From the remote period; when the Roman
province was contracted by the ramparts of Severus,
until the union of the kingdoms, the borders of Scotland
formed the stage, upon which were presented the most
memorable conflicts of two gallant nations. The
inhabitants, at the commencement of this aera, formed
the first wave of the torrent which assaulted, and
finally overwhelmed, the barriers of the Roman power
in Britain. The subsequent events, in which they
were engaged, tended little to diminish their military
hardihood, or to reconcile them to a more civilized
state of society. We have no occasion to trace
the state of the borders during the long and obscure
period of Scottish history, which preceded the accession
of the Stuart family. To illustrate a few ballads,
the earliest of which is hardly coeval with James
V. such an enquiry would be equally difficult and vain.
If we may trust the Welch bards, in their account
of the wars betwixt the Saxons and Danes of Deira
and the Cumraig, imagination can hardly form [Sidenote:
570] any idea of conflicts more desperate, than were
maintained, on the borders, between the ancient British
and their Teutonic invaders. Thus, the Gododin
describes the waste and devastation of mutual havoc,
in colours so glowing, as strongly to recall the words
of Tacitus; “Et ubi solitudinem faciunt, pacem
appellant[1].”
[Footnote 1: In the spirited
translation of this poem, by Jones, the following
verses are highly descriptive of the exhausted state
of the victor army.
At Madoc’s tent the clarion sounds,
With rapid clangour hurried far:
Each echoing dell the note resounds—
But when return the sons of war!
Thou, born of stern necessity,
Dull peace! the desert yields to thee,
And owns thy melancholy sway.
At a later period, the Saxon families,
who fled from the exterminating sword of the Conqueror,
with many of the Normans themselves, whom discontent
and intestine feuds had driven into exile, began to
rise into eminence upon the Scottish borders.
They brought with them arts, both of peace and of
war, unknown in Scotland; and, among their descendants,
we soon number the most powerful border chiefs.
Such, during the reign of the [Sidenote: 1249]
last Alexander, were Patrick, earl of March, and Lord
Soulis, renowned in tradition; and such were, also,
the powerful Comyns, who early acquired the principal
sway upon the Scottish marches. [Sidenote: 1300]
In the civil wars betwixt Bruce and Baliol, all those
powerful chieftains espoused the unsuccessful party.
They were forfeited and exiled; and upon their ruins
was founded the formidable house of Douglas.
The borders, from sea to sea, were now at the devotion
of a succession of mighty chiefs, whose exorbitant
power threatened to place a new dynasty upon the Scottish
throne. It is not my intention to trace the dazzling
career of this race of heroes, whose exploits were
alike formidable to the English, and to their sovereign.
The sun of Douglas set in blood.
The murders of the sixth earl, and his brother, in
the castle of Edinburgh, were followed by that of
their successor, poignarded at Stirling by the hand
of his prince. His brother, Earl James, appears
neither to have possessed the abilities nor the ambition
of his ancestors. He drew, indeed, against his
prince, the formidable sword of Douglas, but with a
timid and hesitating hand. Procrastination ruined
his cause; and he was deserted, at Abercorn, by the
knight of Cadyow, chief of the Hamiltons, and by his
most active adherents, after they had ineffectually
exhorted him to commit [Sidenote: 1453] his fate
to the issue of a battle. The border chiefs,
who longed for independence, shewed little [Sidenote:
1455] inclination to follow the declining fortunes
of Douglas. On the contrary, the most powerful
clans engaged and defeated him, at Arkinholme, in
Annandale, when, after a short residence in England,
he again endeavoured to gain a footing in his native
country2. The spoils of Douglas were liberally
distributed among his conquerors, and royal grants
of his forfeited domains effectually interested them
in excluding his return. An [Sidenote: 1457]
attempt, on the east borders, by “the Percy
and the Douglas, both together,” was equally
unsuccessful. The earl, grown old in exile, longed
once more to see his native country, and vowed, that,
[Sidenote: 1483] upon Saint Magdalen’s day,
he would deposit his offering on the high altar at
Lochmaben.—Accompanied by the banished
earl of Albany, with his usual ill fortune, he entered
Scotland.—The borderers assembled to oppose
him, and he suffered a final defeat at Burnswark,
in Dumfries-shire. The aged earl was taken in
the fight, by a son of Kirkpatrick of Closeburn, one
of his own vassals. A grant of lands had been
offered for his person: “Carry me to the
king!” said Douglas to Kirkpatrick: “thou
art well entitled to profit by my misfortune; for
thou wast true to me, while I was true to myself.”
The young man wept bitterly, and offered to fly with
the earl into England. But Douglas, weary of
exile, refused his proffered liberty, and only requested,
that Kirkpatrick would not deliver him to the king,
till he had secured his own reward3. Kirkpatrick
did more: he stipulated for the personal safety
of his old master. His generous intercession
prevailed; and the last of the Douglasses was permitted
to die, in monastic seclusion, in the abbey of Lindores.
[Footnote 2: At the battle of
Arkinholme, the Earl of Angus, a near kinsman of Douglas,
commanded the royal forces; and the difference of
their complexion occasioned the saying, “that
the Black Douglas had put down the Red.”
The Maxwells, the Johnstones, and the Scotts, composed
his army. Archibald, earl of Murray, brother to
Douglas, was slain in the action; and Hugh, Earl of
Ormond, his second brother, was taken and executed.
His captors, Lord Carlisle, and the Baron of Johnstone,
were rewarded with a grant of the lands of Pittinane,
upon Clyde.—Godscroft, Vol.
I. p. 375.—Balfour’s MS. in the
Advocates’ Library, Edinburgh.—Abercrombie’s
Achievements, Vol. II. p. 361. folio Ed.—The
other chiefs were also distinguished by royal favour.
By a charter, upon record, dated 25th February, 1458,
the king grants to Walter Scott of Kirkurd, ancestor
of the house of Buccleuch, the lands of Abingtown,
Phareholm, and Glentonan craig, in Lanarkshire.
“Pro suo fideli servitio nobis
impenso et pro quod interfuit in conflictu de
Arkenholme in occisione et captione nostrorum rebellium
quondam Archibaldi et Hugonis de Douglas olim comitum
Moraviae et de Ormond et aliorum rebellium nostrorum
in eorum comitiva existen: ibidem captorum
et interfectorum.”
Similar grants of land were made to
Finnart and Arran, the two branches of the house of
Hamilton; to the chiefs of the Battisons; but, above
all, to the Earl of Angus who obtained from royal favour
a donation of the Lordship of Douglas, and many other
lands, now held by Lord Douglas, as his representative.
There appears, however, to be some doubt, whether,
in this division, the Earl of Angus received more
than his natural right. Our historians, indeed,
say, that William I. Earl of Douglas, had three sons;
1. James, the 2d Earl, who died in the field
of Otterburn; 2. Archibald, the Grim, 3d Earl;
and 3. George, in right of his mother, earl of
Angus. Whether, however, this Archibald was actually
the son of William, seems very doubtful; and Sir David
Dalrymple has strenuously maintained the contrary.
Now, if Archibald, the Grim, intruded into the earldom
of Douglas, without being a son of that family, it
follows that the house of Angus, being kept out of
their just rights for more than a century, were only
restored to them after the battle of Arkinholme.
Perhaps, this may help to account for the eager interest
taken by the earl of Angus against his kinsman.—Remarks
on History of Scotland, Edinburgh, 1773. p. 121.]
[Footnote 3: A grant of the king,
dated 2d October, 1484, bestowed upon Kirkpatrick,
for this acceptable service, the lands of Kirkmichael.]
After the fall of the house of Douglas,
no one chieftain appears to have enjoyed the same
extensive supremacy over the Scottish borders.
The various barons, who had partaken of the spoil,
combined in resisting a succession of uncontrouled
domination. The earl of Angus alone seems to
have taken rapid steps in the same course of ambition
which had been pursued by his kinsmen and rivals, the
earls of Douglas. Archibald, sixth earl of Angus,
called Bell-the-Cat, was, at once, warden of
the east and middle marches, Lord of Liddisdale and
Jedwood forest, and possessed of the strong castles
of Douglas, Hermitage, and Tantallon. Highly
esteemed by the ancient nobility, a faction which
he headed shook the throne of the feeble James III.,
whose person they restrained, and whose minions they
led to an ignominious death. The king failed
not to shew his sense of these insults, though unable
effectually to avenge them. This hastened his
fate: and the field of Bannockburn, once the scene
of a more glorious conflict, beheld the combined chieftains
of the border counties arrayed against their sovereign,
under the banners of his own son. The king was
supported by almost all the barons of the north; but
the tumultuous ranks of the Highlanders were ill able
to endure the steady and rapid charge of the men of
Annandale and Liddisdale, who bare spears, two ells
longer than were used by the rest of their countrymen.
The yells, with which they accompanied their onset,
caused the heart of James to quail within him.
He deserted his host, [Sidenote: 1488] and fled
towards Stirling; but, falling from his horse, he
was murdered by the pursuers.
James IV., a monarch of a vigorous
and energetic character, was well aware of the danger
which his ancestors had experienced, from the preponderance
of one overgrown family. He is supposed to have
smiled internally, when the border and highland champions
bled and died in the savage sports of chivalry, by
which his nuptials were solemnized. Upon the
waxing power of Angus he kept a wary eye; and, embracing
the occasion of a casual slaughter, he compelled that
earl, and his son, to exchange the lordship of Liddisdale
and the castle of Hermitage, for the castle and lordship
of Bothwell4. By this policy, he prevented
the house of Angus, mighty as it was, from rising to
the height, whence the elder branch of their family
had been hurled.
[Footnote 4: Spens of Kilspindie,
a renowned cavalier, had been present in court, when
the Earl of Angus was highly praised for strength
and valour. “It may be,” answered
Spens, “if all be good that is upcome;”
insinuating, that the courage of the earl might not
answer the promise of his person. Shortly after,
Angus, while hawking near Borthwick, with a single
attendant, met Kilspindie. “What reason
had ye,” said the earl, “for making question
of my manhood? thou art a tall fellow, and so am I;
and by St. Bride of Douglas, one of us shall pay for
it!”—“Since it may be no better,”
answered Kilspindie, “I will defend myself against
the best earl in Scotland.” With these
words they encountered fiercely, till Angus, with one
blow, severed the thigh of his antagonist, who died
upon the spot. The earl then addressed the attendant
of Kilspindie: “Go thy way: tell my
gossip, the king, that here was nothing but fair play.
I know my gossip will be offended; but I will get
me into Liddisdale, and remain in my castle of the
Hermitage till his anger be abated.”—Godscroft,
Vol. II. p. 59. The price of the earl’s
pardon seems to have been the exchange mentioned in
the text. Bothwell is now the residence of Lord
Douglas. The sword, with which Archibald, Bell-the-Cat,
slew Spens, was, by his descendant, the famous Earl
of Morton, presented to Lord Lindsay of the Byres,
when, about to engage in single combat with Bothwell,
at Carberry-hill—Godscroft, Vol.
II. p. 175.]
Nor did James fail in affording his
subjects on the marches marks of his royal justice
and protection. [Sidenote: 1510] The clan of
Turnbull having been guilty of unbounded excesses,
the king came suddenly to Jedburgh, by a night march,
and executed the most rigid justice upon the astonished
offenders. Their submission was made with singular
solemnity. Two hundred of the tribe met the king,
at the water of Rule, holding in their hands the naked
swords, with which they had perpetrated their crimes,
and having each around his neck the halter which he
had well merited. A few were capitally punished,
many imprisoned, and the rest dismissed, after they
had given hostages for their future peaceable demeanour.—Holinshed’s
Chronicle, Lesly.
The hopes of Scotland, excited by
the prudent and spirited conduct of James, were doomed
to a sudden and fatal reverse. Why should we
recapitulate the painful tale of the defeat and death
of a high-spirited prince? Prudence, policy,
the prodigies of superstition, and the advice of his
most experienced counsellors, were alike unable to
subdue in James the blazing zeal of romantic chivalry.
The monarch, and the flower of his nobles, [Sidenote:
1513] precipitately rushed to the fatal field of Flodden,
whence they were never to return.
The minority of James V. presents
a melancholy scene. Scotland, through all its
extent, felt the truth of the adage, “that the
country is hapless, whose prince is a child.”
But the border counties, exposed from their situation
to the incursions of the English, deprived of many
of their most gallant chiefs, and harassed by the intestine
struggles of the survivors, were reduced to a wilderness,
inhabited only by the beasts of the field, and by
a few more brutal warriors. Lord Home, the chamberlain
and favourite of James IV., leagued with the Earl
of Angus, who married the widow of his sovereign, held,
for a time, the chief sway upon the east border.
Albany, the regent of the kingdom, bred in the French
court, and more accustomed to wield the pen than the
sword, feebly endeavoured to controul a lawless nobility,
to whom his manners appeared strange, and his person
[Sidenote: 1516] despicable. It was in vain
that he inveigled the Lord Home to Edinburgh, where
he was tried and executed. This example of justice,
or severity, only irritated the kinsmen and followers
of the deceased baron: for though, in other respects,
not more sanguinary than the rest of a barbarous nation,
the borderers never dismissed from their memory a
deadly feud, till blood for blood had been exacted,
to the uttermost drachm5. Of this, the fate
of Anthony d’Arcey, Seigneur de la Bastie, affords
a melancholy example. This gallant French cavalier
was appointed warden of the east marches by Albany,
at his first disgraceful retreat to France. Though
De la Bastie was an able statesman, and a true son
of chivalry, the choice of the regent was nevertheless
unhappy. The new warden was a foreigner, placed
in the office of Lord Home, as [Sidenote: 1517]
the delegate of the very man, who had brought that
baron to the scaffold. A stratagem, contrived
by Home of Wedderburn, who burned to avenge the death
of his chief, drew De la Bastie towards Langton, in
the Merse. Here he found himself surrounded by
his enemies. In attempting, by the speed of his
horse, to gain the castle of Dunbar, the warden plunged
into a morass, where he was overtaken and cruelly
butchered. Wedderburn himself cut off his head;
and, in savage triumph, knitted it to his saddle-bow
by the long flowing hair, which had been admired by
the dames of France.—Pitscottie, Edit.
1728, p. 130. Pinkerton’s History of Scotland,
Vol. II. p. 169 [6].
[Footnote 5: The statute 1594,
cap. 231, ascribes the disorders on the border in
a great measure to the “counselles, directions,
receipt, and partaking, of chieftains principalles
of the branches, and househalders of the saides surnames,
and clannes, quhilkis bears quarrel, and seeks revenge
for the least hurting or slauchter of ony ane of their
unhappy race, although it were ardour of justice, or
in rescuing and following of trew mens geares stollen
or reft.”]
[Footnote 6: This tragedy, or,
perhaps, the preceding execution of Lord Home, must
have been the subject of the song, the first two lines
of which are preserved in the Complaynt of Scotland;
God sen’ the Duc hed byddin in France,
And de la Bauté had never come hame.
P, 100, Edin. 1801.]
The Earl of Arran, head of the house
of Hamilton was appointed to succeed De la Bastie
in his perilous office. But the Douglasses, the
Homes, and the Kerrs, proved too strong for him upon
the [Sidenote: 1520] border. He was routed
by these clans, at Kelso, and afterwards in a sharp
skirmish, fought betwixt his faction and that of Angus,
in the high-street of the metropolis7.
[Footnote 7: The particulars
of this encounter are interesting. The Hamiltons
were the most numerous party, drawn chiefly from the
western counties. Their leaders met in the palace
of Archbishop Beaton, and resolved to apprehend Angus,
who was come to the city to attend the convention
of estates. Gawain Douglas, bishop of Dunkeld,
a near relation of Angus, in vain endeavoured to mediate
betwixt the factions. He appealed to Beaton,
and invoked his assistance to prevent bloodshed.
“On my conscience,” answered the archbishop,
“I cannot help what is to happen.”
As he laid his hand upon his breast, at this solemn
declaration, the hauberk, concealed by his rocket,
was heard to clatter: “Ah! my lord!”
retorted Douglas, “your conscience sounds hollow.”
He then expostulated with the secular leaders, and
Sir Patrick Hamilton, brother to Arran, was convinced
by his remonstrances; but Sir James, the natural son
of the earl, upbraided his uncle with reluctance to
fight. “False bastard!” answered Sir
Patrick, “I will fight to day where thou darest
not be seen.” With these words they rushed
tumultuously towards the high-street, where Angus,
with the prior of Coldinghame, and the redoubted Wedderburn,
waited their assault, at the head of 400 spearmen,
the flower of the east marches, who, having broke
down the gate of the Netherbow, had arrived just in
time to the earl’s assistance. The advantage
of the ground, and the disorder of the Hamiltons,
soon gave the day to Angus. Sir Patrick Hamilton,
and the master of Montgomery, were slain. Arran,
and Sir James Hamilton, escaped with difficulty; and
with no less difficulty was the military prelate of
Glasgow rescued from the ferocious borderers, by the
generous interposition of Gawain Douglas. The
skirmish was long remembered in Edinburgh, by the name
of “Cleanse the Causeway.”—Pinkerton’s
History, Vol. II. p. 181.—Pitscottie
Edit. 1728. p. 120.—Life of Gawain
Douglas, prefixed to his Virgil.]
The return of the regent was followed
by the banishment of Angus, and by a desultory warfare
with England, carried on with mutual incursions.
Two gallant armies, levied by Albany, were dismissed
without any exploit worthy notice, while Surrey, at
the head of ten thousand cavalry, burned Jedburgh,
and laid waste all Tiviotdale. This general pays
a splendid tribute to the gallantry of the border chiefs.
He terms them “the boldest [Sidenote: 1523]
men, and the hottest, that ever I saw any nation8.”
[Footnote 8: A curious letter
from Surrey to the king is printed in the Appendix,
No. I.]
Disgraced and detested, Albany bade
adieu to Scotland for ever. The queen-mother,
and the Earl of Arran, for some time swayed the kingdom.
But their power was despised on the borders, where
Angus, though banished, had many friends. Scot
of Buccleuch even appropriated to himself domains,
belonging to the queen, worth 4000 merks yearly; being
probably the castle of Newark and her jointure lands
in Ettrick forest9.—
[Footnote 9: In a letter to the
Duke of Norfolk, October 1524, Queen Margaret says,
“Sen that the Lard of Sessford and the Lard of
Baclw vas put in the castell of Edinbrouh, the Erl
of Lenness hath past hyz vay vythout lycyens, and
in despyt; and thynkyth to make the brek that he may,
and to solyst other lordis to tak hyz part; for the
said lard of Bavkl wvas hyz man, and dyd the gretyst
ewelyz that myght be dwn, and twk part playnly vyth
theasyz as is well known.”—Cot.
MSS. Calig. B.I.]
This chief, with Kerr of Cessford,
was committed to ward, from which they escaped, to
join [Sidenote: 1525] the party of the exiled
Angus. Leagued with these, and other border chiefs,
Angus effected his return to Scotland, where he shortly
after acquired possession of the supreme power, and
of the person of the youthful king. “The
ancient power of the Douglasses,” says the accurate
historian, whom I have so often referred to, “seemed
to have revived; and, after a slumber of near a century,
again to threaten destruction to the Scottish monarchy.”—Pinkerton,
Vol. 11, p. 277.
In fact, the time now returned, when
no one durst strive with a Douglas, or with his follower.
For, although Angus used the outward pageant of conducting
the king around the country, for punishing thieves
and traitors, “yet,” says Pitscottie, “none
were found greater than were in his own company.”
The high spirit of the young king was galled by the
ignominious restraint under which he found himself;
and, in a progress to the border for repressing the
Armstrongs, he probably gave such signs of dissatisfaction,
as excited the [Sidenote: 1526] laird of Buccleuch
to attempt his rescue.
This powerful baron was the chief
of a hardy clan, inhabiting Ettrick forest, Eskdale,
Ewsdale, the higher part of Tiviotdale, and a portion
of Liddesdale. In this warlike district he easily
levied a thousand horse, comprehending a large body
of Elliots, Armstrongs, and other broken clans, over
whom the laird of Buccleuch exercised an extensive
authority; being termed, by Lord Dacre, “chief
maintainer of all misguided men on the borders of
Scotland.”—Letter to Wolsey,
July 18. 1528. The Earl of Angus, with his reluctant
ward, had slept at Melrose; and the clans of Home
and Kerr, under the Lord Home, and the barons of Cessford,
and Fairnihirst, had taken their leave of the king,
when, in the gray of the morning, Buccleuch and his
band of cavalry were discovered, hanging, like a thunder-cloud,
upon the neighbouring hill of Haliden10. A
herald was sent to demand his purpose, and to charge
him to retire. To the first point he answered,
that he came to shew his clan to the king, according
to the custom of the borders; to the second, that
he knew the king’s mind better than Angus.—When
this haughty answer was reported to the earl, “Sir,”
said he to the king, “yonder is Buccleuch, with
the thieves of Annandale and Liddesdale, to bar your
grace’s passage. I vow to God they shall
either fight or flee. Your grace shall tarry on
this hillock, with my brother George; and I will either
clear your road of yonder banditti, or die in the
attempt.” The earl, with these words, alighted,
and hastened to the charge; while the Earl of Lennox
(at whose instigation Buccleuch made the attempt),
remained with the king, an inactive spectator.
Buccleuch and his followers likewise dismounted, and
received the assailants with a dreadful shout, and
a shower of lances. The encounter was fierce
and obstinate; but the Homes and Kerrs, returning
at the noise of battle, bore down and dispersed the
left wing of Buccleuch’s little army. The
hired banditti fled on all sides; but the chief himself,
surrounded by his clan, fought desperately in the
retreat. The laird of Cessford, chief of the Roxburgh
Kerrs, pursued the chace fiercely; till, at the bottom
of a steep path, Elliot of Stobs, a follower of Buccleuch,
turned, and slew him with a stroke of his lance.
When Cessford fell, the pursuit ceased. But his
death, with those of Buccleuch’s friends, who
fell in the action, to the number of eighty, occasioned
a deadly feud betwixt the names of Scott and Kerr,
which cost much blood upon the marches11.—See
Pitscottie, Lesly, and Godscroft.
[Footnote 10: Near Darnick.
By a corruption from Skirmish field, the spot is still
called the Skinnerfield. Two lines of an old ballad
on the subject are still preserved:
“There were sick belts and blows,
The Mattous burn ran blood.”
[Footnote 11: Buccleuch contrived
to escape forfeiture, a doom pronounced against those
nobles, who assisted the Earl of Lennox, in a subsequent
attempt to deliver the king, by force of arms.
“The laird of Bukcleugh has a respecte, and
is not forfeited; and will get his pece, and was in
Leithquo, both Sondaye, Mondaye, and Tewisday last,
which is grete displeasure to the Carres.”—Letter
from Sir C. Dacre to Lord Dacre, 2d December,
1526.]
[Sidenote: 1528] Stratagem at
length effected what force had been unable to accomplish;
and the king, emancipated from the iron tutelage of
Angus, made the first use of his authority, by banishing
from the kingdom his late lieutenant, and the whole
race of Douglas. This command was not enforced
without difficulty; for the power of Angus was strongly
rooted in the east border, where he possessed the castle
of Tantallon, and the hearts of the Homes and Kerrs.
The former, whose strength was proverbial12, defied
a royal army; and the latter, at the Pass of Pease,
baffled the Earl of Argyle’s attempts to enter
the Merse, as lieutenant of his sovereign. On
this occasion, the borderers regarded with wonder
and contempt the barbarous array, and rude equipage,
of their northern countrymen Godscroft has preserved
the beginning of a scoffing rhyme, made upon this
occasion:
The Earl of Argyle is bound to ride
From the border of Edgebucklin brae13;
And all his habergeons him beside,
Each man upon a sonk of strae.
They made their vow that they would slay—
Godscroft, v. 2. p. 104. Ed. 1743.
[Footnote 12: “To ding
down Tantallon, and make a bridge to the Bass,”
was an adage expressive of impossibility. The
shattered ruins of this celebrated fortress still
overhang a tremendous rock on the coast of East Lothian.]
[Footnote 13: Edgebucklin, near Musselburgh.]
The pertinacious opposition of Angus
to his doom irritated to the extreme the fiery temper
of James, and he swore, in his wrath, that a Douglas
should never serve him; an oath which he kept in circumstances
under which the spirit of chivalry, which he worshipped14,
should have taught him other feelings.
[Footnote 14: I allude to the
affecting story of Douglas of Kilspindie, uncle to
the Earl of Angus. This gentleman had been placed
by Angus about the king’s person, who, when a
boy, loved him much, on account of his singular activity
of body, and was wont to call him his Graysteil,
after a champion of chivalry, in the romance of Sir
Eger and Sir Grime. He shared, however, the
fate of his chief, and, for many years, served in
France. Weary, at length, of exile, the aged
warrior, recollecting the king’s personal attachment
to him, resolved to throw himself on his clemency.
As James returned from hunting in the park at Stirling,
he saw a person at a distance, and, turning to his
nobles, exclaimed, “Yonder is my Graysteil,
Archibald of Kilspindie!” As he approached,
Douglas threw himself on his knees, and implored permission
to lead an obscure life in his native land. But
the name of Douglas was an amulet, which steeled the
king’s heart against the influence of compassion
and juvenile recollection. He passed the suppliant
without an answer, and rode briskly up the steep hill,
towards the castle. Kilspindie, though loaded
with a hauberk under his cloaths, kept pace with the
horse, in vain endeavouring to catch a glance from
the implacable monarch. He sat down at the gate,
weary and exhausted, and asked for a draught of water.
Even this was refused by the royal attendants.
The king afterwards blamed their discourtesy; but
Kilspindie was obliged to return to France, where he
died of a broken heart; the same disease which afterwards
brought to the grave his unrelenting sovereign.
Even the stern Henry VIII. blamed his nephew’s
conduct, quoting the generous saying “A king’s
face should give grace.”—Godscroft,
Vol. II. P. 107.]
While these transactions, by which
the fate of Scotland was influenced, were passing
upon the eastern border, the Lord Maxwell seems to
have exercised a most uncontrouled domination in Dumfries-shire.
Even the power of the Earl of Angus was exerted in
vain, against the banditti of Liddesdale, protected
and bucklered by this mighty chief. Repeated
complaints are made by the English residents, of the
devastation occasioned by the depredations of the
Elliots, Scotts, and Armstrongs, connived at, and encouraged,
by Maxwell, [Sidenote: 1528] Buccleuch, and Fairnihirst.
At a convention of border commissioners, it was agreed,
that the king of England, in case the excesses of
the Liddesdale freebooters were not duly redressed,
should be at liberty to issue letters of reprisal to
his injured subjects, granting “power to invade
the said inhabitants of Liddesdale, to their slaughters,
burning, heirships, robbing, reifing, despoiling and
destruction, and so to continue the same at his grace’s
pleasure,” till the attempts of the inhabitants
were fully atoned for. This impolitic expedient,
by which the Scottish prince, unable to execute justice
on his turbulent subjects, committed to a rival sovereign
the power of unlimited chastisement, was a principal
cause of the savage state of the borders. For
the inhabitants, finding that the sword of revenge
was substituted for that of justice, were loosened
from their attachment to Scotland, and boldly threatened
to carry on their depredations, in spite of the efforts
of both kingdoms.
James V., however, was not backward
in using more honourable expedients to quell the banditti
[Sidenote: 1529] on the borders. The imprisonment
of their chiefs, and a noted expedition, in which many
of the principal thieves were executed (see introduction
to the ballad, called Johnie Armstrong), produced
such good effects, that, according to an ancient picturesque
history, “thereafter there was great peace and
rest a long time, where through the king had great
profit; for he had ten thousand sheep going in the
Ettrick forest, in keeping by Andrew Bell, who made
the king so good count of them, as they had gone in
the hounds of Fife.” Pitscottie, p. 153.
A breach with England interrupted
the tranquillity [Sidenote: 1532] of the borders.
The Earl of Northumberland, a formidable name to Scotland,
ravaged the middle marches, and burned Branxholm, the
abode of Buccleuch, the hereditary enemy of the English
name. Buccleuch, with the barons of Cessford
and Fairnihirst, retaliated by a raid into England,
[Sidenote: 1533] where they acquired much spoil.
On the east march, Fowberry was destroyed by the Scots,
and Dunglass castle by D’Arcey, and the banished
Angus.
A short peace was quickly followed
by another war, which proved fatal to Scotland, and
to her king. In the battle of Haddenrig, the English,
and the exiled Douglasses, were defeated by the Lords
Huntly and Home; but this was a transient gleam of
success. Kelso was burned, and the borders [Sidenote:
1542] ravaged, by the Duke of Norfolk; and finally,
the rout of Solway moss, in which ten thousand men,
the flower of the Scottish army, were dispersed and
defeated by a band of five hundred English cavalry,
or rather by their own dissentions, broke the proud
heart of James; a death, more painful a hundred fold
than was met by his father in the field of Flodden.
When the strength of the Scottish
army had sunk, without wounds, and without renown,
the principal chiefs were led captive into England.—Among
these was the Lord Maxwell, who was compelled, by the
menaces of Henry, to swear allegiance to the English
monarch. There is still in existence the spirited
instrument of vindication, by which he renounces his
connection with England, and the honours and estates
which had been proffered him, as the price of treason
to his infant sovereign. From various bonds of
manrent, it appears, that all the western marches
were swayed [Sidenote: 1543] by this powerful
chieftain. With Maxwell, and the other captives,
returned to Scotland the banished Earl of Angus, and
his brother, Sir George Douglas, after a banishment
of fifteen years. This powerful family regained
at least a part of their influence upon the borders;
and, grateful to the kingdom which had afforded them
protection during their exile, became chiefs of the
English faction in Scotland, whose object it was to
urge a contract of marriage betwixt the young queen
and the heir apparent of England. The impetuosity
of Henry, the ancient hatred betwixt the nations,
and the wavering temper of the governor, Arran, prevented
the success of this measure. The wrath of the
disappointed monarch discharged itself in a wide-wasting
and furious invasion of the east marches, conducted
by the Earl of Hertford. Seton, Home, and Buccleuch,
hanging on the mountains of Lammermoor, saw, with
ineffectual regret, the fertile plains of Merse and
Lothian, and the metropolis itself, reduced to a smoking
desert. Hertford had scarcely retreated with
the main army, when Evers and Latoun laid waste the
whole vale of Tiviot, with a ferocity of devastation,
hitherto unheard of15. The same “lion
mode of wooing,” being pursued during the minority
of Edward VI., totally alienated the affections even
of those Scots who were most attached to the English
interest. The Earl of Angus, in particular, united
himself to the governor, and gave the English a sharp
defeat at Ancram moor, [Sidenote: 1545] a particular
account of which action is subjoined to the ballad,
entituled, “The Eve of St. John.”
Even the fatal defeat at Pinky, which at once renewed
the carnage of Flodden, and the disgrace of Solway,
served to prejudice the cause of the victors.
The borders saw, with dread and detestation, the ruinous
fortress of Roxburgh once more receive an English
garrison, and the widow of Lord Home driven from his
baronial castle, to [Sidenote: 1547] make room
for the “Southern Reivers.”
Many of the barons made a reluctant submission to Somerset;
but those of the higher part of the marches remained
among their mountains, meditating revenge. A
similar incursion was made on the west borders by
Lord Wharton, who, with five thousand men, ravaged
and overran Annandale, Nithsdale, and Galloway, compelling
the inhabitants to receive the yoke of England16.
[Footnote 15: In Haynes’
State Papers, from p. 43 to p. 64, is an account of
these destructive forays. One list of the places
burned and destroyed enumerates—
Monasteries and Freehouses
.... 7
Castles, towres, and piles
.... 16
Market townes …..............
5
Villages …...................
243
Mylnes ….....................
13
Spytells and hospitals ….....
3
See also official accounts of these
expeditions, in Dalyell’s Fragments.]
[Footnote 16: Patten gives us
a list of those east border chiefs who did homage
to the Duke of Somerset, on the 24th of September,
1547; namely, the lairds of Cessfoorth, Fernyherst,
Grenehed, Hunthill, Hundely, Makerstone, Bymerside,
Bounjedworth, Ormeston, Mellestains, Warmesay, Synton,
Egerston, Merton, Mowe, Rydell, Beamerside. Of
gentlemen, he enumerates George Tromboul, Jhon Haliburton,
Robert Car, Robert Car of Greyden, Adam Kirton, Andrew
Mether, Saunders Purvose of Erleston, Mark Car of
Littledean, George Car of Faldenside, Alexander Mackdowal,
Charles Rutherford, Thomas Car of the Yere, Jhon Car
of Meynthorn (Nenthorn), Walter Holiburton, Richard
Hangansyde, Andrew Car, James Douglas of Cavers, James
Car of Mersington, George Hoppringle, William Ormeston
of Edmerden, John Grymslowe.—Patten,
in Dalyell’s Fragments, p. 87.
On the west border, the following
barons and clans submitted and gave pledges to Lord
Wharton, that they would serve the king of England,
with the number of followers annexed to their names.
ANNERDALE.
NITHSDALE.
Laird of Kirkmighel .......... 222 Mr Maxwell and more ........ 1000
Rose ................ 165 Laird of Closeburn ......... 403
Hempsfield .......... 163 Lag ............... 202
Home Ends ........... 162 Cransfield ........ 27
Wamfrey ............. 102 Mr Ed. Creighton ........... 10
Dunwoddy ............ 44 Laird of Cowhill ........... 91
Laird of Newby and Gratney .. 122 Maxwells of Brackenside,
Tinnel (Tinwald) .... 102 and vicar of Carlaverick .. 310
Patrick Murray .............. 203 ANNERDALE AND GALWAY. 
Christie Urwin (Irving) of Lord Carlisle .............. 101
Coveshawe ............ 102 ANNERDALE AND CLIDSDALE
Cuthbert Urwen of Robbgill .. 34 Laird of Applegirth ........ 242
Urwens of Sennersack ......... 40 LIDDESDALE AND DEBATEABLE
Wat Urwen .................... 20 LAND. 
Jeffrey Urwen ................ 93 Armstrongs ................. 300
T. Johnston of Crackburn .... 64 Elwoods (Elliots) .......... 74
James Johnston of Coites .... 162 Nixons ..................... 32
Johnstons of Graggyland ..... 37 GALLOWAY
Johnstons of Driesdell ...... 46 Laird of Dawbaylie ......... 41
Johnstons of Malinshaw ...... 65 Orcherton .................. 111
Gawen Johnston .............. 31 Carlisle ................... 206
Will Johnston, the laird’s Loughenwar ................. 45
brother ................... 110 Tutor of Bumbie ............ 140
Robin Johnston of Abbot of Newabbey .......... 141
Lochmaben .................. 67 Town of Dumfries ........... 201
Lard of Gillersbie ............ 30 Town of Kircubrie .......... 36
Moffits ....................... 24 TIVIDALE. 
Bells of Tostints ............ 142 Laird of Drumlire .......... 364
Bells of Tindills ............ 222 Caruthers .................. 71
Sir John Lawson ............... 32 Trumbells .................. 12
Town of Annan ................ 33 ESKDALE. 
Roomes of Tordephe ........... 32 Battisons and Thomsons ..... 166
Total 7008 men under
English assurance.
Nicolson, from Bell’s MS.
Introduction to History of Cumberland, p. 65.]
The arrival of French auxiliaries,
and of French gold, rendered vain the splendid successes
of the English. One by one, the fortresses which
they occupied were recovered by force, or by stratagem;
and the vindictive cruelty of the Scottish borderers
made dreadful retaliation for the, injuries they had
sustained. An idea may be conceived of this horrible
warfare, from the memoirs of Beaugé, a French officer,
serving in Scotland.
The castle of Fairnihirst, situated
about three miles above Jedburgh, had been taken and
garrisoned by the English. The commander and his
followers are accused of such excesses of lust and
cruelty “as would,” says Beaugé, “have
made to tremble the most savage moor in Africa.”
A band of Frenchmen, with the laird of Fairnihirst,
and [Sidenote: 1549] his borderers, assaulted
this fortress. The English archers showered their
arrows down the steep ascent, leading to the castle,
and from the outer wall by which it was surrounded.
A vigorous escalade, however, gained the base court,
and the sharp fire of the French arquebusiers drove
the bowmen into the square keep, or dungeon, of the
fortress. Here the English defended themselves,
till a breach in the wall was made by mining.
Through this hole the commandant creeped forth; and,
surrendering himself to De la Mothe-rouge, implored
protection from the vengeance of the borderers.
But a Scottish marc-hman, eyeing in the captive the
ravisher of his wife, approached him ere the French
officer could guess his intention, and, at one blow,
carried his head four paces from the trunk. Above
a hundred Scots rushed to wash their hands in the
blood of their oppressor, bandied about the severed
head, and expressed their joy in such shouts, as if
they had stormed the city of London. The prisoners,
who fell into their merciless hands, were put to death,
after their eyes had been torn out; the victors contending
who should display the greatest address in severing
their legs and arms, before inflicting a mortal wound.
When their own prisoners were slain, the Scottish,
with an unextinguishable thirst for blood, purchased
those of the French; parting willingly with their
very arms, in exchange for an English captive.
“I myself,” says Beaugé, with military
sang-froid, “I myself sold them a prisoner for
a small horse. They laid him down upon the ground,
galloped over him with their lances in rest, and wounded
him as they passed. When slain, they cut his
body in pieces, and bore the mangled gobbets, in triumph,
on the points of their spears. I cannot greatly
praise the Scottish for this practice. But the
truth is, that the English tyrannized over the borders
in a most barbarous manner; and I think it was but
fair to repay them, according to the proverb, in their
own coin.”—
Campagnes de Beaugé.
A peace, in 1551, put an end to this
war; the most destructive which, for a length of time,
had ravaged Scotland. Some attention was paid
by the governor and queen-mother, to the administration
of justice on the border; and the chieftains, who
had distinguished themselves during the late troubles,
received the honour of knighthood17. [Sidenote:
1522] At this time, also, the Debateable Land, a tract
of country, situated betwixt the Esk and Sarke, claimed
by both kingdoms, was divided by royal commissioners,
appointed by the two crowns.—By their award,
this land of contention was separated by a line, drawn
from east to west, betwixt the rivers. The upper
half was adjudged to Scotland, and the more eastern
part to England. Yet the Debateable Land continued
long after to be the residence of the thieves and
banditti, to whom its dubious state had afforded a
desirable refuge18.
[Footnote 17: These were the
lairds of Buccleuch, Cessford, and Fairnihirst, Littleden,
Grenehed, and Coldingknows. Buccleuch, whose
gallant exploits we have noticed, did not long enjoy
his new honours. He was murdered, in the streets
of Edinburgh, by his hereditary enemies, the Kerrs,
anno 1552.]
[Footnote 18: The jest of James
VI. is well known, who, when a favourite cow had found
her way from London, back to her native country of
Fife, observed, “that nothing surprised him so
much as her passing uninterrupted through the Debateable
Land!”]
In 1557, a new war broke out, in which
rencounters on the borders were, as usual, numerous,
and with varied success. In some of these, the
too famous Bothwell is said to have given proofs of
his courage, which was at other times very questionable19.
About this time the Scottish borderers seem to have
acquired some ascendency over their southern neighbours.—Strype,
Vol. III. p. 437—In 1559, peace was
again restored.
[Footnote 19: He was lord of
Liddesdale, and keeper of the Hermitage castle.
But he had little effective power over that country,
and was twice defeated by the Armstrongs, its lawless
inhabitants.—Border History, p.
584. Yet the unfortunate Mary, in her famous Apology,
says, “that in the weiris againis Ingland, he
gaif proof of his vailyentnes, courage, and gude conduct;”
and praises him especially for subjugating “the
rebellious subjectis inhabiting the cuntreis lying
ewest the marches of Ingland.”—Keith,
p. 388. He appears actually to have defeated
Sir Henry Percy, in a skirmish, called the Raid of
Haltweilswire.]
The flame of reformation, long stifled
in Scotland, now burst forth, with the violence of
a volcanic eruption. The siege of Leith was commenced,
by the combined forces of the Congregation and of England.
The borderers cared little about speculative points
of religion; but they shewed themselves much interested
in the treasures which passed through their country,
for payment of the English forces at Edinburgh.
Much alarm was excited, lest the marchers should intercept
these weighty protestant arguments; and it was, probably,
by voluntarily imparting a share in them to Lord Home,
that he became a sudden convert to the new faith20.
[Footnote 20: This nobleman had,
shortly before, threatened to spoil the English east
march; “but,” says the Duke of Norfolk,
“we have provided such sauce for him, that I
think he will not deal in such matter; but, if he
do fire but one hay-goff, he shall not go to Home
again without torch-light, and, peradventure, may find
a lanthorn at his own house.”]
Upon the arrival of the ill-fated
Mary in her native country, she found the borders
in a state of great disorder. The exertions of
her natural brother (afterwards the famous regent,
Murray) were necessary to restore some degree of tranquillity.
He marched to Jedburgh, executed twenty or thirty
of the transgressors, burned many houses, and brought
a number of prisoners to Edinburgh. The chieftains
of the principal clans were also obliged to grant
pledges for their future obedience. A noted convention
(for the particulars of which, see Border Laws,
p. 84.) adopted various regulations, which were attended
with great advantage to the marches21.
[Footnote 21: The commissioners
on the English side were, the elder Lord Scroope of
Bolton, Sir John Foster, Sir Thomas Gargrave, and Dr.
Rookby. On the Scottish side appeared, Sir John
Maxwell of Terreagles, and Sir John Ballenden.]
The unhappy match, betwixt Henry Darnley
and his sovereign, led to new dissentions on the border.
The Homes, Kerrs, and other east marchers, hastened
to support the queen, against Murray, Chatelherault,
and other nobles, whom her marriage had offended.
For the same purpose the Johnstones, Jardines, and
clans of Annandale entered into bonds of confederacy.
But Liddesdale was under the influence of England;
in so much, that Randolph, the English minister, proposed
to hire a band of strapping Elliots, to find
Home business at home, in looking after his corn and
cattle.—Keith, p. 265. App.
133.
This storm was hardly overblown, when
Bothwell received the commission of lieutenant upon
the borders; but, as void of parts as of principle,
he could not even recover to the queen’s allegiance
his own domains in Liddesdale.—Keith,
App. 165. The queen herself advanced to the
borders, to remedy this evil, and to hold courts at
Jedburgh. Bothwell was already in Liddesdale,
where he had been severely wounded, in an attempt
to seize John Elliot, of the Parke, a desperate freebooter;
and happy had it been for Mary, had the dagger of the
moss-trooper struck more home. Bothwell being
transported to his castle of Hermitage, the queen,
upon hearing the tidings, hastened thither, A dangerous
morass, still called the Queen’s Mire[22],
is pointed out by tradition as the spot where the
lovely Mary, and her white palfrey, were in danger
of perishing. The distance betwixt Hermitage and
Jedburgh, by the way of Hawick, is nearly twenty-four
English miles. The queen went and returned the
same day. Whether she visited a wounded subject,
or a lover in danger, has been warmly disputed in our
latter days.
[Footnote 22: The Queen’s
Mire is still a pass of danger, exhibiting, in
many places, the bones of the horses which have been
entangled in it. For what reason the queen chose
to enter Liddesdale by the circuitous route of Hawick,
does not appear. There are two other passes from
Jedburgh to Hermitage castle; the one by the Note
of the Gate, the other over the mountain, called
Winburgh. Either of these, but especially the
latter, is several miles shorter than that by Hawick,
and the Queen’s Mire. But, by the circuitous
way of Hawick, the queen could traverse the districts
of more friendly clans, than by going directly into
the disorderly province of Liddesdale.]
To the death of Henry Darnley, it
is said, some of the border lords were privy.
But the subsequent marriage, betwixt the queen and
Bothwell, alienated from her the affections of the
chieftains of the marches, most of whom aided the
association of the insurgent barons. A few gentlemen
of the Merse, however, joined the army which Mary
brought to Carberry-hill. But no one was willing
to fight for the detested Bothwell, nor did Bothwell
himself shew any inclination to put his person in
jeopardy. The result to Mary was a rigorous captivity
in Lochleven castle; and the name of Bothwell scarcely
again pollutes the page of Scottish history.
The distress of a beautiful and afflicted
princess softened the hearts of her subjects; and,
when she escaped from her severe captivity, the most
powerful barons in Scotland crowded around her standard.
Among these were many of the west border men, under
the lords Maxwell and Herries23. But the defeat
at Langside was a death-blow to her interest in Scotland.
[Footnote 23: The followers of
these barons are said to have stolen the horses of
their friends, while they were engaged in the battle.]
The death of the regent Murray, in
1569, excited the party of Mary to hope and to exertion.
It seems, that the design of Bothwelhaugh, who slew
him, was well known upon the borders; for, the very
day on which the slaughter happened, Buccleuch and
Fairnihirst, with their clans, broke into England,
and spread devastation along the frontiers, with unusual
ferocity. It is probable they well knew that the
controuling hand of the regent was that day palsied
by death. Buchanan exclaims loudly against this
breach of truce with Elizabeth, charging Queen Mary’s
party with having “houndit furth proude and uncircumspecte
young men, to hery, burne, and slay, and tak prisoneris,
in her realme, and use all misordour and crueltie,
not only usit in weir, but detestabil to all barbar
and wild Tartaris, in slaying of prisoneris, and contrair
to all humanitie and justice, keeping na promeis to
miserabil catives resavit anis to thair mercy “—Admonitioun
to the trew lordis, Striveling, 1571. He
numbers, among these insurgents, highlanders as well
as borderers, Buccleuch and Fairnihirst, the Johnstons
and Armstrongs, the Grants, and the clan Chattan.
Besides these powerful clans, Mary numbered among
her adherents, the Maxwells, and almost all the west
border leaders, excepting Drumlanrig, and Jardine
of Applegirth. On the eastern border, the faction
of the infant king was more powerful; for, although
deserted by Lord Home, the greater part of his clan,
under the influence of Wedderburn, remained attached
to that party. The laird of Cessford wished them
well, and the Earl of Angus naturally followed the
steps of his uncle Morton. A sharp and bloody
invasion of the middle march, under the command of
the Earl of Sussex, avenged with interest the raids
of Buccleuch and Fairnihirst. The domains of
these chiefs were laid waste, their castles burned
and destroyed. The narrow vales of Beaumont and
Kale, belonging to Buccleuch, were treated with peculiar
severity; and the forrays of Hertford were equalled
by that of Sussex. In vain did the chiefs request
assistance from the government to defend their fortresses.
Through the predominating interest of Elizabeth in
the Scottish councils, this was refused to all but
Home, whose castle, nevertheless, again received an
English garrison; while Buccleuch and Fairnihirst
complained bitterly that those, who had instigated
their invasion, durst not even come so far as Lauder,
to shew countenance to their defence against the English.
The bickerings, which followed, distracted the whole
kingdom. One celebrated exploit may be selected,
as an illustration of the border fashion of war.
The Earl of Lennox, who had succeeded
Murray in the regency, held a parliament at Stirling,
in 1571. The young king was exhibited to the
great council of his nation. He had been tutored
to repeat a set speech, composed for the occasion;
but, observing that the roof of the building was a
little decayed, he interrupted his recitation, and
exclaimed, with childish levity, “that there
was a hole in the parliament,”—words
which, in these days, were held to presage the deadly
breach shortly to be made in that body, by the death
of him in whose name it was convoked.
Amid the most undisturbed security
of confidence, the lords, who composed this parliament,
were roused at day-break, by the shouts of their enemies
in the heart of the town. God and the Queen!
resounded from every quarter, and, in a few minutes,
the regent, with the astonished nobles of his party,
were prisoners to a band of two hundred border cavalry,
led by Scott of Buccleuch, and to the Lord Claud Hamilton,
at the head of three hundred infantry. These
enterprising chiefs, by a rapid and well concerted
manoeuvre, had reached Stirling in a night march from
Edinburgh, and, without so much as being bayed at
by a watch-dog had seized the principal street of
the town.—The fortunate obstinacy of Morton
saved his party. Stubborn and undaunted, he defended
his house till the assailants set it in flames, and
then yielded with reluctance to his kinsman, Buccleuch.
But the time, which he had gained, effectually served
his cause. The borderers had dispersed to plunder
the stables of the nobility; the infantry thronged
tumultuously together on the main street, when the
Earl of Mar, issuing from the castle, placed one or
two small pieces of ordnance in his own half-built
house24, which commands the market place. Hardly
had the artillery begun to scour the street, when the
assailants, surprised in their turn, fled with precipitation.
Their alarm was increased by the townsmen thronging
to arms. Those, who had been so lately triumphant,
were now, in many instances, asking the protection
of their own prisoners. In all probability, not
a man would have escaped death, or captivity, but
for the characteristic rapacity of Buccleuch’s
marauders, who, having seized and carried off all the
horses in the town, left the victors no means of following
the chace. The regent was slain by an officer,
named Caulder, in order to prevent his being rescued.
Spens of Ormeston, to whom he had surrendered, lost
his life in a generous attempt to protect him25.
Hardly does our history present another enterprise,
so well planned, so happily commenced, and so strangely
disconcerted. To the licence of the marchmen
the failure was attributed; but the same cause ensured
a safe retreat.—Spottiswoode, Godscroft,
Robertson, Melville.
[Footnote 24: This building still
remains, in the unfinished state which it then presented.]
[Footnote 25: Birrel says, that
“the regent was shot by an unhappy fellow, while
sitting on horseback behind the laird of Buccleuch.”—The
following curious account of the whole transaction
is extracted from a journal of principal events, in
the years 1570, 1571, 1572, and part of 1573, kept
by Richard Bannatyne, amanuensis to John Knox.
The fourt of September, they of Edinburgh, horsemen
and futmen (and, as was reported, the most part of
Clidisdaill, that perteinit to the Hamiltons), come
to Striveling, the number of iii or iiii c men, in
hors bak, guydit be ane George Bell, their hacbutteris
being all horsed, enterit in Striveling, be fyve houris
in the morning (whair thair was never one to mak watche),
crying this slogane, ’God and the quene! ane
Hamiltoun think on the bishop of St. Androis, all
is owres;’ and so a certaine come to everie grit
manis ludgene, and apprehendit the Lordis Mortoun
and Glencarne; but Mortounis hous they set on fyre,
wha randerit him to the laird of Balcleuch. Wormestoun
being appointed to the regentes hous, desyred him to
cum furth, which he had no will to doe, yet, be perswasione
of Garleys and otheris, with him, tho’t it best
to come in will, nor to byde the extremitie, becaus
they supposed there was no resistance, and swa the
regent come furth, and was randered to Wormestoun,
under promeis to save his lyfe. Captane Crawfurde,
being in the town, gat sum men out of the castell,
and uther gentlemen being in the town, come as they
my’t best to the geat, chased them out of the
town. The regent was schot be ane Captain Cader,
wha confessed, that he did it at comande of George
Bell, wha was comandit so to doe be the Lord Huntlie
and Claud Hamilton. Some sayis, that Wormestoun
was schot by the same schot that slew the regent,
but alwayis he was slane, notwithstanding the regent
cryed to save him, but it culd not be, the furie was
so grit of the presewaris, who, following so fast,
the lord of Mortone said to Balcleuch, ’I sall
save you as ye savit me,’ and so he was tane.
Garleys, and sindrie otheris, war slane at the port,
in the persute of thame. Thair war ten or twelve
gentlemen slane of the kingis folk, and als mony of
theiris, or mea, as was said, and a dosone or xvi
tane. Twa especiall servantis of the Lord Argyle’s
were slane also. This Cader, that schot the regent,
was once turned bak off the toune, and was send again
(as is said), be the Lord Huntlie, to cause Wormistoun
retire; but, before he come agane, he was dispatched,
and had gottin deidis woundis.
The regent being schot (as said is),
was brought to the castell, whair he callit for ane
phisitione, one for his soule, ane uther for his bodie.
But all hope of life was past, for he was schot in
his entreallis; and swa, after sumthingis spokin to
the lordis, which I know not, he departed, in the
feare of God, and made a blessed end; whilk the rest
of the lordis, that tho’t thame to his hiert,
and lytle reguardit him, shall not mak so blised ane
end, unles they mend thair maneris.
This curious manuscript has been lately
published, under the inspection of John Graham Dalyell,
Esq.]
The wily Earl of Morton, who, after
the short intervening regency of Mar, succeeded to
the supreme authority, contrived, by force or artifice,
to render the party of the king every where superior.
Even on the middle borders, he had the address to
engage in his cause the powerful, though savage and
licentious, clans of Rutherford and Turnbull, as well
as the citizens of Jedburgh. He was thus enabled
to counterpoise his powerful opponents, Buccleuch and
Fairnihirst, in their own country; and, after an unsuccessful
attempt to surprise Jedburgh even these warm adherents
of Mary relinquished her cause in despair.
While Morton swayed the state, his
attachment to Elizabeth, and the humiliation which
many of the border chiefs had undergone, contributed
to maintain good order on the marches, till James VI.
himself assumed the reigns of government.—The
intervening skirmish of the Reidswire (see the ballad
under that title) was but a sudden explosion of the
rivalry and suppressed hatred of the borderers of both
kingdoms. In truth, the stern rule of Morton,
and of his delegates, men unconnected with the borders
by birth, maintained in that country more strict discipline
than had ever been there exercised. Perhaps this
hastened his fall.
The unpopularity of Morton, acquired
partly by the strict administration of justice, and
partly by avarice and severity, forced him from the
regency. In 1578, he retired, apparently, from
state affairs, to his castle of Dalkeith; which the
populace, emphatically expressing their awe and dread
of his person, termed the Lion’s Den.
But Morton could not live in retirement; and, early
in the same year, the aged lion again rushed from
his cavern. By a mixture of policy and violence,
he possessed himself of the fortress of Stirling, and
of the person of James. His nephew, Angus, hastened
to his assistance. Against him appeared his follower
Cessford, with many of the Homes, and the citizens
of Edinburgh. Alluding to the restraint of the
king’s person, they bore his effigy on their
banners, with a rude rhyme, demanding liberty or death.—Birrel’s
Diary, ad annum, 1578. The Earl of Morton
marched against his foes as far as Falkirk, and a
desperate action must have ensued, but for the persuasions
of Bowes, the English ambassador. The only blood,
then spilt, was in a duel betwixt Tait, a follower
of Cessford, and Johnstone, a west border man, attending
upon Angus. They fought with lances, and on horseback,
according to the fashion of the borders.—The
former was unhorsed and slain, the latter desperately
wounded.—Godscroft, Vol. II.
p. 261. The prudence of the late regent appears
to have abandoned him, when he was decoyed into a
treaty upon this occasion. It was not long before
Morton the veteran warrior, and the crafty statesman,
was forced bend his neck to an engine of death26,
the use of which he himself had introduced into Scotland.
[Footnote 26: A rude sort of
guillotine, called the maiden. The implement
is now in possession of the Society of Scottish Antiquaries.]
Released from the thraldom of Morton,
the king, with more than youthful levity, threw his
supreme power into the hands of Lennox and Arran.
The religion of the first, and the infamous character
of the second favourite, excited the hatred of the
commons, while their exclusive and engrossing power
awakened the jealousy of the other nobles. James,
doomed to be the sport of contending factions was
seized at Stirling by the nobles, confederated in what
was termed the Raid of Ruthven. But the conspirators
soon suffered their prize to escape, and were rewarded
for their enterprize by exile or death.
In 1585, an affray took place at a
border meeting in which Lord Russel, the Earl of Bedford’s
eldest son, chanced to be slain. Queen Elizabeth
imputed the guilt of this slaughter to Thomas Kerr
of Fairnihirst, instigated by Arran. Upon the
imperious demand of the English ambassador, both were
committed to prison; but the minion, Arran, was soon
restored to liberty and favour; while Fairnihirst,
the dread of the English borderers and the gallant
defender of Queen Mary, died in his confinement, of
a broken heart.—Spottiswoode p. 341.
The tyranny of Arran becoming daily
more insupportable the exiled lords, joined by Maxwell,
Home, Bothwell, and other border chieftains, seized
the town of Stirling, which was pillaged by their disorderly
followers, invested the castle, which surrendered at
discretion, and drove the favourite from the king’s
council27.
[Footnote 27: The associated
nobles seem to have owed their success chiefly to
the border spearmen; for, though they had a band of
mercenaries, who used fire arms, yet they were such
bad masters of their craft, their captain was heard
to observe, “that those, who knew his soldiers
as well as he did, would hardly chuse to march before
them.”—Godscroft, v. ii.
p. 368.]
The king, perceiving the Earl of Bothwell
among the armed barons, to whom he surrendered his
person addressed him in these prophetic words:—
“Francis, Francis, what moved thee to come in
arms against thy prince, who never wronged thee?
I wish thee a more quiet spirit, else I foresee thy
destruction.”—Spottiswoode,
p. 343.
In fact, the extraordinary enterprizes
of this nobleman disturbed the next ten years of James’s
reign. Francis Stuart, son to a bastard of James
V., had been invested with the titles and estates belonging
to his maternal uncle, James Hepburn, Earl of Bothwell,
upon the forfeiture of that infamous man; and consequently
became lord of Liddesdale, and of the castle of Hermitage.—This
acquisition of power upon the borders, where he could
easily levy followers, willing to undertake the most
desperate enterprize, joined to the man’s native
daring and violent spirit, rendered Bothwell the most
turbulent insurgent, that ever disturbed the tranquillity
of a kingdom. During the king’s absence
in Denmark, Bothwell, swayed by the superstition of
his age, had tampered with certain soothsayers and
witches, by whose pretended art he hoped to atchieve
the death of his monarch. In one of the courts
of inquisition, which James delighted to hold upon
the professors of the occult sciences, some of his
cousin’s proceedings were brought to light,
for which he was put in ward in the castle of Edinburgh.
Burning with revenge, he broke from his confinement,
and lurked for some time upon the borders, where he
hoped for the countenance of his son-in-law, Buccleuch.
Undeterred by the absence of that chief, who, in obedience
to the royal command, had prudently retired to France,
Bothwell attempted the desperate enterprize of seizing
the person of the king, while residing in his metropolis.
At the dead of night, followed by a band of borderers,
he occupied the court of the palace of Holyrood, and
began to burst open the doors of the royal apartments.
The nobility, distrustful of each other, and ignorant
of the extent of the conspiracy, only endeavoured to
make good the defence of their separate lodgings; but
darkness and confusion prevented the assailants from
profiting by their disunion. Melville, who was
present, gives a lively picture of the scene of disorder,
transiently illuminated by the glare of passing torches;
while the report of fire arms, the clatter of armour,
the din of hammers thundering on the gates, mingled
wildly with the war-cry of the borderers, who shouted
incessantly, “Justice! Justice! A Bothwell!
A Bothwell!” The citizens of Edinburgh at length
began to assemble for the defence of their sovereign;
and Bothwell was compelled to retreat, which he did
without considerable loss.—Melville,
p. 356. A similar attempt on the person of James,
while residing at Faulkland, also misgave; but the
credit which Bothwell obtained on the borders, by
these bold and desperate enterprizes, was incredible
“All Tiviotdale,” says Spottiswoode, “ran
after him;” so that he finally obtained his
object; and, at Edinburgh, in 1593, he stood before
James, an unexpected apparition, with his naked sword
in his hand. “Strike!” said James,
with royal dignity—“Strike, and end
thy work! I will not survive my dishonour.”
But Bothwell with unexpected moderation, only stipulated
for remission of his forfeiture, and did not even insist
on remaining at court, whence his party was shortly
expelled, by the return of the Lord Home, and his
other enemies. Incensed at this reverse, Bothwell
levied a body of four hundred cavalry, and attacked
the king’s guard in broad day, upon the Borough
Moor, near Edinburgh.—The ready succour
of the citizens saved James from falling once more
into the hands of his turbulent subject28. On
a subsequent day, Bothwell met the laird of Cessford,
riding near Edinburgh, with whom he fought a single
combat, which lasted for two hours29. But his
credit was now fallen; he retreated to England, whence
he was driven by Elizabeth, and then wandered to Spain
and Italy, where he subsisted, in indigence and obscurity,
on the bread which he earned by apostatizing to the
faith of Rome. So fell this agitator of domestic
broils, whose name passed into a proverb, denoting
a powerful and turbulent demagogue30.
[Footnote 28: Spottiswoode says,
the king awaited this charge with firmness; but Birrell
avers, that he fled upon the gallop. The same
author, instead of the firm deportment of James, when
seized by Bothwell, describes “the king’s
majestie as flying down the back stair, with his breeches
in his hand, in great fear.”—Birrell,
apud Dalyell, p. 30. Such is the difference
betwixt the narrative of the courtly archbishop, and
that of the presbyterian burgess of Edinburgh.]
[Footnote 29: This rencounter
took place at Humbie, in East Lothian. Bothwell
was attended by a servant, called Gibson, and Cessford
by one of the Rutherfords, who was hurt in the cheek.
The combatant parted from pure fatigue.]
[Footnote 30: Sir Walter Raleigh,
in writing of Essex, then in prison, says, “Let
the queen hold Bothwell while she hath him.”—Murdin,
Vol. II. p. 812. It appears, from Crichton’s
Memoirs, that Bothwell’s grandson, though
so nearly related to the royal family, actually rode
a private in the Scottish horse guards, in the reign
of Charles II.—Edinburgh, 1731,
p. 43.]
While these scenes were passing in
the metropolis the borders were furiously agitated
by civil discord. The families of Cessford and
Fairnihirst disputed their right to the wardenry of
the middle marches, and to the provostry of Jedburgh;
and William Kerr of Ancram, a follower of the latter,
was murdered by the young chief of Cessford, at the
instigation of his mother.—Spottiswoode,
p. 383. But this was trifling, compared to the
civil war, waged on the western frontier, between
the Johnstones and Maxwells, of which there is a minute
account in the introduction to the ballad, entitled,
“Maxwell’s Goodnight.”
Prefixed to that termed “Kinmont Willie”
the reader will find an account of the last warden
raids performed upon the border.
My sketch of border history now draws
to a close. The accession of James to the English
crown converted the extremity into the centre of his
kingdom.
The east marches of Scotland were,
at this momentous period, in a state of comparative
civilization. The rich soil of Berwickshire soon
invited the inhabitants to the arts of agriculture.—Even
in the days of Lesley, the nobles and barons of the
Merse differed in manners from the other borderers,
administered justice with regularity, and abstained
from plunder and depredation.—De moribus
Scotorum, p. 7. But, on the middle and western
marches, the inhabitants were unrestrained moss-troopers
and cattle drivers, knowing no measure of law, says
Camden, but the length of their swords. The sterility
of the mountainous country, which they inhabited,
offered little encouragement to industry; and, for
the long series of centuries, which we have hastily
reviewed, the hands of rapine were never there folded
in inactivity, nor the sword of violence returned to
the scabbard. Various proclamations were in vain
issued for interdicting the use of horses and arms
upon the west border of England and Scotland31.
[Footnote 31: “Proclamation
shall be made, that all inhabiting within Tynedale
and Riddesdale, in Northumberland, Bewcastledale, Willgavey,
the north part of Gilsland, Esk, and Leven, in Cumberland;
east and west Tividale, Liddesdale, Eskdale, Ewsdale,
and Annesdale, in Scotland (saving noblemen Footnote:
and gentlemen unsuspected of felony and theft, and
not being of broken clans, and their household servants,
dwelling within those several places, before recited),
shall put away all armour and weapons, as well offensive
as defensive, as jacks, spears, lances, swords, daggers,
steel-caps, hack-buts, pistols, plate sleeves, and
such like; and shall not keep any horse, gelding,
or mare, above the value of fifty shillings sterling,
or thirty pounds Scots, upon the like paid of imprisonment.”—Proceedings
of the Border Commissioners, 1505.—Introduction
to History of Cumberland, p. 127.]
The evil was found to require the
radical cure of extirpation. Buccleuch collected
under his banners the most desperate of the border
warriors, of whom he formed a legion, for the service
of the states of Holland; who had as much reason to
rejoice on their arrival upon the continent, as Britain
to congratulate herself upon their departure.
It may be presumed, that few of this corps ever returned
to their native country. The clan of Graeme,
a hardy and ferocious set of freebooters inhabiting
chiefly the Debateable Land, by a very summary exertion
of authority, was transported to Ireland, and their
return prohibited under pain of death. Against
other offenders, measures, equally arbitrary, were
without hesitation pursued. Numbers of border
riders were executed, without even the formality of
a trial; and it is even said, that, in mockery of
justice, assizes were held upon them after they had
suffered. For these acts of tyranny, see Johnston,
p. 374, 414, 39, 93. The memory of Dunbar’s
legal proceedings at Jedburgh, are preserved in the
proverbial phrase, Jeddart Justice, which signifies,
trial after execution. By this rigour though sternly
and unconscientiously exercised the border marauders
were, in the course of years, either reclaimed or
exterminated; though nearly a century elapsed ere
their manners were altogether assimilated to those
of their countrymen32.
[Footnote 32: See the acts 18
Cha. II. 6.3. and 80 Cha. II. ch. 2. against
the border moss-troopers; to which we may add the following
curious extracts from Mercurius Politicus, a
newspaper, published during the usurpation.
“Thursday, November 11, 1662.
“Edinburgh.—The Scotts
and moss-troopers have again revived their old custom,
of robbing and murdering the English, whether soldiers
or other, upon all opportunities, within these three
weeks. We have had notice of several robberies
and murders, committed by them. Among the rest,
a lieutenant, and one other of Col. Overton’s
regiment, returning from England, were robbed not
far from Dunbarr. A lieutenant, lately master
of the customs at Kirkcudbright, was killed about
twenty miles from this place; and four foot soldiers
of Colonel Overton’s were killed, going to their
quarters, by some mossers, who, after they had given
them quarter, tied their hands behind them, and then
threw them down a steep hill, or rock, as it was related
by a Scotchman, who was with them, but escaped.”
Ibidem.—“October
13, 1663.—The Parliament, October 21, past
an act, declaring, any person that shall discover
any felon, or felons (commonly called, or known, by
the name of moss-troopers), residing upon the borders
of England and Scotland, shall have a reward of ten
pound upon their conviction.”]
In these hasty sketches of border
history, I have endeavoured to select, such incidents,
as may introduce to the reader the character of the
marchmen, more briefly and better than a formal essay
upon their manners. If I have been successful
in the attempt, he is already acquainted with the
mixture of courage and rapacity by which they were
distinguished; and has reviewed some of the scenes
in which they acted a principal part. It is,
therefore only necessary to notice, more minutely,
some of their peculiar customs and modes of life.
Their morality was of a singular kind.
The ranpine, by which they subsisted, they accounted
lawful and honourable. Ever liable to lose their
whole substance, by an incursion of the English, on
a sudden breach of truce, they cared little to waste
their time in cultivating crops, to be reaped by their
foes. Their cattle was, therefore, their chief
property; and these were nightly exposed to the southern
borderers, as rapacious and active as themselves.
Hence, robbery assumed the appearance of fair reprisal.
The fatal privilege of pursuing the marauders into
their own country, for recovery of stolen goods, led
to continual skirmishes The warden also, himself frequently
the chieftain of a border horde, when redress was not
instantly granted by the opposite officer, for depredations
sustained by his district, was entitled to retaliate
upon England by a warden raid. In such cases,
the moss-troopers, who crowded to his standard, found
themselves pursuing their craft under legal authority,
and became the favourites and followers of the military
magistrate, whose duty it was to have checked and
suppressed them. See the curious history of Geordie
Bourne, App. No. II. Equally unable
and unwilling to make nice distinctions, they were
not to be convinced, that what was to-day fair booty,
was to-morrow a subject of theft. National animosity
usually gave an additional stimulus to their rapacity;
although it must be owned, that their depredations
extended also to the more cultivated parts of their
own country33.
[Footnote 33: The armorial bearings,
adopted by many of the border tribes, shew how little
they were ashamed of their trade of rapine. Like
Falstaff, they were “Gentlemen of the
night, minions of the moon,” under whose countenance
they committed their depredations.—Hence,
the emblematic moons and stars, so frequently charged
in the arms of border families. Their mottoes,
also, bear allusion to their profession.—“Reparabit
cornua Phaebe,” i.e. “We’ll
have moon-light again,” is that of the family
of Harden. “Ye shall want, ere I want,”
that of Cranstoun, &c.]
Satchells, who lived when the old
border ideas of meum and tuum were still
in some force, endeavours to draw a very nice distinction
betwixt a freebooter and a thief; and thus sings he
of the Armstrongs:
On that border was the Armstrongs, able
men;
Somewhat unruly, and very ill to tame.
I would have none think that I call them thieves,
For, if I did, it would be arrant lies.
Near a border frontier, in the time
of war,
There’s ne’er a man but he’s a
freebooter.
* * * *
Because to all men it may appear,
The freebooter he is a volunteer;
In the muster rolls he has no desire to stay;
He lives by purchase, he gets no pay.
* * *
It’s most clear a freebooter doth
live in hazard’s train;
A freebooter’s a cavalier that ventures life
for gain:
But, since King James the Sixth to England went,
Ther has been no cause of grief;
And he that hath transgress’d since then,
Is no Freebooter, but a Thief.
History of the name of Scott.
The inhabitants of the inland counties
did not understand these subtle distinctions.
Sir David Lindsay, in the curious drama, published
by Mr Pinkerton, introduces, as one of his dramatis
personae, Common Thift, a borderer, who is supposed
to come to Fife to steal the Earl of Rothes’
best hackney, and Lord Lindsay’s brown jennet.
Oppression also (another personage there introduced),
seems to be connected with the borders; for, finding
himself in danger, he exclaims,—
War God that I were sound and haill,
Now liftit into Liddesdail;
The Mers sowld fynd me beiff and caill,
What rack of breid?
War I thair lyftit with my lyfe,
The devill sowld styk me with a knyffe,
An’ ever I cum agane in Fyfe,
Till I were deid.—
Pinkerton’s Scotish Poems, Vol.
II p. 180.
Again, when Common Thift is
brought to condign punishment, he remembers his border
friends in his dying speech:
The widdefow wardanis tuik my geir,
And left me nowthir horse nor meir,
Nor erdly gud that me belangit;
Now, walloway! I mon be hangit.
* * *
Adew! my bruthir Annan thieves,
That holpit me in my mischevis:
Adew! Grossars, Niksonis, and Bells,
Oft have we fairne owthreuch the fells:
Adew! Robsons, Howis, and Pylis,
That in our craft hes mony wilis:
Littlis, Trumbells, and Armestranges;
Adew! all theeves, that me belangis;
Baileowes, Erewynis, and Elwandis,
Speedy of flicht, and slicht of handis:
The Scotts of Eisdale, and the Gramis,
I half na time to tell your namis.
Ib. p. 156.
When Common Thift is executed (which
is performed upon the stage), Falset (Falsehood),
who is also brought forth for punishment, pronounces
over him the following eulogy:
Waes me for thee, gude Common Thift!
Was never man made more honest chift,
His living for to win:
Thair wes not, in all Liddesdail,
That ky mair craftelly could steil,
Whar thou hingis on that pin!
Ib. p. 194.
Sir Richard Maitland, incensed at
the boldness and impunity of the thieves of Liddesdale
in his time, has attacked them with keen iambicks.
His satire, which, I suppose, had very little effect
at the time, forms No. III, of the appendix to
this introduction.
The borderers had, in fact, little
reason to regard the inland Scots as their fellow
subjects, or to respect the power of the crown.
They were frequently resigned, by express compact,
to the bloody retaliation of the English, without
experiencing any assistance from their prince, and
his more immediate subjects. If they beheld him,
it was more frequently in the character of an avenging
judge, than of a protecting sovereign. They were,
in truth, during the time of peace, a kind of outcasts,
against whom the united powers of England and Scotland
were often employed. Hence, the men of the borders
had little attachment to the monarchs, whom they termed,
in derision, the kings of Fife and Lothian; provinces
which they were not legally entitled to inhabit34,
and which, therefore, they pillaged with as little
remorse as if they had belonged to a foreign country.
This strange, precarious, and adventurous mode of
life, led by the borderers, was not without its pleasures,
and seems, in all probability, hardly so disagreeable
to us, as the monotony of regulated society must have
been to those, who had been long accustomed to a state
of rapine. Well has it been remarked, by the
eloquent Burke, that the shifting tides of fear and
hope, the flight and pursuit, the peril and escape,
alternate famine and feast, of the savage and the robber,
after a time render all course of slow, steady, progressive,
unvaried occupation and the prospect only of a limited
mediocrity at the end of long labour, to the last
degree tame, languid, and insipid. The interesting
nature of their exploits may be conceived from the
account of Camden.
[Footnote 34: By act 1587, c.
96, borderers are expelled from the inland counties,
unless they can find security for their quiet deportment.]
“What manner of cattle stealers
they are, that inhabit these valleys in the marches
of both kingdoms, John Lesley, a Scotchman himself,
and bishop of Ross, will inform you. They sally
out of their own borders, in the night, in troops,
through unfrequented bye-ways, and many intricate
windings. All the day-time, they refresh themselves
and their horses in lurking holes they had pitched
upon before, till they arrive in the dark at those
places they have a design upon. As soon as they
have seized upon the booty, they, in like manner, return
home in the night, through blind ways, and fetching
many a compass. The more skilful any captain
is to pass through those wild deserts, crooked turnings,
and deep precipices, in the thickest mists and darkness,
his reputation is the greater, and he is looked upon
as a man of an excellent head.—And they
are so very cunning, that they seldom have their booty
taken from them, unless sometimes, when, by the help
of blood-hounds following them exactly upon the tract,
they may chance to fall into the hands of their adversaries.
When being taken, they have so much persuasive eloquence,
and so many smooth insinuating words at command, that
if they do not move their judges, nay, and even their
adversaries (notwithstanding the severity of their
natures), to have mercy, yet they incite them to admiration
and compassion.”—Camden’s
Britannia. The reader is requested to compare this
curious account, given by Lesley, with the ballad,
called Hobble Noble[35].
[Footnote 35: The following tradition
is also illustrative of Lesley’s account.
Veitch of Dawyk, a man of great strength and bravery
who flourished in the 16th century, was upon bad terms
with a neighbouring proprietor, Tweedie of Drummelziar.
By some accident, a flock of Dawyk’s sheep had
strayed over into Drummelziar’s grounds, at the
time when Dickie of the Den, a Liddesdale outlaw,
was making his rounds in Tweeddale. Seeing this
flock of sheep; he drove them off without ceremony.
Next morning, Veitch, perceiving his loss, summoned
his servants and retainers, laid a blood-hound upon
the traces of the robber, by whom they were guided
for many miles, till, on the banks of Liddel, he staid
upon a very large hay-stack. The pursuers were
a good deal surprised at the obstinate pause of the
blood-hound, till Dawyk pulled down some of the hay,
and discovered a large excavation, containing the
robbers and their spoil. He instantly flew upon
Dickie, and was about to poniard him, when the marauder,
with the address noticed by Lesley, protested that
he would never have touched a cloot (hoof)
of them, had he not taken them for Drummelziar’s
property. This dexterous appeal to Veitch’s
passions saved the life of the freebooter.]
The inroads of the marchers, when
stimulated only by the desire of plunder, were never
marked with cruelty, and seldom even with bloodshed,
unless in the case of opposition. They held, that
property was common to all who stood in want of it;
but they abhorred and avoided the crime of unnecessary
homicide.—Lesley, p. 63. This
was, perhaps, partly owing to the habits of intimacy
betwixt the borderers of both kingdoms, notwithstanding
their mutual hostility, and reciprocal depredations.
A natural intercourse took place between the English
and Scottish marchers, at border meetings, and during
the short intervals of peace. They met frequently
at parties of the chace and foot-ball; and it required
many and strict regulations, on both sides, to prevent
them from forming intermarriages, and from cultivating
too close a degree of intimacy.—Scottish
Acts, 1587, c. 105; Wharton’s Regulations,
6th Edward VI. The custom, also, of paying black-mail,
or protection-rent, introduced a connection betwixt
the countries; for, a Scottish borderer, taking black-mail
from an English inhabitant, was not only himself bound
to abstain from injuring such person, but also to
maintain his quarrel, and recover his property, if
carried off by others. Hence, an union arose betwixt
the parties, founded upon mutual interest, which counteracted,
in many instances, the effects of national prejudice.
The similarity of their manners may be inferred from
that of their language. In an old mystery, imprinted
at London, 1654, a mendicant borderer is introduced,
soliciting alms of a citizen and his wife. To
a question of the latter he replies, “Savying
your honour, good maistress, I was born in Redesdale,
in Northomberlande, and come of a wight riding sirname,
call’d the Robsons: gude honeste men, and
true, savyng a little shiftynge for theyr livyng;
God help them, silly pure men.” The wife
answers, “What doest thou here, in this countrie?
me thinke thou art a Scot by thy tongue.” Beggar—“Trowe
me never mair then, good deam; I had rather be hanged
in a withie of a cow-taile, for thei are ever fare
and fase.”—Appendix to Johnstone’s
Sad Shepherd, 1783. p. 188. From the wife’s
observation, as well as from the dialect of the beggar,
we may infer, that there was little difference between
the Northumbrian and the border Scottish; a circumstance
interesting in itself, and decisive of the occasional
friendly intercourse among the marchmen. From
all those combining circumstances arose the lenity
of the borderers in their incursions and the equivocal
moderation which they sometimes observed towards each
other, in open war36.
[Footnote 36: This practice of
the marchmen was observed and reprobated by Patten.
“Anoother maner have they (the English borderers)
amoong them, of wearyng handkerchers roll’d about
their armes, and letters brouder’d (embroidered)
upon their cappes: they said themselves, the
use thearof was that ech of them might knowe his fellowe,
and thearbye the sooner assemble, or in nede to ayd
one another, and such lyke respectes; howbeit, thear
wear of the army amoong us (sum suspicious men perchaunce),
that thought thei used them for collusion, and rather
bycaus thei might be knowen to the enemie, as the
enemies are knowen to them (for thei have their markes
too), and so in conflict either ech to spare oother,
or gently eche to take oother. Indede men have
been mooved the rather to thinke so, bycaus sum of
their crosses (the English red cross) were so
narrowe, and so singly set on, that a puff of wynde
might blowed them from their breastes, and that thei
wear found right often talking with the Skottish prikkers
within less than their gad’s (spears)
length asunder; and when thei perceived thei had been
espied, thei have begun one to run at anoother, but
so apparently perlassent (in parley), as the
lookers on resembled their chasyng lyke the running
at base in an uplondish toun, whear the match is made
for a quart of good ale, or like the play in Robin
Cookes scole (a fencing school), whear, bycaus
the punies may lerne, thei strike fewe strokes but
by assent and appointment. I hard sum men say,
it did mooch augment their suspicion that wey, bycaus
at the battail they sawe these prikkers so badly demean
them, more intending the taking of prisoners, than
the surety of victorye; for while oother men fought,
thei fell to their prey; that as thear wear but fewe
of them but brought home his prisoner, so wear thear
many that had six or seven.”—Patten’s
Account of Somerset’s Expedition, apud Dalyell’s
Fragments, p. 76.
It is singular that, about this very
period, the same circumstances are severely animadverted
upon by the strenuous Scottishman, who wrote the Complaynt
of Scotland, as well as by the English author above
quoted. “There is nothing that is occasione
of your adhering to the opinion of Ingland contrair
your natife cuntré, bot the grit familiarite that
Inglis men and Scottes hes had on baitht the boirdours,
ilk are witht utheris, in merchandeis, in selling and
buying hors and nolt, and scheip, outfang and infang,
ilk are amang utheris, the whilk familiarite is express
contrar the lauis and consuetudis bayth of Ingland
and Scotland. In auld tymis it was determit in
the artiklis of the pace, be the twa wardanis of the
boirdours of Ingland and Scotland, that there suld
be na familiarite betwix Scottis men and Inglis men,
nor marriage to be contrakit betwix them, nor conventions
on holydais at gammis and plays, nor merchandres to
be maid amang them, nor Scottis men till enter on Inglis
grond, witht out the king of Ingland’s save
conduct, nor Inglis men til enter on Scottis grond
witht out the King of Scotland’s save conduct,
howbeit that ther war sure pace betwix the twa realmes.
Bot thir sevyn yeir bygane, thai statutis and artiklis
of the pace are adnullit, for ther hes been as grit
familiarite, and conventions, and makyng of merchandreis,
on the boirdours, this lang tyme betwix Inglis men
and Scottis men, baytht in pace and weir, as Scottismen
usis amang theme selfis witht in the realme of Scotland:
and sic familiarite has bene the cause that the kyng
of Ingland gat intelligence witht divers gentlemen
of Scotland.”
Complaynt of Scotland, Edin. 1801, p.
164.]
This humanity and moderation was,
on certain occasions, entirely laid aside by the borderers.
In the case of deadly feud, either against an Englishman,
or against any neighbouring tribe, the whole force
of the offended clan was bent to avenge the death
of any of their number. Their vengeance not only
vented itself upon the homicide and his family, but
upon all his kindred, on his whole tribe; on every
one, in fine, whose death or ruin could affect him
with regret.—Lesley, p. 63; Border
Laws, passim; Scottish Acts, 1594,
c. 231. The reader will find, in the following
collection, many allusions to this infernal custom,
which always overcame the marcher’s general
reluctance to shed human, blood, and rendered him remorselessly
savage.
For fidelity to their word, Lesley
ascribes high praise to the inhabitants of the Scottish
frontier. When an instance happened to the contrary,
the injured person, at the first border meeting, rode
through the field, displaying a glove (the pledge of
faith) upon the point of his lance, and proclaiming
the perfidy of the person, who had broken his word.
So great was the indignation of the assembly against
the perjured criminal, that he was often slain by his
own clan, to wipe out the disgrace he had brought
on them. In the same spirit of confidence, it
was not unusual to behold the victors, after an engagement,
dismiss their prisoners upon parole, who never failed
either to transmit the stipulated ransom, or to surrender
themselves to bondage, if unable to do so. But
the virtues of a barbarous people, being founded not
upon moral principle, but upon the dreams of superstition,
or the capricious dictates of antient custom, can seldom
be uniformly relied on. We must not, therefore,
be surprised to find these very men, so true to their
word in general, using, upon other occasions, various
resources of cunning and chicane, against which the
border laws were in vain directed.
The immediate rulers of the borders
were the chiefs of the different clans, who exercised
over their respective septs a dominion, partly patriarchal,
and partly feudal. The latter bond of adherence
was, however, the more slender; for, in the acts regulating
the borders, we find repeated mention of “Clannes
having captaines and chieftaines, whom on they depend,
oft-times against the willes of their landeslordes.”—Stat.
1587, c. 95, and the Roll thereto annexed.
Of course, these laws looked less to the feudal superior,
than to the chieftain of the name, for the restraint
of the disorderly tribes; and it is repeatedly enacted,
that the head of the clan should be first called upon
to deliver those of his sept, who should commit any
trespass, and that, on his failure to do so, he should
be liable to the injured party in full redress. Ibidem,
and Stat. 1594, c. 231. By the same statutes,
the chieftains and landlords, presiding over border
clans, were obliged to find caution, and to grant hostages,
that they would subject themselves to the due course
of law. Such clans, as had no chieftain of sufficient
note to enter bail for their quiet conduct, became
broken men, outlawed to both nations.
From these enactments, the power of
the border chieftains may be conceived; for it had
been hard and useless to have punished them for the
trespasses of their tribes, unless they possessed over
them unlimited authority. The abode of these
petty princes by no means corresponded to the extent
of their power. We do not find, on the Scottish
borders, the splendid and extensive baronial castles,
which graced and defended the opposite frontier.
The gothic grandeur of Alnwick, of Raby, and of Naworth,
marks the wealthier and more secure state of the English
nobles. The Scottish chieftain, however extensive
his domains, derived no advantage, save from such parts
as he could himself cultivate or occupy. Payment
of rent was hardly known on the borders, till after
the union37. All that the landlord could gain,
from those residing upon his estate, was their personal
service in battle, their assistance in labouring the
land retained in his natural possession, some petty
quit-rents, of a nature resembling the feudal casualties,
and perhaps a share in the spoil which they acquired
by rapine38. This, with his herds of cattle
and of sheep, and with the black mail, which
he exacted from his neighbours, constituted the revenue
of the chieftain; and, from funds so precarious, he
could rarely spare sums to expend in strengthening
or decorating his habitation. Another reason
is found in the Scottish mode of warfare. It
was early discovered, that the English surpassed their
neighbours in the arts of assaulting or defending
fortified places. The policy of the Scottish,
therefore, deterred them from erecting upon the borders
buildings of such extent and strength, as, being once
taken by the foe, would have been capable of receiving
a permanent garrison39. To themselves, the
woods and hills of their country were pointed out,
by the great Bruce, as their safest bulwarks; and the
maxim of the Douglasses, that “it was better
to hear the lark sing, than the mouse cheep,”
was adopted by every border chief. For these combined
reasons, the residence of the chieftain was commonly
a large square battlemented40 tower, called a keep,
or peel; placed on a precipice, or on the banks
of a torrent, and, if the ground would permit, surrounded
by a moat. In short, the situation of a border
house, surrounded by woods, and rendered almost inaccessible
by torrents, by rocks, or by morasses, sufficiently
indicated the pursuits and apprehensions of its inhabitant.—“Locus
horroris et vastae solitudinis, aptus ad praedam,
habilis ad rapinam, habitatoribus suis lapis erat
offensiones et petra scandali, utpote qui stipendiis
suis minime contenti totum de alieno parum de suo
possidebant—totius provinciae spolium.”
No wonder, therefore, that James V., on approaching
the castle of Lochwood, the antient seat of the Johnstones,
is said to have exclaimed, “that he who built
it must have been a knave in his heart.”
An outer wall, with some slight fortifications, served
as a protection for the cattle at night. The
walls of these fortresses were of an immense thickness,
and they could easily be defended against any small
force; more especially, as, the rooms being vaulted,
each story formed a separate lodgement, capable of
being held out for a considerable time. On such
occasions, the usual mode, adopted by the assailants,
was to expel the defenders, by setting fire to wet
straw in the lower apartments. But the border
chieftains seldom chose to abide in person a siege
of this nature; and I have not observed a single instance
of a distinguished baron made prisoner in his own
house41.—Patten’s Expedition,
p. 35. The common people resided in paltry huts,
about the safety of which they were little anxious,
as they contained nothing of value. On the approach
of a superior force, they unthatched them, to prevent
their being burned, and then abandoned them to the
foe.—Stowe’s Chronicle, p.
665. Their only treasures were, a fleet and active
horse, with the ornaments which their rapine had procured
for the females of their family, of whose gay appearance
the borderers were vain.
[Footnote 37: Stowe, in detailing
the happy consequences of the union of the crowns,
observes, “that the northerne borders became
as safe, and peaceable, as any part of the entire
kingdome, so as in the fourth yeare of the king’s
raigne, as well gentlemen as others, inhabiting the
places aforesayde, finding the auncient wast ground
to be very good and fruitefull, began to contende
in lawe about their bounds, challenging then, that
for their hereditarie right, which formerly they disavowed,
only to avoyde charge of common defence.”]
[Footnote 38: “As for the
humours of the people (i.e. of Tiviotdale),
they were both strong and warlike, as being inured
to war, and daily incursions, and the most part of
the heritors of the country gave out all their lands
to their tenants, for military attendance upon rentals,
and reserved only some few manses for their own sustenance,
which were laboured by their tenants, besides their
service. They paid an entry, a herauld, and a
small rental-duty; for there were no rents raised
here that were considerable, till King James went
into England; yea, all along the border.”—Account
of Roxburghshire, by Sir William Scott of Harden,
and Kerr of Sunlaws, apud Macfarlane’s MSS.]
[Footnote 39: The royal castles
of Roxburgh, Hermitage, Lochmaben, &c. form a class
of exceptions to this rule, being extensive and well
fortified. Perhaps we ought also to except the
baronial castle of Home. Yet, in 1455, the following
petty garrisons were thought sufficient for the protection
of the border; two hundred spearmen, and as many archers,
upon the east and middle marches; and one hundred
spears, with a like number of bowmen, upon the western
marches. But then the same statute provides,
“They that are neare hand the bordoure, are
ordained to have gud househaldes, and abuilzed men
as effeiris: and to be reddie at their principal
place, and to pass, with the wardanes, quhen and quhair
they sail be charged.”—Acts of
James II., cap. 55, Of garisonnes to be laid
upon the borderes.—Hence Buchanan has
justly described, as an attribute of the Scottish nation,
“Nec fossis, nee muris, patriam
sed Marte tueri.”
[Footnote 40: I have observed
a difference in architecture betwixt the English and
Scottish towers. The latter usually have upon
the top a projecting battlement, with interstices,
anciently called machicoules, betwixt the parapet
and the wall, through which stones or darts might
be hurled upon the assailants. This kind of fortification
is less common on the south border.]
[Footnote 41: I ought to except
the famous Dand Ker, who was made prisoner in his
castle of Fairnihirst, after defending it bravely
against Lord Dacres, 24th September, 1523.]
Some rude monuments occur upon the
borders, the memorial of ancient valour. Such
is the cross at Milholm, on the banks of the Liddel,
said to have been erected in memory of the chief of
the Armstrongs, murdered treacherously by Lord Soulis,
while feasting in Hermitage castle. Such also,
a rude stone, now broken, and very much defaced, placed
upon a mount on the lands of Haughhead, near the junction
of the Kale and Teviot. The inscription records
the defence made by Hobbie Hall, a man of great strength
and courage against an attempt by the powerful family
of Ker, to possess themselves of his small estate42.
[Footnote 42: The rude strains
of the inscription little correspond with the gallantry
of a
—village Hampden, who, with
dauntless breast,
The little tyrant of his fields withstood.
It is in these words:
Here Hobbie Hall boldly maintained his
right, ‘Gainst reif, plain force, armed wi’
awles might. Full thirty pleughs, harnes’d
in all their gear, Could not his valiant noble heart
make fear: But wi’ his sword, he cut
the foremost’s soam In two; and drove baith
pleughs and pleughmen home. 1620.
Soam means the iron links,
which fasten a yoke of oxen to the plough.]
The same simplicity marked their dress
and arms. Patten observes, that in battle the
laird could not be distinguished from the serf:
all wearing the same coat armour, called a jack, and
the baron being only distinguished by his sleeves
of mail, and his head-piece. The borderers, in
general, acted as light cavalry; riding horses of a
small size, but astonishingly nimble, and trained to
move, by short bounds, through the morasses with which
Scotland abounds. Their offensive weapons were,
a lance of uncommon length; a sword, either two-handed,
or of the modern light size; sometimes a species of
battle-axe, called a Jedburgh-staff; and, latterly,
dags, or pistols. Although so much accustomed
to act on horseback, that they held it even mean to
appear otherwise, the marchmen occasionally acted as
infantry; nor were they inferior to the rest of Scotland
in forming that impenetrable phalanx of spears, whereof
it is said, by an English historian, that “sooner
shall a bare finger pierce through the skin of an
angry hedge-hog, than any one encounter the brunt of
their pikes.” At the battle of Melrose,
for example, Buccleuch’s army fought upon foot.
But the habits of the borderers fitted them particularly
to distinguish themselves as light cavalry; and hence
the name of prickers and hobylers, so frequently
applied to them. At the blaze of their beacon
fires, they were wont to assemble ten thousand horsemen
in the course of a single day. Thus rapid in their
warlike preparations, they were alike ready for attack
and defence. Each individual carried his own
provisions, consisting of a small bag of oatmeal,
and trusted to plunder, or the chace, for ekeing out
his precarious meal. Beaugé remarks, that nothing
surprised the Scottish cavalry so much as to see their
French auxiliaries encumbered with baggage-waggons,
and attended by commissaries. Before joining battle,
it seems to have been the Scottish practice to set
fire to the litter of their camp, while, under cover
of the smoke, the hobylers, or border cavalry,
executed their manoeuvres.—There is a curious
account of the battle of Mitton, fought in the year
1319, in a valuable MS. Chronicle of England,
in the collection of the Marquis of Douglas, from
which this stratagem seems to have decided the engagement.
“In meyn time, while the wer thus lastyd, the
kynge went agane into Skotlonde, that hitte was wonder
for to wette, and bysechyd the towne of Barwick; but
the Skottes went over the water of Sold, that was iii
myle from the hoste, and prively they stole awaye be
nyghte, and come into England, and robbed and destroyed
all that they myght, and spared no manner thing til
that they come to Yorke. And, whan the Englischemen,
that wer left att home, herd this tiding, all tho that
myght well travell, so well monkys and priestis, and
freres, and chanouns, and seculars, come and met with
the Skottes at Mytone of Swale, the xii day of October.
Allas, for sorow for the Englischemen! housbondmen,
that could nothing in wer, ther were quelled and drenchyd
in an arm of the see. And hyr chyftaines, Sir
William Milton, ersch-biishop of Yorke, and the abbot
of Selby, with her stedes, fled and com into Yorke;
and that was her owne folye that they had that mischaunce;
for the passyd the water of Swale, and the Skottes
set on fiir three stalkes of hey, and the smoke thereof
was so huge, that the Englischemen might nott se the
Scottes; and whan the Englischemen were gon over the
water, tho cam the Skottes, with hir wyng, in maner
of a sheld, and come toward the Englischemen in ordour.
And the Englischemen fled for unnethe they had any
use of armes, for the kyng had hem al almost lost
att the sege of Barwick. And the Scotsmen hobylers
went betwene the brigge and the Englischemen; and when
the gret hoste them met, the Englischemen fled between
the hobylers and the gret hoste; and the Englischemen
were ther quelled, and he that myght wend over the
water were saved, but many were drowned. Alas!
for there were slayn many men of religion, and seculars,
and pristis, and clerks, and with much sorwe the erschbischope
scaped from the Skottes; and, therefore, the Skottes
called that battell the White Battell”
For smaller predatory expeditions,
the borderers had signals, and places of rendezvous,
peculiar to each tribe. If the party set forward
before all the members had joined, a mark, cut in the
turf, or on the bark of a tree, pointed out to the
stragglers the direction which the main body had pursued43.
[Footnote 43: In the parish of
Linton, in Roxburghshire, there is a circle of stones,
surrounding a smooth plot of turf, called the Tryst,
or place of appointment, which tradition avers to have
been the rendezvous of the neighbouring warriors.
The name of the leader was cut in the turf, and the
arrangement of the letters announced to his followers
the course which he had taken. See Statistical
Account of the Parish of Linton.]
Their warlike convocations were, also,
frequently disguised, under pretence of meetings for
the purpose of sport. The game of foot-ball,
in particular which was anciently, and still continues
to be, a favourite border sport, was the means of
collecting together large bodies of moss-troopers,
previous to any military exploit. When Sir Robert
Carey was warden of the east marches, the knowledge
that there was a great match of foot-ball at Kelso,
to be frequented by the principal Scottish riders,
was sufficient to excite his vigilance and his apprehension44.
Previous also to the murder of Sir John Carmichael
(see Notes on the Raid of the Reidswire,) it
appeared at the trial of the perpetrators that they
had assisted at a grand foot-ball meeting, where the
crime was concerted.
[Footnote 44: See Appendix.]
Upon the religion of the borderers
there can very little be said. We have already
noticed, that they remained attached to the Roman
Catholic faith rather longer than the rest of Scotland.
This probably arose from a total indifference upon
the subject; for, we no where find in their character
the respect for the church, which is a marked feature
of that religion. In 1528, Lord Dacre complains
heavily to Cardinal Wolsey, that, having taken a notorious
freebooter, called Dyk Irwen, the brother and friends
of the outlaw had, in retaliation, seized a man of
some property, and a relation of Lord Dacre, called
Jeffrey Middleton, as he returned from a pilgrimage
to St. Ninian’s, in Galloway; and that, notwithstanding
the sanctity of his character, as a true pilgrim,
and the Scottish monarch’s safe conduct, they
continued to detain him in their fastnesses, until
he should redeem the said arrant thief, Dyk Irwen.
The abbeys, which were planted upon the border, neither
seem to have been much respected by the English, nor
by the Scottish barons. They were repeatedly burned
by the former, in the course of the border wars, and
by the latter they seem to have been regarded chiefly
as the means of endowing a needy relation, or the
subject of occasional plunder. Thus, Andrew Home
of Fastcastle, about 1488, attempted to procure a
perpetual feu of certain possessions belonging to
the abbey of Coldinghame; and being baffled, by the
king bestowing that opulent benefice upon the royal
chapel at Stirling, the Humes and Hepburns started
into rebellion; asserting, that the priory should
be conferred upon some younger son of their families,
according to ancient custom. After the fatal battle
of Flodden, one of the Kerrs testified his contempt
for clerical immunities and privileges, by expelling
from his house the abbot of Kelso. These bickerings
betwixt the clergy and the barons were usually excited
by disputes about their temporal interest. It
was common for the churchmen to grant lands in feu
to the neighbouring gentlemen, who, becoming their
vassals, were bound to assist and protect them45.
But, as the possessions and revenues of the benefices
became thus intermixed with those of the laity, any
attempts rigidly to enforce the claims of the church
were usually attended by the most scandalous disputes.
A petty warfare was carried on for years, betwixt
James, abbot of Dryburgh, and the family of Halliburton
of Mertoun, or Newmains, who held some lands from
that abbey. These possessions were, under various
pretexts, seized and laid waste by both parties; and
some bloodshed took place in the contest, betwixt the
lay vassals and their spiritual superior. The
matter was, at length, thought of sufficient importance
to be terminated by a reference to his majesty; whose
decree arbitral, dated at Stirling, the 8th of May,
1535, proceeds thus: “Whereas we, having
been advised and knowing the said gentlemen, the Halliburtons,
to be leal and true honest men, long servants unto
the saide abbeye, for the saide landis, stout men at
armes, and goode borderers against Ingland; and doe
therefore decree and ordaine, that they sail be re-possess’d,
and bruik and enjoy the landis and steedings they
had of the said abbeye, paying the use and wonte:
and that they sall be goode servants to the said venerabil
father, like as they and their predecessours were to
the said venerabil father, and his predecessours,
and he a good master to them46.” It is
unnecessary to detain the reader with other instances
of the discord, which prevailed anciently upon the
borders, betwixt the spiritual shepherd and his untractable
flock.
[Footnote 45: These vassals resembled,
in some degree, the Vidames in France, and the Vogten,
or Vizedomen, of the German abbeys; but the system
was never carried regularly into effect in Britain,
and this circumstance facilitated the dissolution
of the religious houses.]
[Footnote 46: This decree was
followed by a marriage betwixt the abbot’s daughter,
Elizabeth Stewart, and Walter Halliburton, one of
the family of Newmains. But even this alliance
did not secure peace between the venerable father
and his vassals. The offspring of the marriage
was an only daughter, named Elizabeth Halliburton.
As this young lady was her father’s heir, the
Halliburtons resolved that she should marry one of
her cousins, to keep her property in the clan.
But as this did not suit the views of the abbot, he
carried off by force the intended bride, and married
her, at Stirling, to Alexander Erskine, a brother
of the laird of Balgony, a relation and follower of
his own. From this marriage sprung the Erskines
of Shielfield. This exploit of the abbot revived
the feud betwixt him and the Halliburtons, which only
ended with the dissolution of the abbey.—MS.
History of Halliburton Family, penes editorem.]
The reformation was late of finding
its way into the border wilds; for, while the religious
and civil dissentions were at the height in 1568,
Drury writes to Cecil,—“Our trusty
neighbours of Teviotdale are holden occupied only
to attend to the pleasure and calling of their own
heads, to make some diversion in this matter.”
The influence of the reformed preachers, among the
borders, seems also to have been but small; for, upon
all occasions of dispute with the kirk, James VI. was
wont to call in their assistance. Calderwood,
p. 129.
We learn from a curious passage in
the life of Richard Cameron, a fanatical preacher
during the time of what is called “the persecution,”
that some of the borderers retained to a late period
their indifference about religious matters. After
having been licensed at Haughhead, in Teviotdale,
he was, according to his biographer, sent first to
preach in Annandale. “He said, ’how
can I go there? I know what sort of people they
are.’ ‘But,’ Mr. Welch said,
’go your way, Ritchie, and set the fire of hell
to their tails.’ He went; and, the first
day, he preached upon that text, Home shall I put
thee among the children, &c. In the application
he said, ’Put you among the children! the offspring
of thieves and robbers! we have all heard of Annandale
thieves.’ Some of them got a merciful cast
that day, and told afterwards, that it was the first
field meeting they ever attended, and that they went
out of mere curiosity, to see a