The new Act regarding the Kirk permitted the holding of Synods and
General Assemblies, to be summoned by permission of William or of the
Privy Council, with a Royal Commissioner present to restrain the preachers
from meddling, as a body, with secular politics. The Kirk was
to be organised by the “Sixty Bishops,” the survivors of
the ministers ejected in 1663. The benefices of ejected Episcopalian
conformists were declared to be vacant. Lay patronage was annulled:
the congregations had the right to approve or disapprove of presentees.
But the Kirk was deprived of her old weapon, the attachment of civil
penalties (that is practical outlawry) to her sentences of excommunication
(July 19, 1690). The Covenant was silently dropped.
Thus ended, practically, the war between Kirk and State which had
raged for nearly a hundred and twenty years. The cruel torturing
of Nevile Payne, an English Jacobite taken in Scotland, showed that
the new sovereigns and Privy Council retained the passions and methods
of the old, but this was the last occasion of judicial torture for political
offences in Scotland. Payne was silent, but was illegally imprisoned
till his death.
The proceedings of the restored General Assembly were awaited with
anxiety by the Government. The extremists of the Remnant, the
“Cameronians,” sent deputies to the Kirk. They were
opposed to acknowledging sovereigns who were “the head of the
Prelatics” in England, and they, not being supported by the Assembly,
remained apart from the Kirk and true to the Covenants.
Much had passed which William disliked-the abolition of patronage,
the persecution of Episcopalians-and Melville, in 1691, was removed
by the king from the Commissionership.
The Highlands were still unsettled. In June 1691 Breadalbane,
at heart a Jacobite, attempted to appease the chiefs by promises of
money in settlement of various feuds, especially that of the dispossessed
Macleans against the occupant of their lands, Argyll. Breadalbane
was known by Hill, the commander of Fort William at Inverlochy, to be
dealing between the clans and James, as well as between William and
the clans. William, then campaigning in Flanders, was informed
of this fact, thought it of no importance, and accepted a truce from
July 1 to October 1 with Buchan, who commanded such feeble forces as
still stood for James in the north. At the same time William threatened
the clans, in the usual terms, with “fire and sword,” if
the chiefs did not take the oaths to his Government by January 1, 1692.
Money and titles under the rank of earldoms were to be offered to Macdonald
of Sleat, Maclean of Dowart, Lochiel, Glengarry, and Clanranald, if
they would come in. All declined the bait-if Breadalbane
really fished with it. It is plain, contrary to Lord Macaulay's
statement, that Sir John Dalrymple, William's trusted man for
Scotland, at this time hoped for Breadalbane's success in pacifying
the clans. But Dalrymple, by December 1691, wrote, “I think
the Clan Donell must be rooted out, and Lochiel.” He could
not mean that he hoped to massacre so large a part of the population.
He probably meant by “punitive expeditions” in the modern
phrase-by “fire and sword,” in the style current then-to
break up the recalcitrants. Meanwhile it was Dalrymple's
hope to settle ancient quarrels about the “superiorities”
of Argyll over the Camerons, and the question of compensation for the
lands reft by the Argyll family from the Macleans.
Before December 31, in fear of “fire and sword,” the
chiefs submitted, except the greatest, Glengarry, and the least in power,
MacIan or Macdonald, with his narrow realm of Glencoe, whence his men
were used to plunder the cattle of their powerful neighbour, Breadalbane.
Dalrymple now desired not peace, but the sword. By January 9,
1692, Dalrymple, in London, heard that Glencoe had come in (he had accidentally
failed to come in by January 1), and Dalrymple was “sorry.”
By January 11 Dalrymple knew that Glencoe had not taken the oath before
January 1, and rejoiced in the chance to “root out that damnable
sect.” In fact, in the end of December Glencoe had gone
to Fort William to take the oaths before Colonel Hill, but found that
he must do so before the Sheriff of the shire at remote Inveraray.
Various accidents of weather delayed him; the Sheriff also was not at
Inveraray when Glencoe arrived, but administered the oaths on January
6. The document was taken to Edinburgh, where Lord Stair, Dalrymple's
father, and others caused it to be deleted. Glengarry was still
unsworn, but Glengarry was too strong to be “rooted out”;
William ordered his commanding officer, Livingstone, “to extirpate
that sect of thieves,” the Glencoe men (January 16). On
the same day Dalrymple sent down orders to hem in the MacIans, and to
guard all the passes, by land or water, from their glen. Of the
actual method of massacre employed Dalrymple may have been ignorant;
but orders “from Court” to “spare none,” and
to take no prisoners, were received by Livingstone on January 23.
On February 1, Campbell of Glenlyon, with 120 men, was hospitably
received by MacIan, whose son, Alexander, had married Glenlyon's
niece. On February 12, Hill sent 400 of his Inverlochy garrison
to Glencoe to join hands with 400 of Argyll's regiment, under
Major Duncanson. These troops were to guard the southern passes
out of Glencoe, while Hamilton was to sweep the passes from the north.
At 5 A.M. on February 13 the soldier-guests of MacIan began to slay
and plunder. Men, women, and children were shot or bayoneted,
1000 head of cattle were driven away; but Hamilton arrived too late.
Though the aged chief had been shot at once, his sons took to the hills,
and the greater part of the population escaped with their lives, thanks
to Hamilton's dilatoriness. “All I regret is that
any of the sect got away,” wrote Dalrymple on March 5, “and
there is necessity to prosecute them to the utmost.” News
had already reached London “that they are murdered in their beds.”
The newspapers, however, were silenced, and the story was first given
to Europe in April by the ‘Paris Gazette.' The crime
was unprecedented: it had no precedent, admits of no apology.
Many an expedition of “fire and sword” had occurred, but
never had there been a midnight massacre “under trust” of
hosts by guests. King William, on March 6, went off to his glorious
wars on the Continent, probably hoping to hear that the fugitive MacIans
were still being “prosecuted”-if, indeed, he thought
of them at all. But by October they were received into his peace.
William was more troubled by the General Assembly, which refused
to take oaths of allegiance to him and his wife, and actually appointed
a date for an Assembly without his consent. When he gave it, it
was on condition that the members should take the oaths of allegiance.
They refused: it was the old deadlock, but William at the last moment
withdrew from the imposition of oaths of allegiance-moved, it
is said, by Mr Carstares, “Cardinal Carstares,” who had
been privy to the Rye House Plot. Under Queen Anne, however, the
conscientious preachers were compelled to take the oaths like mere laymen.