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+<h2>
+<a href="#startoftext">John Knox and the Reformation, by Andrew Lang</a>
+</h2>
+<pre>
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, John Knox and the Reformation, by Andrew Lang
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: John Knox and the Reformation
+
+Author: Andrew Lang
+
+Release Date: November 10, 2004 [eBook #14016]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JOHN KNOX AND THE REFORMATION***
+</pre>
+<p><a name="startoftext"></a></p>
+<p>Transcribed from the 1905 Longmans, Green and Co. edition by David
+Price, email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk</p>
+<h1>John Knox and the Reformation</h1>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/knox1b.jpg">
+<img alt="John Knox. From a Posthumous Portrait. Beza&rsquo;s Icones, 1850" src="images/knox1s.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>To Maurice Hewlett</p>
+<h2>PREFACE</h2>
+<p>In this brief Life of Knox I have tried, as much as I may, to get
+behind Tradition, which has so deeply affected even modern histories
+of the Scottish Reformation, and even recent Biographies of the Reformer.&nbsp;
+The tradition is based, to a great extent, on Knox&rsquo;s own &ldquo;History,&rdquo;
+which I am therefore obliged to criticise as carefully as I can.&nbsp;
+In his valuable <i>John Knox</i>, <i>a Biography</i>, Professor Hume
+Brown says that in the &ldquo;History&rdquo; &ldquo;we have convincing
+proof alike of the writer&rsquo;s good faith, and of his perception
+of the conditions of historic truth.&rdquo;&nbsp; My reasons for dissenting
+from this favourable view will be found in the following pages.&nbsp;
+If I am right, if Knox, both as a politician and an historian, resembled
+Charles I. in &ldquo;sailing as near the wind&rdquo; as he could, the
+circumstance (as another of his biographers remarks) &ldquo;only makes
+him more human and interesting.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Opinion about Knox and the religious Revolution in which he took
+so great a part, has passed through several variations in the last century.&nbsp;
+In the <i>Edinburgh Review</i> of 1816 (No. liii. pp. 163-180), is an
+article with which the present biographer can agree.&nbsp; Several passages
+from Knox&rsquo;s works are cited, and the reader is expected to be
+&ldquo;shocked at their principles.&rdquo;&nbsp; They are certainly
+shocking, but they are not, as a rule, set before the public by biographers
+of the Reformer.</p>
+<p>Mr. Carlyle introduced a style of thinking about Knox which may be
+called platonically Puritan.&nbsp; Sweet enthusiasts glide swiftly over
+all in the Reformer that is specially distasteful to us.&nbsp; I find
+myself more in harmony with the outspoken Hallam, Dr. Joseph Robertson,
+David Hume, and the Edinburgh reviewer of 1816, than with several more
+recent students of Knox.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Reformer&rsquo;s violent counsels and intemperate speech
+were remarkable,&rdquo; writes Dr. Robertson, &ldquo;even in his own
+ruthless age,&rdquo; and he gives fourteen examples. <a name="citation0a"></a><a href="#footnote0a">{0a}</a>&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Lord Hailes has shown,&rdquo; he adds, &ldquo;how little Knox&rsquo;s
+statements&rdquo; (in his &ldquo;History&rdquo;) &ldquo;are to be relied
+on even in matters which were within the Reformer&rsquo;s own knowledge.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+In Scotland there has always been the party of Cavalier and White Rose
+sentimentalism.&nbsp; To this party Queen Mary is a saintly being, and
+their admiration of Claverhouse goes far beyond that entertained by
+Sir Walter Scott.&nbsp; On the other side, there is the party, equally
+sentimental, which musters under the banner of the Covenant, and sees
+scarcely a blemish in Knox.&nbsp; A pretty sample of the sentiment of
+this party appears in a biography (1905) of the Reformer by a minister
+of the Gospel.&nbsp; Knox summoned the organised brethren, in 1563,
+to overawe justice, when some men were to be tried on a charge of invading
+in arms the chapel of Holyrood.&nbsp; No proceeding could be more anarchic
+than Knox&rsquo;s, or more in accordance with the lovable customs of
+my dear country, at that time.&nbsp; But the biographer of 1905, &ldquo;a
+placed minister,&rdquo; writes that &ldquo;the doing of it&rdquo; (Knox&rsquo;s
+summons) &ldquo;was only an assertion of the liberty of the Church,
+and of the members of the Commonwealth as a whole, to assemble for purposes
+which were clearly lawful&rdquo;&mdash;the purposes being to overawe
+justice in the course of a trial!</p>
+<p>On sentiment, Cavalier or Puritan, reason is thrown away.</p>
+<p>I have been surprised to find how completely a study of Knox&rsquo;s
+own works corroborates the views of Dr. Robertson and Lord Hailes.&nbsp;
+That Knox ran so very far ahead of the Genevan pontiffs of his age in
+violence; and that in his &ldquo;History&rdquo; he needs such careful
+watching, was, to me, an unexpected discovery.&nbsp; He may have been
+&ldquo;an old Hebrew prophet,&rdquo; as Mr. Carlyle says, but he had
+also been a young Scottish notary!&nbsp; A Hebrew prophet is, at best,
+a dangerous anachronism in a delicate crisis of the Church Christian;
+and the notarial element is too conspicuous in some passages of Knox&rsquo;s
+&ldquo;History.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>That Knox was a great man; a disinterested man; in his regard for
+the poor a truly Christian man; as a shepherd of Calvinistic souls a
+man fervent and considerate; of pure life; in friendship loyal; by jealousy
+untainted; in private character genial and amiable, I am entirely convinced.&nbsp;
+In public and political life he was much less admirable; and his &ldquo;History,&rdquo;
+vivacious as it is, must be studied as the work of an old-fashioned
+advocate rather than as the summing up of a judge.&nbsp; His favourite
+adjectives are &ldquo;bloody,&rdquo; &ldquo;beastly,&rdquo; &ldquo;rotten,&rdquo;
+and &ldquo;stinking.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Any inaccuracies of my own which may have escaped my correction will
+be dwelt on, by enthusiasts for the Prophet, as if they are the main
+elements of this book, and disqualify me as a critic of Knox&rsquo;s
+&ldquo;History.&rdquo;&nbsp; At least any such errors on my part are
+involuntary and unconscious.&nbsp; In Knox&rsquo;s defence we must remember
+that he never saw his &ldquo;History&rdquo; in print.&nbsp; But he kept
+it by him for many years, obviously re-reading, for he certainly retouched
+it, as late as 1571.</p>
+<p>In quoting Knox and his contemporaries, I have used modern spelling:
+the letter from the State Papers printed on pp. 146, 147, shows what
+the orthography of the period was really like.&nbsp; Consultation of
+the original MSS. on doubtful points, proves that the printed Calendars,
+though excellent guides, cannot be relied on as authorities.</p>
+<p>The portrait of Knox, from Beza&rsquo;s book of portraits of Reformers,
+is posthumous, but is probably a good likeness drawn from memory, after
+a description by Peter Young, who knew him, and a design, presumably
+by &ldquo;Adrianc Vaensoun,&rdquo; a Fleming, resident in Edinburgh.
+<a name="citation0b"></a><a href="#footnote0b">{0b}</a></p>
+<p>There is an interesting portrait, possibly of Knox, in the National
+Gallery of Portraits, but the work has no known authentic history.</p>
+<p>The portrait of Queen Mary, at the age of thirty-six, and a prisoner,
+is from the Earl of Morton&rsquo;s original; it is greatly superior
+to the &ldquo;Sheffield&rdquo; type of likenesses, of about 1578; and,
+with Janet&rsquo;s and other drawings (1558-1561), the Bridal medal
+of 1558, and (in my opinion) the Earl of Leven and Melville&rsquo;s
+portrait, of about 1560-1565, is the best extant representation of the
+Queen.</p>
+<p>The Leven and Melville portrait of Mary, young and charming, and
+wearing jewels which are found recorded in her Inventories, has hitherto
+been overlooked.&nbsp; An admirable photogravure is given in Mr. J.
+J. Foster&rsquo;s &ldquo;True Portraiture of Mary, Queen of Scots&rdquo;
+(1905), and I understand that a photograph was done in 1866 for the
+South Kensington Museum.</p>
+<p>A. LANG.</p>
+<p>8 Gibson Place, St. Andrews.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER I: ANCESTRY, BIRTH, EDUCATION, ENVIRONMENT: 1513(?)-1546</h2>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>November</i> 24, 1572.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;John Knox, minister, deceased, who had, as was alleged, the
+most part of the blame of all the sorrows of Scotland since the slaughter
+of the late Cardinal.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It is thus that the decent burgess who, in 1572, kept <i>The Diurnal</i>
+of such daily events as he deemed important, cautiously records the
+death of the great Scottish Reformer.&nbsp; The sorrows, the &ldquo;cumber&rdquo;
+of which Knox was &ldquo;alleged&rdquo; to bear the blame, did not end
+with his death.&nbsp; They persisted in the conspiracies and rebellions
+of the earlier years of James VI.; they smouldered through the later
+part of his time; they broke into far spreading flame at the touch of
+the Covenant; they blazed at &ldquo;dark Worcester and bloody Dunbar&rdquo;;
+at Preston fight, and the sack of Dundee by Monk; they included the
+Cromwellian conquest of Scotland, and the shame and misery of the Restoration;
+to trace them down to our own age would be invidious.</p>
+<p>It is with the &ldquo;alleged&rdquo; author of the Sorrows, with
+his life, works, and ideas that we are concerned.</p>
+<p>John Knox, son of William Knox and of --- Sinclair, his wife, <a name="citation2a"></a><a href="#footnote2a">{2a}</a>
+unlike most Scotsmen, unlike even Mr. Carlyle, had not &ldquo;an ell
+of pedigree.&rdquo;&nbsp; The common scoff was that each Scot styled
+himself &ldquo;the King&rsquo;s poor cousin.&rdquo;&nbsp; But John Knox
+declared, &ldquo;I am a man of base estate and condition.&rdquo; <a name="citation2b"></a><a href="#footnote2b">{2b}</a>&nbsp;
+The genealogy of Mr. Carlyle has been traced to a date behind the Norman
+Conquest, but of Knox&rsquo;s ancestors nothing is known.&nbsp; He himself,
+in 1562, when he &ldquo;ruled the roast&rdquo; in Scotland, told the
+ruffian Earl of Bothwell, &ldquo;my grandfather, my maternal grandfather,
+and my father, have served your Lordship&rsquo;s predecessors, and some
+of them have died under their standards; and this&rdquo; (namely goodwill
+to the house of the feudal superior) &ldquo;is a part of the obligation
+of our Scottish kindness.&rdquo;&nbsp; Knox, indeed, never writes very
+harshly of Bothwell, partly for the reason he gives; partly, perhaps,
+because Bothwell, though an infamous character, and a political opponent,
+was not in 1562-67 &ldquo;an idolater,&rdquo; that is, a Catholic: if
+ever he had been one; partly because his &ldquo;History&rdquo; ends
+before Bothwell&rsquo;s murder of Darnley in 1567.</p>
+<p>Knox&rsquo;s ancestors were, we may suppose, peasant farmers, like
+the ancestors of Burns and Hogg; and Knox, though he married a maid
+of the Queen&rsquo;s kin, bore traces of his descent.&nbsp; &ldquo;A
+man ungrateful and unpleasable,&rdquo; Northumberland styled him: he
+was one who could not &ldquo;smiling, put a question by&rdquo;; if he
+had to remonstrate even with a person whom it was desirable to conciliate,
+he stated his case in the plainest and least flattering terms.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Of nature I am churlish, and in conditions different from many,&rdquo;
+he wrote; but this side of his character he kept mainly for people of
+high rank, accustomed to deference, and indifferent or hostile to his
+aims.&nbsp; To others, especially to women whom he liked, he was considerate
+and courteous, but any assertion of social superiority aroused his wakeful
+independence.&nbsp; His countrymen of his own order had long displayed
+these peculiarities of humour.</p>
+<p>The small Scottish cultivators from whose ranks Knox rose, appear,
+even before his age, in two strangely different lights.&nbsp; If they
+were not technically &ldquo;kindly tenants,&rdquo; in which case their
+conditions of existence and of tenure were comparatively comfortable
+and secure, they were liable to eviction at the will of the lord, and,
+to quote an account of their condition written in 1549, &ldquo;were
+in more servitude than the children of Israel in Egypt.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Henderson, the writer of 1549 whom we have quoted, hopes that the agricultural
+class may yet live &ldquo;as substantial commoners, not miserable cottars,
+charged daily to war and slay their neighbours <i>at their own expense</i>,&rdquo;
+as under the standards of the unruly Bothwell House.&nbsp; This Henderson
+was one of the political observers who, before the Scottish Reformation,
+hoped for a secure union between Scotland and England, in place of the
+old and romantic league with France.&nbsp; That alliance had, indeed,
+enabled both France and Scotland to maintain their national independence.&nbsp;
+But, with the great revolution in religion, the interest of Scotland
+was a permanent political league with England, which Knox did as much
+as any man to forward, while, by resisting a religious union, he left
+the seeds of many sorrows.</p>
+<p>If the Lowland peasantry, from one point of view, were terribly oppressed,
+we know that they were of independent manners.&nbsp; In 1515 the chaplain
+of Margaret Tudor, the Queen Mother, writes to one Adam Williamson:
+&ldquo;You know the use of this country.&nbsp; Every man speaks what
+he will without blame.&nbsp; The man hath more words than the master,
+and will not be content unless he knows the master&rsquo;s counsel.&nbsp;
+There is no order among us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Thus, two hundred and fifty years before Burns, the Lowland Scot
+was minded that &ldquo;A man&rsquo;s a man for a&rsquo; that!&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Knox was the true flower of this vigorous Lowland thistle.&nbsp; Throughout
+life he not only &ldquo;spoke what he would,&rdquo; but uttered &ldquo;the
+Truth&rdquo; in such a tone as to make it unlikely that his &ldquo;message&rdquo;
+should be accepted by opponents.&nbsp; Like Carlyle, however, he had
+a heart rich in affection, no breach in friendship, he says, ever began
+on his side; while, as &ldquo;a good hater,&rdquo; Dr. Johnson might
+have admired him.&nbsp; He carried into political and theological conflicts
+the stubborn temper of the Border prickers, his fathers, who had ridden
+under the Roses and the Lion of the Hepburns.&nbsp; So far Knox was
+an example of the doctrine of heredity; that we know, however little
+we learn in detail about his ancestors.</p>
+<p>The birthplace of Knox was probably a house in a suburb of Haddington,
+in a district on the path of English invasion.&nbsp; The year of his
+birth has long been dated, on a late statement of little authority,
+as 1505. <a name="citation4"></a><a href="#footnote4">{4}</a>&nbsp;
+Seven years after his death, however, a man who knew him well, namely,
+Peter Young, tutor and librarian of James VI., told Beza that Knox died
+in his fifty-ninth year.&nbsp; Dr. Hay Fleming has pointed out that
+his natal year was probably 1513-15, not 1505, and this reckoning, we
+shall see, appears to fit in better with the deeds of the Reformer.</p>
+<p>If Knox was born in 1513-15, he must have taken priest&rsquo;s orders,
+and adopted the profession of a notary, at nearly the earliest moment
+which the canonical law permitted.&nbsp; No man ought to be in priest&rsquo;s
+orders before he was twenty-five; Knox, if born in 1515, was just twenty-five
+in 1540, when he is styled &ldquo;Sir John Knox&rdquo; (one of &ldquo;The
+Pope&rsquo;s Knights&rdquo;) in legal documents, and appears as a notary.
+<a name="citation5"></a><a href="#footnote5">{5}</a>&nbsp; He certainly
+continued in orders and in the notarial profession as late as March
+1543.&nbsp; The law of the Church did not, in fact, permit priests to
+be notaries, but in an age when &ldquo;notaires&rdquo; were often professional
+forgers, the additional security for character yielded by Holy Orders
+must have been welcome to clients, and Bishops permitted priests to
+practise this branch of the law.</p>
+<p>Of Knox&rsquo;s near kin no more is known than of his ancestors.&nbsp;
+He had a brother, William, for whom, in 1552, he procured a licence
+to trade in England as owner of a ship of 100 tons.&nbsp; Even as late
+as 1656, there were not a dozen ships of this burden in Scotland, so
+William Knox must have been relatively a prosperous man.&nbsp; In 1544-45,
+there was a William Knox, a fowler or gamekeeper to the Earl of Westmoreland,
+who acted as a secret agent between the Scots in English pay and their
+paymasters.&nbsp; We much later (1559) find the Reformer&rsquo;s brother,
+William, engaged with him in a secret political mission to the Governor
+of Berwick; probably this William knew shy Border paths, and he may
+have learned them as the Lord Westmoreland&rsquo;s fowler in earlier
+years.</p>
+<p>About John Knox&rsquo;s early years and education nothing is known.&nbsp;
+He certainly acquired such Latin (<i>satis humilis</i>, says a German
+critic) as Scotland then had to teach; probably at the Burgh School
+of Haddington.&nbsp; A certain John Knox matriculated at the University
+of Glasgow in 1522, but he cannot have been the Reformer, if the Reformer
+was not born till 1513-15.&nbsp; Beza, on the other hand (1580), had
+learned, probably from the Reformer, whom he knew well, that Knox was
+a St. Andrews man, and though his name does not occur in the University
+Register, the Register was very ill kept.&nbsp; Supposing Knox, then,
+to have been born in 1513-15, and to have been educated at St. Andrews,
+we can see how he comes to know so much about the progress of the new
+religious ideas at that University, between 1529 and 1535.&nbsp; &ldquo;The
+Well of St. Leonard&rsquo;s College&rdquo; was a notorious fountain
+of heresies, under Gawain Logie, the Principal.&nbsp; Knox very probably
+heard the sermons of the Dominicans and Franciscans &ldquo;against the
+pride and idle life of bishops,&rdquo; and other abuses.&nbsp; He speaks
+of a private conversation between Friar Airth and Major (about 1534),
+and names some of the persons present at a sermon in the parish church
+of St. Andrews, as if he had himself been in the congregation.&nbsp;
+He gives the text and heads of the discourse, including &ldquo;merry
+tales&rdquo; told by the Friar. <a name="citation6"></a><a href="#footnote6">{6}</a>&nbsp;
+If Knox heard the sermons and stories of clerical scandals at St. Andrews,
+they did not prevent him from taking orders.&nbsp; His Greek and Hebrew,
+what there was of them, Knox must have acquired in later life, at least
+we never learn that he was taught by the famous George Wishart, who,
+about that time, gave Greek lectures at Montrose.</p>
+<p>The Catholic opponents of Knox naturally told scandalous anecdotes
+concerning his youth.&nbsp; These are destitute of evidence: about his
+youth we know nothing.&nbsp; It is a characteristic trait in him, and
+a fact much to his credit, that, though he is fond of expatiating about
+himself, he never makes confessions as to his earlier adventures.&nbsp;
+On his own years of the wild oat St. Augustine dilates in a style which
+still has charm: but Knox, if he sowed wild oats, is silent as the tomb.&nbsp;
+If he has anything to repent, it is not to the world that he confesses.&nbsp;
+About the days when he was &ldquo;one of Baal&rsquo;s shaven sort,&rdquo;
+in his own phrase; when he was himself an &ldquo;idolater,&rdquo; and
+a priest of the altar: about the details of his conversion, Knox is
+mute.&nbsp; It is probable that, as a priest, he examined Lutheran books
+which were brought in with other merchandise from Holland; read the
+Bible for himself; and failed to find Purgatory, the Mass, the intercession
+of Saints, pardons, pilgrimages, and other accessories of medi&aelig;val
+religion in the Scriptures. <a name="citation7"></a><a href="#footnote7">{7}</a>&nbsp;
+Knox had only to keep his eyes and ears open, to observe the clerical
+ignorance and corruption which resulted in great part from the Scottish
+habit of securing wealthy Church offices for ignorant, brutal, and licentious
+younger sons and bastards of noble families.&nbsp; This practice in
+Scotland was as odious to good Catholics, like Quentin Kennedy, Ninian
+Winzet, and, rather earlier, to Ferrerius, as to Knox himself.&nbsp;
+The prevalent anarchy caused by the long minorities of the Stuart kings,
+and by the interminable wars with England, and the difficulty of communications
+with Rome, had enabled the nobles thus to rob and deprave the Church,
+and so to provide themselves with moral reasons good for robbing her
+again; as a punishment for the iniquities which they had themselves
+introduced!</p>
+<p>The almost incredible ignorance and profligacy of the higher Scottish
+clergy (with notable exceptions) in Knox&rsquo;s youth, are not matter
+of controversy.&nbsp; They are as frankly recognised by contemporary
+Catholic as by Protestant authors.&nbsp; In the very year of the destruction
+of the monasteries (1559) the abuses are officially stated, as will
+be told later, by the last Scottish Provincial Council.&nbsp; Though
+three of the four Scottish universities were founded by Catholics, and
+the fourth, Edinburgh, had an endowment bequeathed by a Catholic, the
+clerical ignorance, in Knox&rsquo;s time, was such that many priests
+could hardly read.</p>
+<p>If more evidence is needed as to the debauched estate of the Scottish
+clergy, we obtain it from Mary of Guise, widow of James V., the Regent
+then governing Scotland for her child, Mary Stuart.&nbsp; The Queen,
+in December 1555, begged Pius IV. to permit her to levy a tax on her
+clergy, and to listen to what Cardinal Sermoneta would tell him about
+their need of reformation.&nbsp; The Cardinal drew a terrible sketch
+of the nefarious lives of &ldquo;every kind of religious women&rdquo;
+in Scotland.&nbsp; They go about with their illegal families and dower
+their daughters out of the revenues of the Church.&nbsp; The monks,
+too, have bloated wealth, while churches are allowed to fall into decay.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;The only hope is in the Holy Father,&rdquo; who should appoint
+an episcopal commission of visitation.&nbsp; For about forty years prelates
+have been alienating Church lands illegally, and churches and monasteries,
+by the avarice of those placed in charge, are crumbling to decay.&nbsp;
+Bishops are the chief dealers in cattle, fish, and hides, though we
+have, in fact, good evidence that their dealings were very limited,
+&ldquo;sma&rsquo; sums.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Not only the clergy, but the nobles and people were lawless.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;They are more difficult to manage than ever,&rdquo; writes Mary
+of Guise (Jan. 13, 1557).&nbsp; They are recalcitrant against law and
+order; every attempt at introducing these is denounced as an attack
+on their old laws: not that their laws are bad, but that they are badly
+administered. <a name="citation9"></a><a href="#footnote9">{9}</a>&nbsp;
+Scotland, in brief, had always been lawless, and for centuries had never
+been godly.&nbsp; She was untouched by the first fervour of the Franciscan
+and other religious revivals.&nbsp; Knox could not fail to see what
+was so patent: many books of the German reformers may have come in his
+way; no more was wanted than the preaching of George Wishart in 1543-45,
+to make him an irreconcilable foe of the doctrine as well as the discipline
+of his Church.</p>
+<p>Knox had a sincerely religious nature, and a conviction that he was,
+more than most men, though a sinner, in close touch with Him &ldquo;in
+whom we live and move and have our being.&rdquo;&nbsp; We ask ourselves,
+had Knox, as &ldquo;a priest of the altar,&rdquo; never known the deep
+emotions, which tongue may not utter, that the ceremonies and services
+of his Church so naturally awaken in the soul of the believer?&nbsp;
+These emotions, if they were in his experience, he never remembered
+tenderly, he flung them from him without regret; not regarding them
+even as dreams, beautiful and dear, but misleading, that came through
+the Ivory Gate.&nbsp; To Knox&rsquo;s opponent in controversy, Quentin
+Kennedy, the mass was &ldquo;the blessed Sacrament of the Altar . .
+. which is one of the chief Sacraments whereby our Saviour, for the
+salvation of mankind, has appointed the fruit of His death and passion
+to be daily renewed and applied.&rdquo;&nbsp; In this traditional view
+there is nothing unedifying, nothing injurious to the Christian life.&nbsp;
+But to Knox the wafer is an idol, a god &ldquo;of water and meal,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;but a feeble and miserable god,&rdquo; that can be destroyed
+&ldquo;by a bold and puissant mouse.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Rats and mice
+will desire no better dinner than white round gods enough.&rdquo; <a name="citation10"></a><a href="#footnote10">{10}</a></p>
+<p>The Reformer and the Catholic take up the question &ldquo;by different
+handles&rdquo;; and the Catholic grounds his defence on a text about
+Melchizedek!&nbsp; To Knox the mass is the symbol of all that he justly
+detested in the degraded Church as she then was in Scotland, &ldquo;that
+horrible harlot with her filthiness.&rdquo;&nbsp; To Kennedy it was
+what we have seen.</p>
+<p>Knox speaks of having been in &ldquo;the puddle of papistry.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+He loathes what he has left behind him, and it is natural to guess that,
+in his first years of priesthood, his religious nature slept; that he
+became a priest and notary merely that he &ldquo;might eat a morsel
+of bread&rdquo;; and that real &ldquo;conviction&rdquo; never was his
+till his studies of Protestant controversialists, and also of St. Augustine
+and the Bible, and the teaching of Wishart, raised him from a mundane
+life.&nbsp; Then he awoke to a passionate horror and hatred of his old
+routine of &ldquo;mumbled masses,&rdquo; of &ldquo;rites of human invention,&rdquo;
+whereof he had never known the poetry and the mystic charm.&nbsp; Had
+he known them, he could not have so denied and detested them.&nbsp;
+On the other hand, when once he had embraced the new ideas, Knox&rsquo;s
+faith in them, or in his own form of them, was firm as the round world,
+made so fast that it cannot be moved.&nbsp; He had now a <i>pou sto</i>,
+whence he could, and did, move the world of human affairs.&nbsp; A faith
+not to be shaken, and enormous energy were the essential attributes
+of the Reformer.&nbsp; It is almost impossible to find an instance in
+which Knox allows that he may have been mistaken: <i>d&rsquo;avoir toujours
+raison</i> was his claim.&nbsp; If he admits an error in details, it
+is usually an error of insufficient severity.&nbsp; He did not attack
+Northumberland or Mary Stuart with adequate violence; he did not disapprove
+enough of our prayer book; he did not hand a heretic over to the magistrates.</p>
+<p>While acting as a priest and notary, between 1540, at latest, and
+1543, Knox was engaged as private tutor to a boy named Brounefield,
+son of Brounefield of Greenlaw, and to other lads, spoken of as his
+&ldquo;bairns.&rdquo;&nbsp; In this profession of tutor he continued
+till 1547.</p>
+<p>Knox&rsquo;s personal aspect did not give signs of the uncommon strength
+which his unceasing labours demanded, but, like many men of energy,
+he had a perpetual youth of character and vigour.&nbsp; After his death,
+Peter Young described him as he appeared in his later years.&nbsp; He
+was somewhat below the &ldquo;just&rdquo; standard of height; his limbs
+were well and elegantly shaped; his shoulders broad, his fingers rather
+long, his head small, his hair black, his face somewhat swarthy, and
+not unpleasant to behold.&nbsp; There was a certain geniality in a countenance
+serious and stern, with a natural dignity and air of command; his eyebrows,
+when he was in anger, were expressive.&nbsp; His forehead was rather
+narrow, depressed above the eyebrows; his cheeks were full and ruddy,
+so that the eyes seemed to retreat into their hollows: they were dark
+grey, keen, and lively.&nbsp; The face was long, the nose also; the
+mouth was large, the upper lip being the thicker.&nbsp; The beard was
+long, rather thick and black, with a few grey hairs in his later years.
+<a name="citation12"></a><a href="#footnote12">{12}</a>&nbsp; The nearest
+approach to an authentic portrait of Knox is a woodcut, engraved after
+a sketch from memory by Peter Young, and after another sketch of the
+same kind by an artist in Edinburgh.&nbsp; Compared with the peevish
+face of Calvin, also in Beza&rsquo;s <i>Icones</i>, Knox looks a broad-minded
+and genial character.</p>
+<p>Despite the uncommon length to which Knox carried the contemporary
+approval of persecution, then almost universal, except among the Anabaptists
+(and any party out of power), he was not personally rancorous where
+religion was not concerned.&nbsp; But concerned it usually was!&nbsp;
+He was the subject of many anonymous pasquils and libels, we know, but
+he entirely disregarded them.&nbsp; If he hated any mortal personally,
+and beyond what true religion demands of a Christian, that mortal was
+the mother of Mary Stuart, an amiable lady in an impossible position.&nbsp;
+Of jealousy towards his brethren there is not a trace in Knox, and he
+told Queen Mary that he could ill bear to correct his own boys, though
+the age was as cruel to schoolboys as that of St. Augustine.</p>
+<p>The faults of Knox arose not in his heart, but in his head; they
+sprung from intellectual errors, and from the belief that he was always
+right.&nbsp; He applied to his fellow-Christians&mdash;Catholics&mdash;the
+commands which early Israel supposed to be divinely directed against
+foreign worshippers of Chemosh and Moloch.&nbsp; He endeavoured to force
+his own theory of what the discipline of the Primitive Apostolic Church
+had been upon a modern nation, following the example of the little city
+state of Geneva, under Calvin.&nbsp; He claimed for preachers chosen
+by local congregations the privileges and powers of the apostolic companions
+of Christ, and in place of &ldquo;sweet reasonableness,&rdquo; he applied
+the methods, quite alien to the Founder of Christianity, of the &ldquo;Sons
+of Thunder.&rdquo;&nbsp; All controversialists then relied on isolated
+and inappropriate scriptural texts, and Biblical analogies which were
+not analogous; but Knox employed these things, with perhaps unusual
+inconsistency, in varying circumstances.&nbsp; His &ldquo;History&rdquo;
+is not more scrupulous than that of other partisans in an exciting contest,
+and examples of his taste for personal scandal are not scarce.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER II: KNOX, WISHART, AND THE MURDER OF BEATON: 1545-1546</h2>
+<p>Our earliest knowledge of Knox, apart from mention of him in notarial
+documents, is derived from his own <i>History of the Reformation</i>.&nbsp;
+The portion of that work in which he first mentions himself was written
+about 1561-66, some twenty years after the events recorded, and in reading
+all this part of his Memoirs, and his account of the religious struggle,
+allowance must be made for errors of memory, or for erroneous information.&nbsp;
+We meet him first towards the end of &ldquo;the holy days of Yule&rdquo;&mdash;Christmas,
+1545.&nbsp; Knox had then for some weeks been the constant companion
+and armed bodyguard of George Wishart, who was calling himself &ldquo;the
+messenger of the Eternal God,&rdquo; and preaching the new ideas in
+Haddington to very small congregations.&nbsp; This Wishart, Knox&rsquo;s
+master in the faith, was a Forfarshire man; he is said to have taught
+Greek at Montrose, to have been driven thence in 1538 by the Bishop
+of Brechin, and to have recanted certain heresies in 1539.&nbsp; He
+had denied the merits of Christ as the Redeemer, but afterwards dropped
+that error, when persistence meant death at the stake.&nbsp; It was
+in Bristol that he &ldquo;burned his faggot,&rdquo; in place of being
+burned himself.&nbsp; There was really nothing humiliating in this recantation,
+for, after his release, he did not resume his heresy; clearly he yielded,
+not to fear, but to conviction of theological error. <a name="citation15a"></a><a href="#footnote15a">{15a}</a></p>
+<p>He next travelled in Germany, where a Jew, on a Rhine boat, inspired
+or increased his aversion to works of sacred art, as being &ldquo;idolatrous.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+About 1542-43 he was reading with pupils at Cambridge, and was remarked
+for the severity of his ascetic virtue, and for his great charity.&nbsp;
+At some uncertain date he translated the Helvetic Confession of Faith,
+and he was more of a Calvinist than a Lutheran.&nbsp; In July 1543 he
+returned to Scotland; at least he returned with some &ldquo;commissioners
+to England,&rdquo; who certainly came home in July 1543, as Knox mentions,
+though later he gives the date of Wishart&rsquo;s return in 1544, probably
+by a slip of the pen.</p>
+<p>Coming home in July 1543, Wishart would expect a fair chance of preaching
+his novel ideas, as peace between Scotland and Protestant England now
+seemed secure, and Arran, the Scottish Regent, the chief of the almost
+Royal House of Hamilton, was, for the moment, himself a Protestant.&nbsp;
+For five days (August 28-September 3, 1543) the great Cardinal Beaton,
+the head of the party of the Church, was outlawed, and Wishart&rsquo;s
+preaching at Dundee, about that date, is supposed by some <a name="citation15b"></a><a href="#footnote15b">{15b}</a>
+to have stimulated an attack then made on the monasteries in the town.&nbsp;
+But Arran suddenly recanted, deserted the Protestants and the faction
+attached to England, and joined forces with Cardinal Beaton, who, in
+November 1543, visited Dundee, and imprisoned the ringleaders in the
+riots.&nbsp; They are called &ldquo;the honestest men in the town,&rdquo;
+by the treble traitor and rascal, Crichton, laird of Brunston in Lothian,
+at this time a secret agent of Sadleir, the envoy of Henry VIII. (November
+25, 1543).</p>
+<p>By April 1544, Henry was preparing to invade Scotland, and the &ldquo;earnest
+professors&rdquo; of Protestant doctrines in Scotland sent to him &ldquo;a
+Scottish man called Wysshert,&rdquo; with a proposal for the kidnapping
+or murder of Cardinal Beaton.&nbsp; Brunston and other Scottish lairds
+of Wishart&rsquo;s circle were agents of the plot, and in 1545-46 our
+George Wishart is found companioning with them.&nbsp; When Cassilis
+took up the threads of the plot against Beaton, it was to Cassilis&rsquo;s
+country in Ayrshire that Wishart went and there preached.&nbsp; Thence
+he returned to Dundee, to fight the plague and comfort the citizens,
+and, towards the end of 1545, moved to Lothian, expecting to be joined
+there by his westland supporters, led by Cassilis&mdash;but entertaining
+dark forebodings of his doom.</p>
+<p>There were, however, other Wisharts, Protestants, in Scotland.&nbsp;
+It is not possible to prove that this reformer, though the associate,
+was the agent of the murderers, or was even conscious of their schemes.&nbsp;
+Yet if he had been, there was no matter for marvel.&nbsp; Knox himself
+approved of and applauded the murders of Cardinal Beaton and of Riccio,
+and, in that age, too many men of all creeds and parties believed that
+to kill an opponent of their religious cause was to imitate Phinehas,
+Jael, Jehu, and other patriots of Hebrew history.&nbsp; Dr. M&lsquo;Crie
+remarks that Knox &ldquo;held the opinion, that persons who, according
+to the law of God and the just laws of society, have forfeited their
+lives by the commission of flagrant crimes, such as notorious murderers
+and tyrants, may warrantably be put to death by private individuals,
+provided all redress in the ordinary course of justice is rendered impossible,
+in consequence of the offenders having usurped the executive authority,
+or being systematically protected by oppressive rulers.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+The ideas of Knox, in fact, varied in varying circumstances and moods,
+and, as we shall show, at times he preached notions far more truculent
+than those attributed to him by his biographer; at times was all for
+saint-like submission and mere &ldquo;passive resistance.&rdquo; <a name="citation17"></a><a href="#footnote17">{17}</a></p>
+<p>The current ideas of both parties on &ldquo;killing no murder&rdquo;
+were little better than those of modern anarchists.&nbsp; It was a prevalent
+opinion that a king might have a subject assassinated, if to try him
+publicly entailed political inconveniences.&nbsp; The Inquisition, in
+Spain, vigorously repudiated this theory, but the Inquisition was in
+advance of the age.&nbsp; Knox, as to the doctrine of &ldquo;killing
+no murder,&rdquo; was, and Wishart may have been, a man of his time.&nbsp;
+But Knox, in telling the story of a murder which he approves, unhappily
+displays a glee unbecoming a reformer of the Church of Him who blamed
+St. Peter for his recourse to the sword.&nbsp; The very essence of Christianity
+is cast to the winds when Knox utters his laughter over the murders
+or misfortunes of his opponents, yielding, as Dr. M&lsquo;Crie says,
+&ldquo;to the strong propensity which he felt to indulge his vein of
+humour.&rdquo;&nbsp; Other good men rejoiced in the murder of an enemy,
+but Knox chuckled.</p>
+<p>Nothing has injured Knox more in the eyes of posterity (when they
+happen to be aware of the facts) than this &ldquo;humour&rdquo; of his.</p>
+<p>Knox might be pardoned had he merely excused the murder of &ldquo;the
+devil&rsquo;s own son,&rdquo; Cardinal Beaton, who executed the law
+on his friend and master, George Wishart.&nbsp; To Wishart Knox bore
+a tender and enthusiastic affection, crediting him not only with the
+virtues of charity and courage which he possessed, but also with supernormal
+premonitions; &ldquo;he was so clearly illuminated with the spirit of
+prophecy.&rdquo;&nbsp; These premonitions appear to have come to Wishart
+by way of vision.&nbsp; Knox asserted some prophetic gift for himself,
+but never hints anything as to the method, whether by dream, vision,
+or the hearing of voices.&nbsp; He often alludes to himself as &ldquo;the
+prophet,&rdquo; and claims certain privileges in that capacity.&nbsp;
+For example the prophet may blamelessly preach what men call &ldquo;treason,&rdquo;
+as we shall see.&nbsp; As to his actual predictions of events, he occasionally
+writes as if they were mere deductions from Scripture.&nbsp; God will
+punish the idolater; A or B is an idolater; therefore it is safe to
+predict that God will punish him or her.&nbsp; &ldquo;What man then
+can cease to prophesy?&rdquo; he asks; and there is, if we thus consider
+the matter, no reason why anybody should ever leave off prophesying.
+<a name="citation18a"></a><a href="#footnote18a">{18a}</a></p>
+<p>But if the art of prophecy is common to all Bible-reading mankind,
+all mankind, being prophets, may promulgate treason, which Knox perhaps
+would not have admitted.&nbsp; He thought himself more specially a seer,
+and in his prayer after the failure of his friends, the murderers of
+Riccio, he congratulates himself on being favoured above the common
+sort of his brethren, and privileged to &ldquo;forespeak&rdquo; things,
+in an unique degree.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I dare not deny . . . but that God hath revealed unto me secrets
+unknown to the world,&rdquo; he writes <a name="citation18b"></a><a href="#footnote18b">{18b}</a>;
+and these claims soar high above mere deductions from Scripture.&nbsp;
+His biographer, Dr. M&lsquo;Crie, doubts whether we can dismiss, as
+necessarily baseless, all stories of &ldquo;extraordinary premonitions
+since the completion of the canon of inspiration.&rdquo; <a name="citation19"></a><a href="#footnote19">{19}</a>&nbsp;
+Indeed, there appears to be no reason why we should draw the line at
+a given date, and &ldquo;limit the operations of divine Providence.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+I would be the last to do so, but then Knox&rsquo;s premonitions are
+sometimes, or usually, without documentary and contemporary corroboration;
+once he certainly prophesied after the event (as we shall see), and
+he never troubles himself about his predictions which were unfulfilled,
+as against Queen Elizabeth.</p>
+<p>He supplied the Kirk with the tradition of supernormal premonitions
+in preachers&mdash;second-sight and clairvoyance&mdash;as in the case
+of Mr. Peden and other saints of the Covenant.&nbsp; But just as good
+cases of clairvoyance as any of Mr. Peden&rsquo;s are attributed to
+Catherine de Medici, who was not a saint, by her daughter, La Reine
+Margot, and others.&nbsp; In Knox, at all events, there is no trace
+of visual or auditory hallucinations, so common in religious experiences,
+whatever the creed of the percipient.&nbsp; He was not a visionary.&nbsp;
+More than this we cannot safely say about his prophetic vein.</p>
+<p>The enthusiasm which induced a priest, notary, and teacher like Knox
+to carry a claymore in defence of a beloved teacher, Wishart, seems
+more appropriate to a man of about thirty than a man of forty, and,
+so far, supports the opinion that, in 1545, Knox was only thirty years
+of age.&nbsp; In that case, his study of the debates between the Church
+and the new opinions must have been relatively brief.&nbsp; Yet, in
+1547, he already reckoned himself, not incorrectly, as a skilled disputant
+in favour of ideas with which he cannot have been very long familiar.</p>
+<p>Wishart was taken, was tried, was condemned; was strangled, and his
+dead body was burned at St. Andrews on March 1, 1546.&nbsp; It is highly
+improbable that Knox could venture, as a marked man, to be present at
+the trial.&nbsp; He cites the account of it in his &ldquo;History&rdquo;
+from the contemporary Scottish narrative used by Foxe in his &ldquo;Martyrs,&rdquo;
+and Laing, Knox&rsquo;s editor, thinks that Foxe &ldquo;may possibly
+have been indebted for some&rdquo; of the Scottish accounts &ldquo;to
+the Scottish Reformer.&rdquo;&nbsp; It seems, if there be anything in
+evidence of tone and style, that what Knox quotes from Foxe in 1561-66
+is what Knox himself actually wrote about 1547-48.&nbsp; Mr. Hill Burton
+observes in the tract &ldquo;the mark of Knox&rsquo;s vehement colouring,&rdquo;
+and adds, &ldquo;it is needless to seek in the account for precise accuracy.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+In &ldquo;precise accuracy&rdquo; many historians are as sadly to seek
+as Knox himself, but his peculiar &ldquo;colouring&rdquo; is all his
+own, and is as marked in the pamphlet on Wishart&rsquo;s trial, which
+he cites, as in the &ldquo;History&rdquo; which he acknowledged.</p>
+<p>There are said to be but few copies of the first edition of the black
+letter tract on Wishart&rsquo;s trial, published in London, with Lindsay&rsquo;s
+&ldquo;Tragedy of the Cardinal,&rdquo; by Day and Seres.&nbsp; I regard
+it as the earliest printed work of John Knox. <a name="citation20"></a><a href="#footnote20">{20}</a>&nbsp;
+The author, when he describes Lauder, Wishart&rsquo;s official accuser,
+as &ldquo;a fed sow . . . his face running down with sweat, and frothing
+at the mouth like ane bear,&rdquo; who &ldquo;spat at Maister George&rsquo;s
+face, . . . &rdquo; shows every mark of Knox&rsquo;s vehement and pictorial
+style.&nbsp; His editor, Laing, bids us observe &ldquo;that all these
+opprobrious terms are copied from Foxe, or rather from the black letter
+tract.&rdquo;&nbsp; But the black letter tract, I conceive, must be
+Knox&rsquo;s own.&nbsp; Its author, like Knox, &ldquo;indulges his vein
+of humour&rdquo; by speaking of friars as &ldquo;fiends&rdquo;; like
+Knox he calls Wishart &ldquo;Maister George,&rdquo; and &ldquo;that
+servand of God.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The peculiarities of the tract, good and bad, the vivid familiar
+manner, the vehemence, the pictorial quality, the violent invective,
+are the notes of Knox&rsquo;s &ldquo;History.&rdquo;&nbsp; Already,
+by 1547, or not much later, he was the perfect master of his style;
+his tone no more resembles that of his contemporary and fellow-historian,
+Lesley, than the style of Mr. J. R. Green resembles that of Mr. S. R.
+Gardiner.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER III: KNOX IN ST. ANDREWS CASTLE: THE GALLEYS: 1547-1549</h2>
+<p>We now take up Knox where we left him: namely when Wishart was arrested
+in January 1546.&nbsp; He was then tutor to the sons of the lairds of
+Langniddrie and Ormiston, Protestants and of the English party.&nbsp;
+Of his adventures we know nothing, till, on Beaton&rsquo;s murder (May
+29, 1546), the Cardinal&rsquo;s successor, Archbishop Hamilton, drove
+him &ldquo;from place to place,&rdquo; and, at Easter, 1547, he with
+his pupils entered the Castle of St. Andrews, then held, with some English
+aid, against the Regent Arran, by the murderers of Beaton and their
+adherents. <a name="citation22"></a><a href="#footnote22">{22}</a>&nbsp;
+Knox was not present, of course, at Beaton&rsquo;s murder, about which
+he writes so &ldquo;merrily,&rdquo; in his manner of mirth; nor at the
+events of Arran&rsquo;s siege of the castle, prior to April 1547.&nbsp;
+He probably, as regards these matters, writes from recollection of what
+Kirkcaldy of Grange, James Balfour, Balnaves, and the other murderers
+or associates of the murderers of the Cardinal told him in 1547, or
+later communicated to him as he wrote, about 1565-66.&nbsp; With his
+unfortunate love of imputing personal motives, he attributes the attacks
+by the rulers on the murderers mainly to the revengeful nature of Mary
+of Guise; the Cardinal having been &ldquo;the comfort to all gentlewomen,
+<i>and especially to wanton widows</i>.&nbsp; His death must be revenged.&rdquo;
+<a name="citation23a"></a><a href="#footnote23a">{23a}</a></p>
+<p>Knox avers that the besiegers of St. Andrews Castle, despairing of
+their task, near the end of January 1547 made a fraudulent truce with
+the assassins, hoping for the betrayal of the castle, or of some of
+the leaders. <a name="citation23b"></a><a href="#footnote23b">{23b}</a>&nbsp;
+In his narrative we find partisanship or very erroneous information.&nbsp;
+The conditions were, he says, that (1) the murderers should hold the
+castle till Arran could obtain for them, from the Pope, a sufficient
+absolution; (2) that they should give hostages, as soon as the absolution
+was delivered to them; (3) that they and their friends should not be
+prosecuted, nor undergo any legal penalties for the murder of the Cardinal;
+(4) that they should meanwhile keep the eldest son of Arran as hostage,
+so long as their own hostages were kept.&nbsp; The Government, however,
+says Knox, &ldquo;never minded to keep word of them&rdquo; (of these
+conditions), &ldquo;as the issue did declare.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There is no proof of this accusation of treachery on the part of
+Arran, or none known to me.&nbsp; The constant aim of Knox, his fixed
+idea, as an historian, is to accuse his adversaries of the treachery
+which often marked the negotiations of his friends.</p>
+<p>From this point, the truce, dated by Knox late in January 1547, he
+devotes eighteen pages to his own call to the ministry by the castle
+people, and to his controversies and sermons in St. Andrews.&nbsp; He
+then returns to history, and avers that, about June 21, 1547, the papal
+absolution was presented to the garrison merely as a veil for a treasonable
+attack, but was rejected, as it included the dubious phrase, <i>Remittimus
+irremissibile</i>&mdash;&ldquo;We remit the crime that cannot be remitted.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Nine days later, June 29, he says, by &ldquo;the treasonable mean&rdquo;
+of Arran, Archbishop Hamilton, and Mary of Guise, twenty-one French
+galleys, and such an army as the Firth had never seen, hove into view,
+and on June 30 summoned the castle to surrender.&nbsp; The siege of
+St Andrews Castle, from the sea, by the French then began, but the garrison
+and castle were unharmed, and many of the galley slaves and some French
+soldiers were slain, and a ship was driven out of action.&nbsp; The
+French &ldquo;shot two days&rdquo; only.&nbsp; On July 19 the siege
+was renewed by land, guns were mounted on the spires of St. Salvator&rsquo;s
+College chapel and on the Cathedral, and did much scathe, though, during
+the first three weeks of the siege, the garrison &ldquo;had many prosperous
+chances.&rdquo;&nbsp; Meanwhile Knox prophesied the defeat of his associates,
+because of &ldquo;their corrupt life.&rdquo;&nbsp; They had robbed and
+ravished, and were probably demoralised by Knox&rsquo;s prophecies.&nbsp;
+On the last day of July the castle surrendered. <a name="citation24"></a><a href="#footnote24">{24}</a>&nbsp;
+Knox adds that his friends would deal with France alone, as &ldquo;Scottish
+men had all traitorously betrayed them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Now much of this narrative is wrong; wrong in detail, in suggestion,
+in omission.&nbsp; That a man of fifty, or sixty, could attribute the
+attacks on Beaton&rsquo;s murderers to mere revenge, specially to that
+of a &ldquo;wanton widow,&rdquo; Mary of Guise (who had, we are to believe,
+so much of the Cardinal&rsquo;s attentions as his mistress, Mariotte
+Ogilvy, could spare), is significant of the spirit in which Knox wrote
+history.&nbsp; He had a strong taste for such scandals as this about
+the &ldquo;wanton widow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Wherever he touches on Mary of Guise (who once treated him in a spirit
+of banter), he deals a stab at her name and fame.&nbsp; On all that
+concerns her personal character and political conduct, he is unworthy
+of credit when uncorroborated by better authority.&nbsp; Indeed Knox&rsquo;s
+spirit is so unworthy that for this, among other reasons, Archbishop
+Spottiswoode declined to believe in his authorship of the &ldquo;History.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+The actual facts were not those recorded by Knox.</p>
+<p>As regards the &ldquo;Appointment&rdquo; or arrangement of the Scottish
+Government with the Castilians, it was not made late in January 1547,
+but was at least begun by December 17-19, 1546. <a name="citation25a"></a><a href="#footnote25a">{25a}</a>&nbsp;
+On January 11, 1547, a spy of England, Stewart of Cardonald, reports
+that the garrison have given pledges and await their absolution from
+Rome. <a name="citation25b"></a><a href="#footnote25b">{25b}</a>&nbsp;
+With regard to Knox&rsquo;s other statements in this place, it was not
+<i>after</i> this truce, first, but before it, on November 26, that
+Arran invited French assistance, if England would not include Scotland
+in a treaty of peace with France.&nbsp; An English invasion was expected
+in February 1547, and Arran&rsquo;s object in the &ldquo;Appointment&rdquo;
+with the garrison was to prevent the English from becoming possessed
+of the Castle of St. Andrews.&nbsp; Far from desiring a papal pardon&mdash;a
+mere pretext to gain time for English relief&mdash;the garrison actually
+asked Henry VIII. to request the Emperor, to implore the Pope, &ldquo;to
+stop and hinder their absolution.&rdquo; <a name="citation25c"></a><a href="#footnote25c">{25c}</a>&nbsp;
+Knox very probably knew nothing of all this, but his efforts to throw
+the blame of treachery on his opponents are obviously futile.</p>
+<p>As to the honesty of his associates&mdash;before the death of Henry
+VIII. (January 28, 1547), the Castilians had promised him not to surrender
+the place without his consent, and to put Arran&rsquo;s son in his hands,
+promises which they also made, on Henry&rsquo;s death, to the English
+Government; in February they repeated these promises, quite incompatible
+with their vow to surrender if absolved.&nbsp; Knox represents them
+as merely promising to Henry that they would return Arran&rsquo;s son,
+and support the plan of marrying Mary Stuart to Prince Edward of Wales!
+<a name="citation26a"></a><a href="#footnote26a">{26a}</a>&nbsp; In
+March 1547, English ships gathered at Holy Island, to relieve the castle.&nbsp;
+Not on June 21, 1547, as Knox alleges, but before April 2, the papal
+absolution for the murderers arrived.&nbsp; They mocked at it; and the
+spy who reports the facts is told that they &ldquo;would rather have
+a boll of wheat than all the Pope&rsquo;s remissions.&rdquo; <a name="citation26b"></a><a href="#footnote26b">{26b}</a>&nbsp;
+Whatever the terms of the papal remission, they had already, before
+it arrived, bound themselves to England not to accept it save with English
+concurrence; and England, then preparing to invade Scotland, could not
+possibly concur.&nbsp; Such was the honesty of Knox&rsquo;s party, and
+we already see how far his &ldquo;History&rdquo; deserves to be accepted
+as historical.</p>
+<p>Next, what is most surprising, Knox&rsquo;s account of the month
+of ineffectual siege by the French, while he was actually in the castle,
+rests on a strange error of his memory.&nbsp; The contemporary diary,
+<i>Diurnal of Occurrences</i> dates the <i>sending</i> (the arrival
+must be meant) of the French galleys, not on June 29, as Knox dates
+their arrival, but on July 24.&nbsp; Professor Hume Brown says that
+the <i>Diurnal</i> gives the date as <i>June</i> 24 (a slip of the pen),
+&ldquo;but Knox had surely the best opportunity of knowing both facts&rdquo;
+<a name="citation27a"></a><a href="#footnote27a">{27a}</a>&mdash;that
+is, the number of the galleys, and the date of their coming.&nbsp; Despite
+his unrivalled opportunities of knowledge, Knox did not know.&nbsp;
+It is not quite correct to say that &ldquo;Knox in his &lsquo;History&rsquo;
+shows throughout a conscientious regard to accuracy of statement.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Whatever the number of the galleys (Knox says twenty-one; the <i>Diurnal</i>
+says sixteen), on July 13-14, they are reported by Lord Eure, at Berwick,
+as passing or having just passed Eyemouth. <a name="citation27b"></a><a href="#footnote27b">{27b}</a>&nbsp;
+They did not therefore suffer for three weeks at the garrison&rsquo;s
+hands, or for three weeks desert the siege, but probably reached the
+scene of action before the date in the <i>Diurnal</i> (July 24), as,
+on July 23, the French Ambassador in England heard that they were investing
+the castle. <a name="citation27c"></a><a href="#footnote27c">{27c}</a>&nbsp;
+Allowing five or six days for transmission of news, they probably began
+the attack from the sea about July 16 or 17, not, as Knox says, on June
+30.&nbsp; Perhaps he is right in saying that the French galleys only
+fired for two days and retreated, rather battered, to Dundee.&nbsp;
+Land forces next attacked the hold, which surrendered on July 29 (as
+was known in London on August 5), that is, on the first day that the
+<i>land</i> battery was erected.</p>
+<p>Knox gives a much more full account of his own controversies, in
+April-June 1547, than of political events.&nbsp; He first, on arrival
+at the castle, drew up a catechism for his pupils, and publicly catechised
+them on its tenets, in the parish kirk in South Street.&nbsp; It is
+unfortunate that we do not possess this catechism.&nbsp; At the time
+when he wrote, Knox was possibly more of &ldquo;Martin&rsquo;s&rdquo;
+mind, as he familiarly terms Luther, both as to the Sacrament and as
+to the Order of Bishops, than he was after his residence in Geneva.&nbsp;
+Wishart, however, was well acquainted with Helvetic doctrine; he had,
+as we saw, translated a Helvetic Confession of Faith, perhaps with the
+view of introducing it into Scotland, and Knox may already have imbibed
+Calvinism from him.&nbsp; He was not yet&mdash;he never was&mdash;a
+full-blown Presbyterian, and, while thinking nothing of &ldquo;orders,&rdquo;
+would not have rejected a bishop, if the bishop <i>preached</i> and
+was of godly and frugal life.&nbsp; Already sermons were the most important
+part of public worship in the mind of Knox.</p>
+<p>In addition to public catechising he publicly expounded, and lectured
+on the Fourth Gospel, in the chapel of the castle.&nbsp; He doubted
+if he had &ldquo;a lawful vocation&rdquo; to <i>preach</i>.&nbsp; The
+castle pulpit was then occupied by an ex-friar named Rough.&nbsp; This
+divine, later burned in England, preached a sermon declaring a doctrine
+accepted by Knox, namely, that any congregation could call on any man
+in whom they &ldquo;espied the gifts of God&rdquo; to be their preacher;
+he offered Knox the post, and all present agreed.&nbsp; Knox wept, and
+for days his gloom declared his sense of his responsibility: such was
+&ldquo;his holy vocation.&rdquo;&nbsp; The garrison was, confessedly,
+brutal, licentious, and rapacious, but they &ldquo;all&rdquo; partook
+of the holy Communion. <a name="citation28"></a><a href="#footnote28">{28}</a></p>
+<p>In controversy, Knox declared the Church to be &ldquo;the synagogue
+of Satan,&rdquo; and in the Pope he detected and denounced &ldquo;the
+Man of Sin.&rdquo;&nbsp; On the following Sunday he proved, from Daniel,
+that the Roman Church is &ldquo;that last Beast.&rdquo;&nbsp; The Church
+is also anti-Christ, and &ldquo;the Hoore of Babylon,&rdquo; and Knox
+dilated on the personal misconduct of Popes and &ldquo;all shavelings
+for the most part.&rdquo;&nbsp; He contrasted Justification by Faith
+with the customs of pardons and pilgrimages.</p>
+<p>After these remarks, a controversy was held between Knox and the
+sub-prior, Wynram, the Scottish Vicar of Bray, Knox being understood
+to maintain that no bishop who did not preach was really a bishop; that
+the Mass is &ldquo;abominable idolatry&rdquo;; that Purgatory does not
+exist; and that the tithes are not necessarily the property of churchmen&mdash;a
+doctrine very welcome to the hungry nobles of Scotland.&nbsp; Knox,
+of course, easily overcame an ignorant opponent, a friar, who joined
+in the fray.&nbsp; His own arguments he later found time to write out
+fully in the French galleys, in which he was a prisoner, after the fall
+of the castle.&nbsp; If he &ldquo;wrate in the galleys,&rdquo; as he
+says, they cannot have been always such floating hells as they are usually
+reckoned.</p>
+<p>That Knox, and other captives from the castle, were placed in the
+galleys after their surrender, was an abominable stretch of French power.&nbsp;
+They were not subjects of France.&nbsp; The terms on which they surrendered
+are not exactly known.&nbsp; Knox avers that they were to be free to
+live in France, and that, if they wished to leave, they were to be conveyed,
+at French expense, to any country except Scotland.&nbsp; Buchanan declares
+that only the lives of the garrison and their friends were secured by
+the terms of surrender.&nbsp; Lesley supports Knox, <a name="citation30a"></a><a href="#footnote30a">{30a}</a>
+who is probably accurate.</p>
+<p>To account for the French severity, Knox tells us that the Pope insisted
+on it, appealing to both the Scottish and French Governments; and Scotland
+sent an envoy to France to beg &ldquo;that those of the castle should
+be sharply handled.&rdquo;&nbsp; Men of birth were imprisoned, the rest
+went to the galleys.&nbsp; Knox&rsquo;s life cannot have been so bad
+as that of the Huguenot galley slaves under Louis XIV.&nbsp; He was
+allowed to receive letters; he read and commented on a treatise written
+in prison by Balnaves; and he even wrote a theological work, unless
+this work was his commentary on Balnaves.&nbsp; These things can only
+have been possible when the galleys were not on active service.&nbsp;
+In a very manly spirit, he never dilated on his sufferings, and merely
+alludes to &ldquo;the torment I sustained in the galleys.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+He kept up his heart, always prophesying deliverance; and once (June,
+1548?), when in view of St. Andrews, declared that he should preach
+again in the kirk where his career began.&nbsp; Unluckily, the person
+to whom he spoke, at a moment when he himself was dangerously ill, denied
+that he had ever been in the galleys at all! <a name="citation30b"></a><a href="#footnote30b">{30b}</a>&nbsp;
+He was Sir James Balfour, a notorious scoundrel, quite untrustworthy;
+according to Knox, he had spoken of the prophecy, in Scotland, long
+before its fulfilment.</p>
+<p>Knox&rsquo;s health was more or less undermined, while his spiritual
+temper was not mollified by nineteen months of the galleys, mitigated
+as they obviously were.</p>
+<p>It is, doubtless, to his &ldquo;torment&rdquo; in the galleys that
+Knox refers when he writes: &ldquo;I know how hard the battle is between
+the spirit and the flesh, under the heavy cross of affliction, where
+no worldly defence, but present death, does appear. . . .&nbsp; Rests
+only Faith, provoking us to call earnestly, and pray for assistance
+of God&rsquo;s spirit, wherein if we continue, our most desperate calamities
+shall turn to gladness, and to a prosperous end. . . .&nbsp; With experience
+I write this.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In February or March, 1549, Knox was released; by April he was in
+England, and, while Edward VI. lived, was in comparative safety.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER IV: KNOX IN ENGLAND: THE BLACK RUBRIC: EXILE: 1549-1554</h2>
+<p>Knox at once appeared in England in a character revolting to the
+later Presbyterian conscience, which he helped to educate.&nbsp; The
+State permitted no cleric to preach without a Royal license, and Knox
+was now a State licensed preacher at Berwick, one of many &ldquo;State
+officials with a specified mission.&rdquo;&nbsp; He was an agent of
+the English administration, then engaged in forcing a detested religion
+on the majority of the English people.&nbsp; But he candidly took his
+own line, indifferent to the compromises of the rulers in that chaos
+of shifting opinions.&nbsp; For example, the Prayer Book of Edward VI.
+at that time took for granted kneeling as the appropriate attitude for
+communicants.&nbsp; Knox, at Berwick, on the other hand, bade his congregation
+sit, as he conceived that to have been the usage at the first institution
+of the rite.&nbsp; Possibly the Apostles, in fact, supped in a recumbent
+attitude, as Cranmer justly remarked later (John xiii. 25), but Knox
+supposed them to have sat.&nbsp; In a letter to his Berwick flock, he
+reminds them of his practice on this point; but he would not dissent
+from kneeling if &ldquo;magistrates make known, as that they&rdquo;
+(would?) &ldquo;have done if ministers were willing to do their duties,
+that kneeling is not retained in the Lord&rsquo;s Supper for maintenance
+of any superstition,&rdquo; much less as &ldquo;adoration of the Lord&rsquo;s
+Supper.&rdquo;&nbsp; This, &ldquo;for a time,&rdquo; would content him:
+and this he obtained. <a name="citation33a"></a><a href="#footnote33a">{33a}</a>&nbsp;
+Here Knox appears to make the civil authority&mdash;&ldquo;the magistrates&rdquo;&mdash;governors
+of the Church, while at the same time he does not in practice obey them
+unless they accept his conditions.</p>
+<p>This letter to the Berwick flock must be prior to the autumn of 1552,
+in which, as we shall see, Knox obtained his terms as to kneeling.&nbsp;
+He went on, in his epistle to the Berwickians, to speak in &ldquo;a
+tone of moderation and modesty,&rdquo; for which, says Dr. Lorimer,
+not many readers will be prepared. <a name="citation33b"></a><a href="#footnote33b">{33b}</a>&nbsp;
+In this modest passage, Knox says that, as to &ldquo;the chief points
+of religion,&rdquo; he, with God&rsquo;s help, &ldquo;will give place
+to neither man nor angel teaching the contrary&rdquo; of his preaching.&nbsp;
+Yet an angel might be supposed to be well informed on points of doctrine!&nbsp;
+&ldquo;But as to ceremonies or rites, things of smaller weight, I was
+not minded to move contention. . . .&rdquo;&nbsp; The one point which&mdash;&ldquo;because
+I am but one, having in my contrary magistrates, common order, and judgments,
+and many learned&rdquo;&mdash;he is prepared to yield, and that for
+a time, is the practice of kneeling, but only on three conditions.&nbsp;
+These being granted, &ldquo;with patience will I bear that one thing,
+daily thirsting and calling unto God for reformation of that and others.&rdquo;
+<a name="citation33c"></a><a href="#footnote33c">{33c}</a>&nbsp; But
+he did not bear that one thing; he would <i>not</i> kneel even after
+his terms were granted!&nbsp; This is the sum of Knox&rsquo;s &ldquo;moderation
+and modesty&rdquo;!</p>
+<p>Though he is not averse from talking about himself, Knox, in his
+&ldquo;History,&rdquo; spares but three lines to his five years&rsquo;
+residence in England (1549-54).&nbsp; His first charge was Berwick (1549-51),
+where we have seen he celebrated holy Communion by the Swiss rite, all
+meekly sitting.&nbsp; The Second Prayer Book, of 1552, when Knox ministered
+in Newcastle, bears marks of his hand.&nbsp; He opposed, as has been
+said, the rubric bidding the communicants kneel; the attitude savoured
+of &ldquo;idolatry.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The circumstances in which Knox carried his point on this question
+are most curious.&nbsp; Just before October 12, 1552, a foreign Protestant,
+Johannes Utenhovius, wrote to the Zurich Protestant, Bullinger, to the
+effect that a certain <i>vir bonus</i>, <i>Scotus natione</i> (a good
+man and a Scot), a preacher (<i>concionator</i>), of the Duke of Northumberland,
+had delivered a sermon before the King and Council, &ldquo;in which
+he freely inveighed against the Anglican custom of kneeling at the Lord&rsquo;s
+Supper.&rdquo;&nbsp; Many listeners were greatly moved, and Utenhovius
+prayed that the sermon might be of blessed effect.&nbsp; Knox was certainly
+in London at this date, and was almost certainly the excellent Scot
+referred to by Utenhovius.&nbsp; The Second Prayer Book of Edward VI.
+was then in such forwardness that Parliament had appointed it to be
+used in churches, beginning on November 1.&nbsp; The book included the
+command to kneel at the Lord&rsquo;s Supper, and any agitation against
+the practice might seem to be too late.&nbsp; Cranmer, the Primate,
+was in favour of the rubric as it stood, and on October 7, 1552, addressed
+the Privy Council in a letter which, without naming Knox, clearly shows
+his opinion of our Reformer.&nbsp; The book, <i>as it stood</i>, said
+Cranmer, had the assent of King and Parliament&mdash;now it was to be
+altered, apparently, &ldquo;without Parliament.&rdquo;&nbsp; The Council
+ought not to be thus influenced by &ldquo;glorious and unquiet spirits.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Cranmer calls Knox, as Throckmorton later called Queen Mary&rsquo;s
+Bothwell, &ldquo;glorious&rdquo; in the sense of the Latin <i>gloriosus</i>,
+&ldquo;swaggering,&rdquo; or &ldquo;arrogant.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Cranmer goes on to denounce the &ldquo;glorious and unquiet spirits,
+which can like nothing but that is after their own fancy, and cease
+not to make trouble and disquietude when things be most quiet and in
+good order.&rdquo; <a name="citation35"></a><a href="#footnote35">{35}</a>&nbsp;
+Their argument (Knox&rsquo;s favourite), that whatever is not commanded
+in Scripture is unlawful and ungodly, &ldquo;is a subversion of all
+order as well in religion as in common policy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Cranmer ends with the amazing challenge: &ldquo;I will set my foot
+by his to be tried in the fire, that his doctrine is untrue, and not
+only untrue but seditious, and perilous to be heard of any subjects,
+as a thing breaking the bridle of obedience and loosing them from the
+bond of all princes&rsquo; laws.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Cranmer had a premonition of the troubled years of James VI. and
+of the Covenant, when this question of kneeling was the first cause
+of the Bishops&rsquo; wars.&nbsp; But Knox did not accept, as far as
+we know, the medi&aelig;val ordeal by fire.</p>
+<p>Other questions about practices enjoined in the Articles arose.&nbsp;
+A &ldquo;Confession,&rdquo; in which Knox&rsquo;s style may be traced,
+was drawn up, and consequently that &ldquo;Declaration on Kneeling&rdquo;
+was intercalated into the Prayer Book, wherein it is asserted that the
+attitude does not imply adoration of the elements, or belief in the
+Real Presence, &ldquo;for that were idolatry.&rdquo;&nbsp; Elizabeth
+dropped, and Charles II. restored, this &ldquo;Black Rubric&rdquo; which
+Anglicanism owes to the Scottish Reformer. <a name="citation36a"></a><a href="#footnote36a">{36a}</a>&nbsp;
+He &ldquo;once had a good opinion,&rdquo; he says, of the Liturgy as
+it now stood, but he soon found that it was full of idolatries.</p>
+<p>The most important event in the private life of Knox, during his
+stay at Berwick, was his acquaintance with a devout lady of tormented
+conscience, Mrs. Bowes, wife of the Governor of Norham Castle on Tweed.&nbsp;
+Mrs. Bowes&rsquo;s tendency to the new ideas in religion was not shared
+by her husband and his family; the results will presently be conspicuous.&nbsp;
+In April 1550, Knox preached at Newcastle a sermon on his favourite
+doctrine that the Mass is &ldquo;Idolatry,&rdquo; because it is &ldquo;of
+man&rsquo;s invention,&rdquo; an opinion not shared by Tunstall, then
+Bishop of Durham.&nbsp; Knox used &ldquo;idolatry&rdquo; in a constructive
+sense, as when we talk of &ldquo;constructive treason.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+But, in practice, he regarded Catholics as &ldquo;idolaters,&rdquo;
+in the same sense as Elijah regarded Hebrew worshippers of alien deities,
+Chemosh or Moloch, and he later drew the inference that idolaters, as
+in the Old Testament, must be put to death.&nbsp; Thus his was logically
+a persecuting religion.</p>
+<p>Knox was made a King&rsquo;s chaplain and transferred to Newcastle.&nbsp;
+He saw that the country was, by preference, Catholic; that the life
+of Edward VI. hung on a thread; and that with the accession of his sister,
+Mary Tudor, Protestant principles would be as unsafe as under &ldquo;umquhile
+the Cardinal.&rdquo;&nbsp; Knox therefore, &ldquo;from the foresight
+of troubles to come&rdquo; (so he writes to Mrs. Bowes, February 28,
+1554), <a name="citation36b"></a><a href="#footnote36b">{36b}</a> declined
+any post, a bishopric, or a living, which would in honour oblige him
+to face the fire of persecution.&nbsp; At the same time he was even
+then far at odds with the Church of England that he had sound reasons
+for refusing benefices.</p>
+<p>On Christmas day, 1552, <a name="citation37a"></a><a href="#footnote37a">{37a}</a>
+he preached at Newcastle against Papists, as &ldquo;thirsting nothing
+more than the King&rsquo;s death, which their iniquity would procure.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+In two brief years Knox was himself publicly expressing his own thirst
+for the Queen&rsquo;s death, and praying for a Jehu or a Phinehas, slayers
+of idolaters, such as Mary Tudor.&nbsp; If any fanatic had taken this
+hint, and the life of Mary Tudor, Catholics would have said that Knox&rsquo;s
+&ldquo;iniquity procured&rdquo; the murder, and they would have had
+fair excuse for the assertion.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile charges were brought against the Reformer, on the ground
+of his Christmas sermon of peace and goodwill.&nbsp; Northumberland
+(January 9, 1552-53) sends to Cecil &ldquo;a letter of poor Knox, by
+the which you may perceive what perplexity the poor soul remaineth in
+at this present.&rdquo;&nbsp; We have not Knox&rsquo;s interesting letter,
+but Northumberland pled his cause against a charge of treason.&nbsp;
+In fact, however, the Court highly approved of his sermon.&nbsp; He
+was presently again in what he believed to be imminent danger of life:
+&ldquo;I fear that I be not yet ripe, nor able to glorify Christ by
+my faith,&rdquo; he wrote to Mrs. Bowes, &ldquo;but what lacketh now,
+God shall perform in His own time.&rdquo; <a name="citation37b"></a><a href="#footnote37b">{37b}</a>&nbsp;
+We do not know what peril threatened the Reformer now (probably in March
+1553), but he frequently, later, seems to have doubted his own &ldquo;ripeness&rdquo;
+for martyrdom.&nbsp; His reluctance to suffer did not prevent him from
+constant attendance to the tedious self-tormentings of Mrs. Bowes, and
+of &ldquo;three honest poor women&rdquo; in London.</p>
+<p>Knox, at all events, was not so &ldquo;perplexed&rdquo; that he feared
+to speak his mind in the pulpit.&nbsp; In Lent, 1553, preaching before
+the boy king, he denounced his ministers in trenchant historical parallels
+between them and Achitophel, Shebna, and Judas.&nbsp; Later, young Mr.
+Mackail, applying the same method to the ministers of Charles II., was
+hanged.&nbsp; &ldquo;What wonder is it then,&rdquo; said Knox, &ldquo;that
+a young and innocent king be deceived by crafty, covetous, wicked, and
+ungodly councillors?&nbsp; I am greatly afraid that Achitophel be councillor,
+that Judas bear the purse, and that Shebna be scribe, comptroller, and
+treasurer.&rdquo; <a name="citation38a"></a><a href="#footnote38a">{38a}</a></p>
+<p>This appears the extreme of audacity.&nbsp; Yet nothing worse came
+to Knox than questions, by the Council, as to his refusal of a benefice,
+and his declining, as he still did, to kneel at the Communion (April
+14, 1553).&nbsp; His answers prove that he was out of harmony with the
+fluctuating Anglicanism of the hour.&nbsp; Northumberland could not
+then resent the audacities of pulpiteers, because the Protestants were
+the only party who might stand by him in his approaching effort to crown
+Lady Jane Grey.&nbsp; Now all the King&rsquo;s preachers, obviously
+by concerted action, &ldquo;thundered&rdquo; against Edward&rsquo;s
+Council, in the Lent or Easter of 1553.&nbsp; Manifestly, in the old
+Scots phrase, &ldquo;the Kirk had a back&rdquo;; had some secular support,
+namely that of their party, which Northumberland could not slight.&nbsp;
+Meanwhile Knox was sent on a preaching tour in Buckinghamshire, and
+there he was when Edward VI. died, in the first week of July 1553. <a name="citation38b"></a><a href="#footnote38b">{38b}</a></p>
+<p>Knox&rsquo;s official attachment to England expired with his preaching
+license, on the death of Edward VI. and the accession of Mary Tudor.&nbsp;
+He did not at once leave the country, but preached both in London and
+on the English border, while the new queen was settling herself on the
+throne.&nbsp; While within Mary&rsquo;s reach, Knox did not encourage
+resistance against that idolatress; he did not do so till he was safe
+in France.&nbsp; Indeed, in his prayer used after the death of Edward
+VI., before the fires of Oxford and Smithfield were lit, Knox wrote:
+&ldquo;Illuminate the heart of our Sovereign Lady, Queen Mary, with
+pregnant gifts of the Holy Ghost. . . .&nbsp; Repress thou the pride
+of those that would rebel. . . .&nbsp; Mitigate the hearts of those
+that persecute us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In the autumn of 1553, Knox&rsquo;s health was very bad; he had gravel,
+and felt his bodily strength broken.&nbsp; Moreover, he was in the disagreeable
+position of being betrothed to a very young lady, Marjorie Bowes, with
+the approval of her devout mother, the wife of Richard Bowes, commander
+of Norham Castle, near Berwick, but to the anger and disgust of the
+Bowes family in general.&nbsp; They by no means shared Knox&rsquo;s
+ideas of religion, rather regarding him as a penniless unfrocked &ldquo;Scot
+runagate,&rdquo; whose alliance was discreditable and distasteful, and
+might be dangerous.&nbsp; &ldquo;Maist unpleasing words&rdquo; passed,
+and it is no marvel that Knox, being persecuted in one city, fled to
+another, leaving England for Dieppe early in March 1554. <a name="citation39"></a><a href="#footnote39">{39}</a></p>
+<p>His conscience was not entirely at ease as to his flight.&nbsp; &ldquo;Why
+did I flee?&nbsp; Assuredly I cannot tell, but of one thing I am sure,
+the fear of death was not the chief cause of my fleeing,&rdquo; he wrote
+to Mrs. Bowes from Dieppe.&nbsp; &ldquo;Albeit that I have, in the beginning
+of this battle, appeared to play the faint-hearted and feeble soldier
+(the cause I remit to God), yet my prayer is that I may be restored
+to the battle again.&rdquo; <a name="citation40a"></a><a href="#footnote40a">{40a}</a>&nbsp;
+Knox was, in fact, most valiant when he had armed men at his back; he
+had no enthusiasm for taking part in the battle when unaided by the
+arm of flesh.&nbsp; On later occasions this was very apparent, and he
+has confessed, as we saw, that he did not choose to face &ldquo;the
+trouble to come&rdquo; without means of retreat.&nbsp; His valour was
+rather that of the general than of the lonely martyr.&nbsp; The popular
+idea of Knox&rsquo;s personal courage, said to have been expressed by
+the Regent Morton in the words spoken at his funeral, &ldquo;here lieth
+a man who in his life never feared the face of man,&rdquo; is entirely
+erroneous.&nbsp; His learned and sympathetic editor, David Laing, truly
+writes: &ldquo;Knox cannot be said to have possessed the impetuous and
+heroic boldness of a Luther when surrounded with danger. . . .&nbsp;
+On more than one occasion Knox displayed a timidity or shrinking from
+danger, scarcely to have been expected from one who boasted of his willingness
+to endure the utmost torture, or suffer death in his Master&rsquo;s
+cause.&nbsp; Happily he was not put to the test. . . .&rdquo; <a name="citation40b"></a><a href="#footnote40b">{40b}</a></p>
+<p>Dr. Laing puts the case more strongly than I feel justified in doing,
+for Knox, far from &ldquo;boasting of his willingness to face the utmost
+torture,&rdquo; more than once doubts his own readiness for martyrdom.&nbsp;
+We must remember that even Blessed Edmund Campion, who went gaily to
+torture and death, had doubts as to the necessity of that journey. <a name="citation40c"></a><a href="#footnote40c">{40c}</a></p>
+<p>Nor was there any reason why Knox should stay in England to be burned,
+if he could escape&mdash;with less than ten groats in his pocket&mdash;as
+he did.&nbsp; It is not for us moderns to throw the first stone at a
+reluctant martyr, still less to applaud useless self-sacrifice, but
+we do take leave to think that, having fled early, himself, from the
+martyr&rsquo;s crown, Knox showed bad taste in his harsh invectives
+against Protestants who, staying in England, conformed to the State
+religion under Mary Tudor.</p>
+<p>It is not impossible that his very difficult position as the lover
+of Marjorie Bowes&mdash;a position of which, while he remained in England,
+the burden fell on the poor girl&mdash;may have been one reason for
+Knox&rsquo;s flight, while the entreaties of his friends that he would
+seek safety must have had their influence.</p>
+<p>On the whole it seems more probable that when he committed himself
+to matrimony with a young girl, the fifth daughter of Mrs. Bowes, he
+was approaching his fortieth rather than his fiftieth year.&nbsp; Older
+than he are happy husbands made, sometimes, though Marjorie Bowes&rsquo;s
+choice may have been directed by her pious mother, whose soul could
+find no rest in the old faith, and not much in the new.</p>
+<p>At thirty-eight the Reformer, we must remember, must have been no
+uncomely wooer.&nbsp; His conversation must have been remarkably vivid:
+he had adventures enough to tell, by land and sea; while such a voice
+as he raised withal in the pulpit, like Edward Irving, has always been
+potent with women, as Sir Walter Scott remarks in Irving&rsquo;s own
+case.&nbsp; His expression, says Young, had a certain geniality; on
+the whole we need not doubt that Knox could please when he chose, especially
+when he was looked up to as a supreme authority.&nbsp; He despised women
+in politics, but had many friends of the sex, and his letters to them
+display a manly tenderness of affection without sentimentality.</p>
+<p>Writing to Mrs. Bowes from London in 1553, Knox mentions, as one
+of the sorrows of life, that &ldquo;such as would most gladly remain
+together, for mutual comfort, cannot be suffered so to do.&nbsp; Since
+the first day that it pleased the providence of God to bring you and
+me in familiarity, I have always delighted in your company.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+He then wanders into religious reflections, but we see that he liked
+Mrs. Bowes, and Marjorie Bowes too, no doubt: he is careful to style
+the elderly lady &ldquo;Mother.&rdquo;&nbsp; Knox&rsquo;s letters to
+Mrs. Bowes show the patience and courtesy with which the Reformer could
+comfort and counsel a middle-aged lady in trouble about her innocent
+soul.&nbsp; As she recited her infirmities, he reminds her, he &ldquo;started
+back, and that is my common consuetude when anything pierces or touches
+my heart.&nbsp; Call to your mind what I did standing at the cupboard
+at Alnwick; in very deed I thought that no creature had been tempted
+as I was&rdquo;&mdash;not by the charms of Mrs. Bowes, of course: he
+found that Satan troubled the lady with &ldquo;the very same words that
+he troubles me with.&rdquo;&nbsp; Mrs. Bowes, in truth, with premature
+scepticism, was tempted to think that &ldquo;the Scriptures of God are
+but a tale, and no credit to be given to them.&rdquo;&nbsp; The Devil,
+she is reminded by Knox, has induced &ldquo;some philosophers to affirm
+that the world never had a beginning,&rdquo; which he refutes by showing
+that God predicted the pains of childbearing; and Mrs. Bowes, as the
+mother of twelve, knows how true <i>this</i> is.</p>
+<p>The circular argument may or may not have satisfied Mrs. Bowes. <a name="citation43"></a><a href="#footnote43">{43}</a></p>
+<p>The young object of Knox&rsquo;s passion, Marjorie Bowes, is only
+alluded to as &ldquo;she whom God hath offered unto me, and commanded
+me to love as my own flesh,&rdquo;&mdash;after her, Mrs. Bowes is the
+dearest of mankind to Knox.&nbsp; No mortal was ever more long-suffering
+with a spiritual hypochondriac, who avers that &ldquo;the sins that
+reigned in Sodom and Gomore reign in me, and I have small power or none
+to resist!&rdquo;&nbsp; Knox replies, with common sense, that Mrs. Bowes
+is obviously ignorant of the nature of these offences.</p>
+<p>Writing to his betrothed he says nothing personal: merely reiterates
+his lessons of comfort to her mother.&nbsp; Meanwhile the lovers were
+parted, Knox going abroad; and it is to be confessed that he was not
+eager to come back.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER V: EXILE: APPEALS FOR A PHINEHAS, AND A JEHU: 1554</h2>
+<p>No change of circumstances could be much more bitter than that which
+exile brought to Knox.&nbsp; He had been a decently endowed official
+of State, engaged in bringing a reluctant country into the ecclesiastical
+fold which the State, for the hour, happened to prefer.&nbsp; His task
+had been grateful, and his congregations, at least at Berwick and Newcastle,
+had, as a rule, been heartily with him.&nbsp; Wherever he preached,
+affectionate women had welcomed him and hung upon his words.&nbsp; The
+King and his ministers had hearkened unto him&mdash;young Edward with
+approval, Northumberland with such emotions as we may imagine&mdash;while
+the Primate of England had challenged him to a competitive ordeal by
+fire, and had been defeated, apparently without recourse to the fire-test.</p>
+<p>But now all was changed; Knox was a lonely rover in a strange land,
+supported probably by collections made among his English friends, and
+by the hospitality of the learned.&nbsp; In his wanderings his heart
+burned within him many a time, and he abruptly departed from his theory
+of passive resistance.&nbsp; Now he eagerly desired to obtain, from
+Protestant doctors and pontiffs, support for the utterly opposite doctrine
+of armed resistance.&nbsp; Such support he did not get, or not in a
+satisfactory measure, so he commenced prophet on his own lines, and
+on his own responsibility.</p>
+<p>When Knox&rsquo;s heart burned within him, he sometimes seized the
+pen and dashed off fiery tracts which occasionally caused inconvenience
+to the brethren, and trouble to himself in later years.&nbsp; In cooler
+moments, and when dubious or prosperous, he now and again displayed
+a calm opportunism much at odds with the inspirations of his grief and
+anger.</p>
+<p>After his flight to Dieppe in March 1554, Knox was engaged, then,
+with a problem of difficulty, one of the central problems of his career
+and of the distracted age.&nbsp; In modern phrase, he wished to know
+how far, and in what fashion, persons of one religion might resist another
+religion, imposed upon them by the State of which they were subjects.&nbsp;
+On this point we have now no doubt, but in the sixteenth century &ldquo;Authority&rdquo;
+was held sacred, and martyrdom, according to Calvin, was to be preferred
+to civil war.&nbsp; If men were Catholics, and if the State was Protestant,
+they were liable, later, under Knox, to fines, exile, and death; but
+power was not yet given to him.&nbsp; If they were Protestants under
+a Catholic ruler, or Puritans under Anglican authority, Knox himself
+had laid down the rule of their conduct in his letter to his Berwick
+congregation. <a name="citation45"></a><a href="#footnote45">{45}</a>&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Remembering always, beloved brethren, that due obedience be given
+to magistrates, rulers, and princes, without tumult, grudge, or sedition.&nbsp;
+For, howsoever wicked themselves be in life, or howsoever ungodly their
+precepts or commandments be, ye must obey them for conscience&rsquo;
+sake; except in chief points of religion, and then ye ought rather to
+obey God than man: <i>not to pretend to defend God&rsquo;s truth or
+religion</i>, <i>ye being subjects</i>, <i>by violence or sword</i>,
+<i>but patiently suffering what God shall please be laid upon you for
+constant confession of your faith and belief</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp; Man or
+angel who teaches contrary doctrine is corrupt of judgment, sent by
+God to blind the unworthy.&nbsp; And Knox proceeded to teach contrary
+doctrine!</p>
+<p>His truly Christian ideas are of date 1552, with occasional revivals
+as opportunity suggested.&nbsp; In exile he was now asking (1554), how
+was a Protestant minority or majority to oppose the old faith, backed
+by kings and princes, fire and sword?&nbsp; He answered the question
+in direct contradiction of his Berwick programme: he was now all for
+active resistance.&nbsp; Later, in addressing Mary of Guise, and on
+another occasion, he recurred to his Berwick theory, and he always found
+biblical texts to support his contradictory messages.</p>
+<p>At this moment resistance seemed hopeless enough.&nbsp; In England
+the Protestants of all shades were decidedly in a minority.&nbsp; They
+had no chance if they openly rose in arms; their only hope was in the
+death of Mary Tudor and the succession of Elizabeth&mdash;itself a poor
+hope in the eyes of Knox, who detested the idea of a female monarch.&nbsp;
+Might they &ldquo;bow down in the House of Rimmon&rdquo; by a feigned
+conformity?&nbsp; Knox, in a letter to the Faithful, printed in 1554,
+entirely rejected this compromise, to which Cecil stooped, thereby deserving
+hell, as the relentless Knox (who had fled) later assured him.</p>
+<p>In the end of March 1554, probably, Knox left Dieppe for Geneva,
+where he could consult Calvin, not yet secure in his despotism, though
+he had recently burned Servetus.&nbsp; Next he went to Zurich, and laid
+certain questions before Bullinger, who gave answers in writing as to
+Knox&rsquo;s problems.</p>
+<p>Could a woman rule a kingdom by divine right, and transfer the same
+to her husband?&mdash;Mary Tudor to Philip of Spain, is, of course,
+to be understood.&nbsp; Bullinger replied that it was a hazardous thing
+for the godly to resist the laws of a country.&nbsp; Philip the eunuch,
+though converted, did not drive Queen Candace out of Ethiopia.&nbsp;
+If a tyrannous and ungodly Queen reign, godly persons &ldquo;have example
+and consolation in the case of Athaliah.&rdquo;&nbsp; The transfer of
+power to a husband is an affair of the laws of the country.</p>
+<p>Again, must a ruler who enforces &ldquo;idolatry&rdquo; be obeyed?&nbsp;
+May true believers, in command of garrisons, repel &ldquo;this ungodly
+violence&rdquo;?&nbsp; Bullinger answered, in effect, that &ldquo;it
+is very difficult to pronounce upon every particular case.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+He had not the details before him.&nbsp; In short, nothing definite
+was to be drawn out of Bullinger. <a name="citation47a"></a><a href="#footnote47a">{47a}</a></p>
+<p>Dr. M&lsquo;Crie observes, indeed, that Knox submitted to the learned
+of Switzerland &ldquo;certain difficult questions, which were suggested
+by the present condition of affairs in England, and about which his
+mind had been greatly occupied.&nbsp; Their views with respect to these
+coinciding with his own, he was confirmed in the judgment which he had
+already formed for himself.&rdquo; <a name="citation47b"></a><a href="#footnote47b">{47b}</a></p>
+<p>In fact, Knox himself merely says that he had &ldquo;reasoned with&rdquo;
+pastors and the learned; he does not say that they agreed with him,
+and they certainly did not.&nbsp; Despite the reserve of Bullinger and
+of Calvin, Knox was of his new opinions still.&nbsp; These divines never
+backed his views.</p>
+<p>By May, Knox had returned to Dieppe, and published an epistle to
+the Faithful.&nbsp; The rebellion of Sir Thomas Wyatt had been put down,
+a blow to true religion.&nbsp; We have no evidence that Knox stimulated
+the rising, but he alludes once to his exertions in favour of the Princess
+Elizabeth.&nbsp; The details are unknown.</p>
+<p>In July, apparently, Knox printed his &ldquo;Faithful Admonition
+to the Professors of God&rsquo;s Truth in England,&rdquo; and two editions
+of the tract were published in that country.&nbsp; The pamphlet is full
+of violent language about &ldquo;the bloody, butcherly brood&rdquo;
+of persecutors, and Knox spoke of what might have occurred had the Queen
+&ldquo;been sent to hell before these days.&rdquo;&nbsp; The piece presents
+nothing, perhaps, so plain spoken about the prophet&rsquo;s right to
+preach treason as a passage in the manuscript of an earlier Knoxian
+epistle of May 1554 to the Faithful.&nbsp; &ldquo;The prophets of God
+sometimes may teach treason against kings, and yet neither he, nor such
+as obey the word spoken in the Lord&rsquo;s name by him, offends God.&rdquo;
+<a name="citation48"></a><a href="#footnote48">{48}</a>&nbsp; That sentence
+contains doctrine not submitted to Bullinger by Knox.&nbsp; He could
+not very well announce himself to Bullinger as a &ldquo;prophet of God.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+But the sentence, which occurs in manuscript copies of the letter of
+May 1554, does not appear in the black letter printed edition.&nbsp;
+Either Knox or the publisher thought it too risky.</p>
+<p>In the published &ldquo;Admonition,&rdquo; however, of July 1554,
+we find Knox exclaiming: &ldquo;God, for His great mercy&rsquo;s sake,
+stir up some Phineas, Helias, or Jehu, that the blood of abominable
+idolaters may pacify God&rsquo;s wrath, that it consume not the whole
+multitude.&nbsp; Amen.&rdquo; <a name="citation49a"></a><a href="#footnote49a">{49a}</a>&nbsp;
+This is a direct appeal to the assassin.&nbsp; If anybody will play
+the part of Phinehas against &ldquo;idolaters&rdquo;&mdash;that is the
+Queen of England and Philip of Spain&mdash;God&rsquo;s anger will be
+pacified.&nbsp; &ldquo;Delay not thy vengeance, O Lord, but let death
+devour them in haste . . .&nbsp; For there is no hope of their amendment,
+. . . He shall send Jehu to execute his just judgments against idolaters.&nbsp;
+Jezebel herself shall not escape the vengeance and plagues that are
+prepared for her portion.&rdquo; <a name="citation49b"></a><a href="#footnote49b">{49b}</a>&nbsp;
+These passages are essential.&nbsp; Professor Hume Brown expresses our
+own sentiments when he remarks: &ldquo;In casting such a pamphlet into
+England at the time he did, Knox indulged his indignation, in itself
+so natural under the circumstances, at no personal risk, while he seriously
+compromised those who had the strongest claims on his most generous
+consideration.&rdquo;&nbsp; This is plain truth, and when some of Knox&rsquo;s
+English brethren later behaved to him in a manner which we must wholly
+condemn, their conduct, they said, had for a motive the mischief done
+to Protestants in England by his fiery &ldquo;Admonition,&rdquo; and
+their desire to separate themselves from the author of such a pamphlet.</p>
+<p>Knox did not, it will be observed, here call all or any of the faithful
+to a general massacre of their Catholic fellow-subjects.&nbsp; He went
+to that length later, as we shall show.&nbsp; In an epistle of 1554
+he only writes: &ldquo;Some shall demand, &lsquo;What then, shall we
+go and slay all idolaters?&rsquo;&nbsp; <i>That</i> were the office,
+dear brethren, of every civil magistrate within his realm. . . .&nbsp;
+The slaying of idolaters appertains not to every particular man.&rdquo;
+<a name="citation49c"></a><a href="#footnote49c">{49c}</a></p>
+<p>This means that every Protestant king should massacre all his inconvertible
+Catholic subjects!&nbsp; This was indeed a counsel of perfection; but
+it could never be executed, owing to the carnal policy of worldly men.</p>
+<p>In writing about &ldquo;the office of the civil magistrate,&rdquo;
+Knox, a Border Scot of the age of the blood feud, seems to have forgotten,
+first, that the Old Testament prophets of the period were not unanimous
+in their applause of Jehu&rsquo;s massacre of the royal family; next,
+that between the sixteenth century A.D. and Jehu, had intervened the
+Christian revelation.&nbsp; Our Lord had given no word of warrant to
+murder or massacre!&nbsp; No persecuted apostle had dealt in appeals
+to the dagger.&nbsp; As for Jehu, a prophet had condemned <i>his</i>
+conduct.&nbsp; Hosea writes that the Lord said unto him, &ldquo;Yet
+a little while, and I will avenge the blood of Jezreel upon the house
+of Jehu,&rdquo; but doubtless Knox would have argued that Hosea was
+temporarily uninspired, as he argued about St. Paul and St. James later.</p>
+<p>However this delicate point may be settled, the appeal for a Phinehas
+is certainly unchristian.&nbsp; The idolaters, the unreformed, might
+rejoice, with the Nuncio of 1583, that the Duc de Guise had a plan for
+murdering Elizabeth, though it was not to be communicated to the Vicar
+of God, who should have no such dealings against &ldquo;that wicked
+woman.&rdquo;&nbsp; To some Catholics, Elizabeth: to Knox, Mary was
+as Jezebel, and might laudably be assassinated.&nbsp; In idolaters nothing
+can surprise us; when persecuted they, in their unchristian fashion,
+may retort with the dagger or the bowl.&nbsp; But that Knox should have
+frequently maintained the doctrine of death to religious opponents is
+a strange and deplorable circumstance.&nbsp; In reforming the Church
+of Christ he omitted some elements of Christianity.</p>
+<p>Suppose, for a moment, that in deference to the teaching of the Gospel,
+Knox had never called for a Jehu, but had ever denounced, by voice and
+pen, those murderous deeds of his own party which he celebrates as &ldquo;godly
+facts,&rdquo; he would have raised Protestantism to a moral pre-eminence.&nbsp;
+Dark pages of Scottish history might never have been written: the consciences
+of men might have been touched, and the cruelties of the religious conflict
+might have been abated.&nbsp; Many of them sprang from the fear of assassination.</p>
+<p>But Knox in some of his writings identified his cause with the palace
+revolutions of an ancient Oriental people.&nbsp; Not that he was a man
+of blood; when in France he dissuaded Kirkcaldy of Grange and others
+from stabbing the gaolers in making their escape from prison.&nbsp;
+Where idolaters in official position were concerned, and with a pen
+in his hand, he had no such scruples.&nbsp; He was a child of the old
+pre-Christian scriptures; of the earlier, not of the later prophets.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VI: KNOX IN THE ENGLISH PURITAN TROUBLES AT FRANKFORT: 1554-1555</h2>
+<p>The consequences of the &ldquo;Admonition&rdquo; came home to Knox
+when English refugees in Frankfort, impeded by him and others in the
+use of their Liturgy, accused him of high treason against Philip and
+Mary, and the Emperor, whom he had compared to Nero as an enemy of Christ.</p>
+<p>The affair of &ldquo;The Troubles at Frankfort&rdquo; brought into
+view the great gulf for ever fixed between Puritanism and the Church
+of England.&nbsp; It was made plain that Knox and the Anglican community
+were of incompatible temperaments, ideas, and, we may almost say, instincts.&nbsp;
+To Anglicans like Cranmer, Knox, from the first, was as antipathetic
+as they were to him.&nbsp; &ldquo;We can assure you,&rdquo; wrote some
+English exiles for religion&rsquo;s sake to Calvin, &ldquo;that that
+outrageous pamphlet of Knox&rsquo;s&rdquo; (his &ldquo;Admonition&rdquo;)
+&ldquo;added much oil to the flame of persecution in England.&nbsp;
+For before the publication of that book not one of our brethren had
+suffered death; but as soon as it came forth we doubt not but you are
+well aware of the number of excellent men who have perished in the flames;
+to say nothing of how many other godly men have been exposed to the
+risk of all their property, and even life itself, on the sole ground
+of either having had this book in their possession or having read it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Such were the charges brought against Knox by these English Protestant
+exiles, fleeing from the persecution that followed the &ldquo;Admonition,&rdquo;
+and, they say, took fresh ferocity from that tract.</p>
+<p>The quarrel between Knox and them definitely marks the beginning
+of the rupture between the fathers of the Church of England and the
+fathers of Puritanism, Scottish Presbyterianism, and Dissent.&nbsp;
+The representatives of Puritans and of Anglicans were now alike exiled,
+poor, homeless, without any abiding city.&nbsp; That they should instantly
+quarrel with each other over their prayer book (that which Knox had
+helped to correct) was, as Calvin told them, &ldquo;extremely absurd.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Each faction probably foresaw&mdash;certainly Knox&rsquo;s party foresaw&mdash;that,
+in the English congregation at Frankfort, a little flock barely tolerated,
+was to be settled the character of Protestantism in England, if ever
+England returned to Protestantism.&nbsp; &ldquo;This evil&rdquo; (the
+acceptance of the English Second Book of Prayer of Edward VI.) &ldquo;shall
+in time be established . . . and never be redressed, neither shall there
+for ever be an end of this controversy in England,&rdquo; wrote Knox&rsquo;s
+party to the Senate of Frankfort.&nbsp; The religious disruption in
+England was, in fact, incurable, but so it would have been had the Knoxians
+prevailed in Frankfort.&nbsp; The difference between the Churchman and
+the Dissenter goes to the root of the English character; no temporary
+triumph of either side could have brought Peace and union.&nbsp; While
+the world stands they will not be peaceful and united.</p>
+<p>The trouble arose thus.&nbsp; At the end of June 1554, some English
+exiles of the Puritan sort, men who objected to surplices, responses,
+kneeling at the Communion, and other matters of equal moment, came to
+Frankfort.&nbsp; They obtained leave to use the French Protestant Chapel,
+provided that they &ldquo;should not dissent from the Frenchmen in doctrine
+or ceremonies, lest they should thereby minister occasions of offence.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+They had then to settle what Order of services they should use; &ldquo;anything
+they pleased,&rdquo; said the magistrates of Frankfort, &ldquo;as long
+as they and the French kept the peace.&rdquo;&nbsp; They decided to
+adopt the English Order, barring responses, the Litany, the surplice,
+&ldquo;and many other things.&rdquo; <a name="citation54"></a><a href="#footnote54">{54}</a>&nbsp;
+The Litany was regarded by Knox as rather of the nature of magic than
+of prayer, the surplice was a Romish rag, and there was some other objection
+to the congregation&rsquo;s taking part in the prayers by responses,
+though they were not forbidden to mingle their voices in psalmody.&nbsp;
+<i>Dissidium valde absurdum</i>&mdash;&ldquo;a very absurd quarrel,&rdquo;
+among exiled fellow-countrymen, said Calvin, was the dispute which arose
+on these points.&nbsp; The Puritans, however, decided to alter the service
+to their taste, and enjoyed the use of the chapel.&nbsp; They had obtained
+a service which they were not likely to have been allowed to enforce
+in England had Edward VI. lived; but on this point they were of another
+opinion.</p>
+<p>This success was providential.&nbsp; They next invited English exiles
+abroad to join them at Frankfort, saying nothing about their mutilations
+of the service book.&nbsp; If these brethren came in, when they were
+all restored to England, if ever they were restored, their example,
+that of sufferers, would carry the day, and their service would for
+ever be that of the Anglican Church.&nbsp; The other exiled brethren,
+on receiving this invitation, had enough of the wisdom of the serpent
+to ask, &ldquo;Are we to be allowed to use our own prayer book?&rdquo;&nbsp;
+The answer of the godly of Frankfort evaded the question.&nbsp; At last
+the Frankfort Puritans showed their hand: they disapproved of various
+things in the Prayer Book.&nbsp; Knox, summoned from Geneva, a reluctant
+visitor, was already one of their preachers.&nbsp; In November 1554
+came Grindal, later Archbishop of Canterbury, from Zurich, ready to
+omit some ceremonies, so that he and his faction might have &ldquo;the
+substance&rdquo; of the Prayer Book.&nbsp; Negotiations went on, and
+it was proposed by the Puritans to use the Geneva service.&nbsp; But
+Knox declined to do that, without the knowledge of the non-Puritan exiles
+at Zurich and elsewhere, or to use the English book, and offered his
+resignation.&nbsp; Nothing could be more fair and above-board.</p>
+<p>There was an inchoate plan for a new Order.&nbsp; That failed; and
+Knox, with others, consulted Calvin, giving him a sketch of the nature
+of the English service.&nbsp; They drew his attention to the surplice;
+the Litany, &ldquo;devised by Pope Gregory,&rdquo; whereby &ldquo;we
+use a certain conjuring of God&rdquo;; the kneeling at the Communion;
+the use of the cross in baptism, and of the ring in marriage, clearly
+a thing of human, if not of diabolical invention, and the &ldquo;imposition
+of hands&rdquo; in confirmation.&nbsp; The churching of women, they
+said, is both Pagan and Jewish.&nbsp; &ldquo;Other things not so much
+shame itself as a certain kind of pity compelleth us to keep close.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The tone of the letter throughout was expressly calculated
+to prejudice Calvin on the point submitted to him,&rdquo; says Professor
+Hume Brown. <a name="citation56"></a><a href="#footnote56">{56}</a>&nbsp;
+Calvin replied that the quarrel might be all very well if the exiles
+were happy and at ease in their circumstances, though in the Liturgy,
+as described, there were &ldquo;tolerable (endurable) follies.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+On the whole he sided with the Knoxian party.&nbsp; The English Liturgy
+is not pure enough; and the English exiles, not at Frankfort, merely
+like it because they are accustomed to it.&nbsp; Some are partial to
+&ldquo;popish dregs.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>To the extreme Reformers no break with the past could be too abrupt
+and precipitous: the framers of the English Liturgy had rather adopted
+the principle of evolution than of development by catastrophe, and had
+wedded what was noblest in old Latin forms and prayers to music of the
+choicest English speech.&nbsp; To this service, for which their fellow-religionists
+in England were dying at the stake, the non-Frankfortian exiles were
+attached.&nbsp; They were Englishmen; their service, they said, should
+bear &ldquo;an English face&rdquo;: so Knox avers, who could as yet
+have no patriotic love of any religious form as exclusively and essentially
+Scottish.</p>
+<p>A kind of truce was now proclaimed, to last till May 1, 1555; Knox
+aiding in the confection of a service without responses, &ldquo;some
+part taken out of the English book, and other things put to,&rdquo;
+while Calvin, Bullinger, and three others were appointed as referees.&nbsp;
+The Frankfort congregation had now a brief interval of provisional peace,
+till, on March 13, 1555, Richard Cox, with a band of English refugees,
+arrived.&nbsp; He had been tutor to Edward VI., the young Marcellus
+of Protestantism, but for Frankfort he was not puritanic enough.&nbsp;
+His company would give a large majority to the anti-Knoxian congregation.&nbsp;
+He and his at once uttered the responses, and on Sunday one of them
+read the Litany.&nbsp; This was an unruly infraction of the provisional
+agreement.&nbsp; Cox and his party (April 5) represented to Calvin that
+they had given up surplices, crosses, and other things, &ldquo;not as
+impure and papistical,&rdquo; but as indifferent, and for the sake of
+peace.&nbsp; This was after they had driven Knox from the place, as
+they presently did; in the beginning it was distinctly their duty to
+give up the Litany and responses, while the truce lasted, that is, till
+the end of April.&nbsp; In the afternoon of the Sunday Knox preached,
+denouncing the morning&rsquo;s proceedings, the &ldquo;impurity&rdquo;
+of the Prayer Book, of which &ldquo;I once had a good opinion,&rdquo;
+and the absence, in England, of &ldquo;discipline,&rdquo; that is, interference
+by preachers with private life.&nbsp; Pluralities also he denounced,
+and some of the exiles had been pluralists.</p>
+<p>For all this Knox was &ldquo;very sharply reproved,&rdquo; as soon
+as he left the pulpit.&nbsp; Two days later, at a meeting, he insisted
+that Cox&rsquo;s people should have a vote in the congregation, thus
+making the anti-puritans a majority; Knox&rsquo;s conduct was here certainly
+chivalrous: &ldquo;I fear not your judgment,&rdquo; he said.&nbsp; He
+had never wished to go to Frankfort; in going he merely obeyed Calvin,
+and probably he had no great desire to stay.&nbsp; He was forbidden
+to preach by Cox and his majority; and a later conference with Cox led
+to no compromise.&nbsp; It seems probable that Cox and the anti-puritans
+already cherished a grudge against Knox for his tract, the &ldquo;Admonition.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+He had a warning that they would use the pamphlet against him, and he
+avers that &ldquo;some devised how to have me cast into prison.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+The anti-puritans, admitting in a letter to Calvin that they brought
+the &ldquo;Admonition&rdquo; before the magistrates of Frankfort as
+&ldquo;a book which would supply their enemies with just ground for
+overturning the whole Church, and one which had added much oil to the
+flame of persecution in England,&rdquo; deny that they desired more
+than that Knox might be ordered to quit the place.&nbsp; The passages
+selected as treasonable in the &ldquo;Admonition&rdquo; do not include
+the prayer for a Jehu.&nbsp; They were enough, however, to secure the
+dismissal of Knox from Frankfort.</p>
+<p>Cox had accepted the Order used by the French Protestant congregation,
+probably because it committed him and his party to nothing in England;
+however, Knox had no sooner departed than the anti-puritans obtained
+leave to use, without surplice, cross, and some other matters, the Second
+Prayer Book of Edward VI.&nbsp; In September the Puritans seceded, the
+anti-puritans remained, squabbling with the Lutherans and among themselves.</p>
+<p>In the whole affair Knox acted the most open and manly part; in his
+&ldquo;History&rdquo; he declines to name the opponents who avenged
+themselves, in a manner so dubious, on his &ldquo;Admonition.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+If they believed their own account of the mischief that it wrought in
+England, their denunciation of him to magistrates, who were not likely
+to do more than dismiss him, is the less inexcusable.&nbsp; They did
+not try to betray him to a body like the Inquisition, as Calvin did
+in the case of Servetus.&nbsp; But their conduct was most unworthy and
+unchivalrous. <a name="citation58"></a><a href="#footnote58">{58}</a></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VII: KNOX IN SCOTLAND: LETHINGTON: MARY OF GUISE: 1555-1556</h2>
+<p>Meanwhile the Reformer returned to Geneva (April 1555), where Calvin
+was now supreme.&nbsp; From Geneva, &ldquo;the den of mine own ease,
+the rest of quiet study,&rdquo; Knox was dragged, &ldquo;maist contrarious
+to mine own judgement,&rdquo; by a summons from Mrs. Bowes.&nbsp; He
+did not like leaving his &ldquo;den&rdquo; to rejoin his betrothed;
+the lover was not so fervent as the evangelist was cautious.&nbsp; Knox
+had at that time probably little correspondence with Scotland.&nbsp;
+He knew that there was no refuge for him in England under Mary Tudor,
+&ldquo;who nowise may abide the presence of God&rsquo;s prophets.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In Scotland, at this moment, the Government was in the hands of Mary
+of Guise, a sister of the Duke of Guise and of the Cardinal.&nbsp; Mary
+was now aged forty; she was born in 1515, as Knox probably was.&nbsp;
+She was a tall and stately woman; her face was thin and refined; Henry
+VIII., as being himself a large man, had sought her hand, which was
+given to his nephew, James V.&nbsp; On the death of that king, Mary,
+with Cardinal Beaton, kept Scotland true to the French alliance, and
+her daughter, the fair Queen of Scots, was at this moment a child in
+France, betrothed to the Dauphin.&nbsp; As a Catholic, of the House
+of Lorraine, Mary could not but cleave to her faith and to the French
+alliance.&nbsp; In 1554 she had managed to oust from the Regency the
+Earl of Arran, the head of the all but royal Hamiltons, now gratified
+with the French title of Duc de Chatelherault.&nbsp; To crown her was
+as seemly a thing, says Knox, &ldquo;if men had but eyes, as a saddle
+upon the back of <i>ane unrewly kow</i>.&rdquo;&nbsp; She practically
+deposed Huntly, the most treacherous of men, from the Chancellorship,
+substituting, with more or less reserve, a Frenchman, de Rubay; and
+d&rsquo;Oysel, the commander of the French troops in Scotland, was her
+chief adviser.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/knox2b.jpg">
+<img alt="Picture of King James V and Mary of Guise" src="images/knox2s.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>Writing after the death of Mary of Guise, Knox avers that she only
+waited her chance &ldquo;to cut the throats of all those in whom she
+suspected the knowledge of God to be, within the realm of Scotland.&rdquo;
+<a name="citation60"></a><a href="#footnote60">{60}</a>&nbsp; As a matter
+of fact, the Regent later refused a French suggestion that she should
+peacefully call Protestants together, and then order a massacre after
+the manner of the Bartholomew: itself still in the womb of the future.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Mary of Guise,&rdquo; says Knox&rsquo;s biographer, Professor
+Hume Brown, &ldquo;had the instincts of a good ruler&mdash;the love
+of order and justice, and the desire to stand well with the people.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Knox, however, believed, or chose to say, that she wanted to cut
+all Protestant throats, just as he believed that a Protestant king should
+cut all Catholic throats.&nbsp; He attributed to her, quite erroneously
+and uncharitably, his own unsparing fervour.&nbsp; As he held this view
+of her character and purposes, it is not strange that a journey to Scotland
+was &ldquo;contrairious to his judgement.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He did not understand the situation.&nbsp; Ferocious as had been
+the English invasion of Scotland in 1547, the English party in Scotland,
+many of them paid traitors, did not resent these &ldquo;rebukes of a
+friend,&rdquo; so much as both the nobles and the people now began to
+detest their French allies, and were jealous of the Queen Mother&rsquo;s
+promotion of Frenchmen.</p>
+<p>There were not, to be sure, many Scots whom she, or any one, could
+trust.&nbsp; Some were honestly Protestant: some held pensions from
+England: others would sacrifice national interests to their personal
+revenges and clan feuds.&nbsp; The Rev. the Lord James Stewart, Mary&rsquo;s
+bastard brother, Prior of St. Andrews and of Pittenweem, was still very
+young.&nbsp; He had no interest in his clerical profession beyond drawing
+his revenues as prior of two abbeys; and his nearness to the Crown caused
+him to be suspected of ambition: moreover, he tended towards the new
+ideas in religion.&nbsp; He had met Knox in London, apparently in 1552.&nbsp;
+Morton was a mere wavering youth; Argyll was very old: Chatelherault
+was a rival of the Regent, a competitor for the Crown and quite incompetent.&nbsp;
+The Regent, in short, could scarcely have discovered a Scottish adviser
+worthy of employment, and when she did trust one, he was the brilliant
+&ldquo;chamaeleon,&rdquo; young Maitland of Lethington, who would rather
+betray his master cleverly than run a straight course, and did betray
+the Regent.&nbsp; Thus Mary, a Frenchwoman and a Catholic, governing
+Scotland for her Catholic daughter, the Dauphiness, with the aid of
+a few French troops who had just saved the independence of the country,
+naturally employed French advisers.&nbsp; This made her unpopular; her
+attempts to bring justice into Scottish courts were odious, and she
+would not increase the odium by persecuting the Protestants.&nbsp; The
+Duke&rsquo;s bastard brother, again, the Archbishop, sharing his family
+ambition, was in no mood for burning heretics.&nbsp; The Queen Mother
+herself carried conciliation so far as to pardon and reinstate such
+trebly dyed traitors as the notorious Crichton of Brunston, and she
+employed Kirkcaldy of Grange, who intrigued against her while in her
+employment.&nbsp; An Edinburgh tailor, Harlaw, who seems to have been
+a deacon in English orders, was allowed to return to Scotland in 1554.&nbsp;
+He became a very notable preacher. <a name="citation62a"></a><a href="#footnote62a">{62a}</a></p>
+<p>Going from Mrs. Bowes&rsquo;s house to Edinburgh, Knox found that
+&ldquo;the fervency&rdquo; of the godly &ldquo;did ravish him.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+At the house of one Syme &ldquo;the trumpet blew the auld sound three
+days thegither,&rdquo; he informed Mrs. Bowes, and Knox himself was
+the trumpeter.&nbsp; He found another lady, &ldquo;who, by reason that
+she had a troubled conscience, delighted much in the company of the
+said John.&rdquo;&nbsp; There were pleasant sisters in Edinburgh, who
+later consulted Knox on the delicate subject of dress.&nbsp; He was
+more tolerant in answering them than when he denounced &ldquo;the stinking
+pride of women&rdquo; at Mary Stuart&rsquo;s Court; admitting that &ldquo;in
+clothes, silks, velvets, gold, and other such, there is no uncleanness,&rdquo;
+yet &ldquo;I cannot praise the common superfluity which women now use
+in their apparel.&rdquo;&nbsp; He was quite opposed, however, to what
+he pleasingly calls &ldquo;correcting natural beauty&rdquo; (as by dyeing
+the hair), and held that &ldquo;farthingales cannot be justified.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>On the whole, he left the sisters fairly free to dress as they pleased.&nbsp;
+His curious phrase, <a name="citation62b"></a><a href="#footnote62b">{62b}</a>
+in a letter to a pair of sisters, &ldquo;the prophets of God are often
+impeded to pray for such as carnally they love unfeignedly,&rdquo; is
+difficult to understand.&nbsp; We leave it to the learned to explain
+this singular limitation of the prophet, which Knox says that he had
+not as yet experienced.&nbsp; He must have heard about it from other
+prophets.</p>
+<p>Knox found at this time a patron remarkable, says Dr. M&lsquo;Crie,
+&ldquo;for great respectability of character,&rdquo; Erskine of Dun.&nbsp;
+Born in 1508, about 1530 he slew a priest named Thomas Froster, in a
+curiously selected place, the belfry tower of Montrose.&nbsp; Nobody
+seems to have thought anything of it, nor should we know the fact, if
+the record of the blood-price paid by Mr. Erskine to the priest&rsquo;s
+father did not testify to the fervent act.&nbsp; Six years later, according
+to Knox, &ldquo;God had marvellously illuminated&rdquo; Erskine, and
+the mildness of his nature is frequently applauded.&nbsp; He was, for
+Scotland, a man of learning, and our first amateur of Greek.&nbsp; Why
+did he kill a priest in a bell tower!</p>
+<p>In the winter or autumn of 1555, Erskine gave a supper, where Knox
+was to argue against crypto-protestantism.&nbsp; When once the Truth,
+whether Anglican or Presbyterian, was firmly established, Catholics
+were compelled, under very heavy fines, to attend services and sermons
+which they believed to be at least erroneous, if not blasphemous.&nbsp;
+I am not aware that, in 1555, the Catholic Church, in Scotland, thus
+vigorously forced people of Protestant opinions to present themselves
+at Mass, punishing nonconformity with ruin.&nbsp; I have not found any
+complaints to this effect, at that time.&nbsp; But no doubt an appearance
+of conformity might save much trouble, even in the lenient conditions
+produced by the character of the Regent and by the political situation.&nbsp;
+Knox, then, discovered that &ldquo;divers who had a zeal to godliness
+made small scruple to go to the Mass, or to communicate with the abused
+sacraments in the Papistical manner.&rdquo;&nbsp; He himself, therefore,
+&ldquo;began to show the impiety of the Mass, and how dangerous a thing
+it was to communicate in any sort with idolatry.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Now to many of his hearers this essential article of his faith&mdash;that
+the Catholic doctrine of the Eucharist and form of celebration were
+&ldquo;idolatry&rdquo;&mdash;may have been quite a new idea.&nbsp; It
+was already, however, a commonplace with Anglican Protestants.&nbsp;
+Nothing of the sort was to be found in the <i>first</i> Prayer Book
+of Edward VI.; broken lights of various ways of regarding the Sacrament
+probably played, at this moment, over the ideas of Knox&rsquo;s Scottish
+disciples.&nbsp; Indeed, their consciences appear to have been at rest,
+for it was <i>after</i> Knox&rsquo;s declaration about the &ldquo;idolatrous&rdquo;
+character of the Mass that &ldquo;the matter began to be agitated from
+man to man, the conscience of some being afraid.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>To us it may seem that the sudden denunciation of a Christian ceremony,
+even what may be deemed a perverted Christian ceremony, as sheer &ldquo;idolatry,&rdquo;
+equivalent to the worship of serpents, bulls, or of a foreign Baal in
+ancient Israel&mdash;was a step calculated to confuse the real issues
+and to provoke a religious war of massacre.&nbsp; Knox, we know, regarded
+extermination of idolaters as a counsel of perfection, though in the
+Christian scriptures not one word could be found to justify his position.&nbsp;
+He relied on texts about massacring Amalekites and about Elijah&rsquo;s
+slaughter of the prophets of Baal.&nbsp; The Mass was idolatry, was
+Baal worship; and Baal worshippers, if recalcitrant, must die.</p>
+<p>These extreme unchristian ideas, then, were new in Scotland, even
+to &ldquo;divers who had a zeal to godliness.&rdquo;&nbsp; For their
+discussion, at Erskine of Dun&rsquo;s party, were present, among others,
+Willock, a Scots preacher returned from England, and young Maitland
+of Lethington.&nbsp; We are not told what part Willock took in the conversation.&nbsp;
+The arguments turned on biblical analogies, never really coincident
+with the actual modern circumstances.&nbsp; The analogy produced in
+discussion by those who did not go to all extremes with Knox did not,
+however, lack appropriateness.&nbsp; Christianity, in fact, as they
+seem to have argued, did arise out of Judaism; retaining the same God
+and the same scriptures, but, in virtue of the sacrifice of its Founder,
+abstaining from the sacrifices and ceremonial of the law.&nbsp; In the
+same way Protestantism arose out of medi&aelig;val Catholicism, retaining
+the same God and the same scriptures, but rejecting the medi&aelig;val
+ceremonial and the medi&aelig;val theory of the sacrifice of the Mass.&nbsp;
+It did not follow that the Mass was sheer &ldquo;idolatry,&rdquo; at
+which no friend of the new ideas could be present.</p>
+<p>As a proof that such presence or participation was not unlawful,
+was not idolatry, in the existing state of affairs, was adduced the
+conduct of St. Paul and the advice given to him by St. James and the
+Church in Jerusalem (Acts xxi. 18-36).&nbsp; Paul was informed that
+many thousands of Jews &ldquo;believed,&rdquo; yet remained zealous
+for the law, the old order.&nbsp; They had learned that Paul advised
+the Jews in Greece and elsewhere not to &ldquo;walk after the customs.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Paul should prove that &ldquo;he also kept the law.&rdquo;&nbsp; For
+this purpose he, with four Christian Jews under a vow, was to purify
+himself, and he went into the Temple, &ldquo;until that an offering
+should be offered for every one of them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Offerings,&rdquo; of course, is the term in our version for
+sacrifices, whether of animals or of &ldquo;unleavened wafers anointed
+with oil.&rdquo;&nbsp; The argument from analogy was, I infer, that
+the Mass, with its wafer, was precisely such an &ldquo;offering,&rdquo;
+such a survival in Catholic ritual, as in Jewish ritual St. Paul consented
+to, by the advice of the Church of Jerusalem; consequently Protestants
+in a Catholic country, under the existing circumstances, might attend
+the Mass.&nbsp; The Mass was not &ldquo;idolatry.&rdquo;&nbsp; The analogy
+halts, like all analogies, but so, of course, and to fatal results,
+does Knox&rsquo;s analogy between the foreign worships of Israel and
+the Mass.&nbsp; &ldquo;She thinks not <i>that</i> idolatry, but good
+religion,&rdquo; said Lethington to Knox once, speaking of Queen Mary&rsquo;s
+Mass.&nbsp; &ldquo;So thought they that offered their children unto
+Moloch,&rdquo; retorted the reformer.&nbsp; Manifestly the Mass is,
+of the two, much more on a level with the &ldquo;offering&rdquo; of
+St. Paul than with human sacrifices to Moloch! <a name="citation66"></a><a href="#footnote66">{66}</a></p>
+<p>In his reply Knox, as he states his own argument, altogether overlooked
+the <i>offering</i> of St. Paul, which, as far as we understand, was
+the essence of his opponents&rsquo; contention.&nbsp; He said that &ldquo;to
+pay <i>vows</i> was never idolatry,&rdquo; but &ldquo;the Mass from
+the original was and remained odious idolatry, therefore the facts were
+most unlike.&nbsp; Secondly, I greatly doubt whether either James&rsquo;s
+commandment or Paul&rsquo;s obedience proceeded from the Holy Ghost,&rdquo;
+about which Knox was, apparently, better informed than these Apostles
+and the Church of Jerusalem.&nbsp; Next, Paul was presently in danger
+from a mob, which had been falsely told that he took Greeks into the
+Temple.&nbsp; Hence it was manifest &ldquo;that God approved not that
+means of reconciliation.&rdquo;&nbsp; Obviously the danger of an Apostle
+from a misinformed mob is no sort of evidence to divine approval or
+disapproval of his behaviour. <a name="citation67"></a><a href="#footnote67">{67}</a>&nbsp;
+We shall later find that when Knox was urging on some English nonconformists
+the beauty of conformity (1568), he employed the very precedent of St.
+Paul&rsquo;s conduct at Jerusalem, which he rejected when it was urged
+at Erskine&rsquo;s supper party!</p>
+<p>We have dwelt on this example of Knox&rsquo;s logic, because it is
+crucial.&nbsp; The reform of the Church of Christ could not be achieved
+without cruel persecution on both parts, while Knox was informing Scotland
+that all members of the old Faith were as much idolaters as Israelites
+who sacrificed their children to a foreign God, while to extirpate idolaters
+was the duty of a Christian prince.&nbsp; Lethington, as he soon showed,
+was as clear-sighted in regard to Knox&rsquo;s logical methods as any
+man of to-day, but he &ldquo;concluded, saying, I see perfectly that
+our shifts will serve nothing before God, seeing that they stand us
+in so small stead before man.&rdquo;&nbsp; But either Lethington conformed
+and went to Mass, or Mary of Guise expected nothing of the sort from
+him, for he remained high in her favour, till he betrayed her in 1559.</p>
+<p>Knox&rsquo;s opinion being accepted&mdash;it obviously was a novelty
+to many of his hearers&mdash;the Reformers must either convert or persecute
+the Catholics even to extermination.&nbsp; Circumstances of mere worldly
+policy forbade the execution of this counsel of perfection, but persistent
+&ldquo;idolaters,&rdquo; legally, lay after 1560 under sentence of death.&nbsp;
+There was to come a moment, we shall see, when even Knox shrank from
+the consequences of a theory (&ldquo;a murderous syllogism,&rdquo; writes
+one of his recent biographers, Mr. Taylor Innes), which divided his
+countrymen into the godly, on one hand, and idolaters doomed to death
+by divine law, on the other.&nbsp; But he put his hesitation behind
+him as a suggestion of Satan.</p>
+<p>Knox now associated with Lord Erskine, then Governor of Edinburgh
+Castle, the central strength of Scotland; with Lord Lorne, soon to be
+Earl of Argyll (a &ldquo;Christian,&rdquo; but not a remarkably consistent
+walker), with &ldquo;Lord James,&rdquo; the natural brother of Queen
+Mary (whose conscience, as we saw, permitted him to draw the benefices
+of the Abbacy of St. Andrews, of Pittenweem, and of an abbey in France,
+without doing any duties), and with many redoubtable lairds of the Lothians,
+Ayrshire, and Forfarshire.&nbsp; He also preached for ten days in the
+town house, at Edinburgh, of the Bishop of Dunkeld.&nbsp; On May 15,
+1556, he was summoned to appear in the church of the Black Friars.&nbsp;
+As he was backed by Erskine of Dun, and other gentlemen, according to
+the Scottish custom when legal proceedings were afoot, no steps were
+taken against him, the clergy probably dreading Knox&rsquo;s defenders,
+as Bothwell later, in similar circumstances, dreaded the assemblage
+under the Earl of Moray; as Lennox shrank from facing the supporters
+of Bothwell, and Moray from encountering the spears of Lethington&rsquo;s
+allies.&nbsp; It was usual to overawe the administrators of justice
+by these gatherings of supporters, perhaps a survival of the old &ldquo;compurgators.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+This, in fact, was &ldquo;part of the obligation of our Scottish kyndness,&rdquo;
+and the divided ecclesiastical and civil powers shrank from a conflict.</p>
+<p>Glencairn and the Earl Marischal, in the circumstances, advised Knox
+to write a letter to Mary of Guise, &ldquo;something that might move
+her to hear the Word of God,&rdquo; that is, to hear Knox preach.&nbsp;
+This letter, as it then stood, was printed in a little black-letter
+volume, probably of 1556.&nbsp; Knox addresses the Regent and Queen
+Mother as &ldquo;her humble subject.&rdquo;&nbsp; The document has an
+interest almost pathetic, and throws light on the whole character of
+the great Reformer.&nbsp; It appears that Knox had been reported to
+the Regent by some of the clergy, or by rumour, as a heretic and seducer
+of the people.&nbsp; But Knox had learned that the &ldquo;dew of the
+heavenly grace&rdquo; had quenched her displeasure, and he hoped that
+the Regent would be as clement to others in his case as to him.&nbsp;
+Therefore he returns to his attitude in the letter to his Berwick congregation
+(1552).&nbsp; He calls for no Jehu, he advises no armed opposition to
+the sovereign, but says of &ldquo;God&rsquo;s chosen children&rdquo;
+(the Protestants), that &ldquo;their victory standeth not in resisting
+but in suffering,&rdquo; &ldquo;in quietness, silence, and hope,&rdquo;
+as the Prophet Isaiah recommends.&nbsp; The Isaiahs (however numerous
+modern criticism may reckon them) were late prophets, not of the school
+of Elijah, whom Knox followed in 1554 and 1558-59, not in 1552 or 1555,
+or on one occasion in 1558-59.&nbsp; &ldquo;The Elect of God&rdquo;
+do not &ldquo;shed blood and murder,&rdquo; Knox remarks, though he
+approves of the Elect, of the brethren at all events, when they <i>do</i>
+murder and shed blood.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile Knox is more than willing to run the risks of the preacher
+of the truth, &ldquo;partly because I would, with St. Paul, wish myself
+accursed from Christ, as touching earthly pleasures&rdquo; (whatever
+that may mean), &ldquo;for the salvation of my brethren and illumination
+of your Grace.&rdquo;&nbsp; He confesses that the Regent is probably
+not &ldquo;so free as a public reformation perhaps would require,&rdquo;
+for that required the downcasting of altars and images, and prohibition
+to celebrate or attend Catholic rites.&nbsp; Thus Knox would, apparently,
+be satisfied for the moment with toleration and immunity for his fellow-religionists.&nbsp;
+Nothing of the sort really contented him, of course, but at present
+he asked for no more.</p>
+<p>Yet, a few days later, he writes, the Regent handed his letter to
+the Archbishop of Glasgow, saying, &ldquo;Please you, my Lord, to read
+a pasquil,&rdquo; an offence which Knox never forgave and bitterly avenged
+in his &ldquo;History.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It is possible that the Regent merely glanced at his letter.&nbsp;
+She would find herself alluded to in a biblical parallel with &ldquo;the
+Egyptian midwives,&rdquo; with Nebuchadnezzar, and Rahab the harlot.&nbsp;
+Her acquaintance with these amiable idolaters may have been slight,
+but the comparison was odious, and far from tactful.&nbsp; Knox also
+reviled the creed in which she had been bred as &ldquo;a poisoned cup,&rdquo;
+and threatened her, if she did not act on his counsel, with &ldquo;torment
+and pain everlasting.&rdquo;&nbsp; Those who drink of the cup of her
+Church &ldquo;drink therewith damnation and death.&rdquo;&nbsp; As for
+her clergy, &ldquo;proud prelates do Kings maintain to murder the souls
+for which the blood of Christ Jesus was shed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>These statements were dogmatic, and the reverse of conciliatory.&nbsp;
+One should not, in attempting to convert any person, begin by reviling
+his religion.&nbsp; Knox adopted the same method with Mary Stuart: the
+method is impossible.&nbsp; It is not to be marvelled at if the Regent
+did style the letter a &ldquo;pasquil.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Knox took his revenge in his &ldquo;History&rdquo; by repeating a
+foolish report that Mary of Guise had designed to poison her late husband,
+James V.&nbsp; &ldquo;Many whisper that of old his part was in the pot,
+and that the suspicion thereof caused him to be inhibited the Queen&rsquo;s
+company, while the Cardinal got his secret business sped of that gracious
+lady either by day or night.&rdquo; <a name="citation71a"></a><a href="#footnote71a">{71a}</a>&nbsp;
+He styled her, as we saw, &ldquo;a wanton widow&rdquo;; he hinted that
+she was the mistress of Cardinal Beaton; he made similar insinuations
+about her relations with d&rsquo;Oysel (who was &ldquo;<i>a secretis
+mulierum</i>&rdquo;); he said, as we have seen, that she only waited
+her chance to cut the throats of all suspected Protestants; he threw
+doubt on the legitimacy of her daughter, Mary Stuart; and he constantly
+accuses her of treachery, as will appear, when the charge is either
+doubtful, or, as far as I can ascertain, absolutely false.</p>
+<p>These are unfortunately examples of Knox&rsquo;s Christianity. <a name="citation71b"></a><a href="#footnote71b">{71b}</a>&nbsp;
+It is very easy for modern historians and biographers to speak with
+genial applause of the prophet&rsquo;s manly bluffness.&nbsp; But if
+we put ourselves in the position of opponents whom he was trying to
+convert, of the two Marys for example, we cannot but perceive that his
+method was hopelessly mistaken.&nbsp; In attempting to evangelise an
+Euahlayi black fellow, we should not begin by threats of damnation,
+and by railing accusations against his god, Baiame.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER VIII: KNOX&rsquo;S WRITINGS FROM ABROAD: BEGINNING OF THE
+SCOTTISH REVOLUTION, 1556-1558</h2>
+<p>Knox was about this time summoned to be one of the preachers to the
+English at Geneva.&nbsp; He sent in advance Mrs. Bowes and his wife,
+visited Argyll and Glenorchy (now Breadalbane), wrote (July 7) an epistle
+bidding the brethren be diligent in reading and discussing the Bible,
+and went abroad.&nbsp; His effigy was presently burned by the clergy,
+as he had not appeared in answer to a second summons, and he was outlawed
+in absence.</p>
+<p>It is not apparent that Knox took any part in the English translation
+of the Bible, then being executed at Geneva.&nbsp; Greek and Hebrew
+were not his forte, though he had now some knowledge of both tongues,
+but he preached to the men who did the work.&nbsp; The perfections of
+Genevan Church discipline delighted him.&nbsp; &ldquo;Manners and religion
+so sincerely reformed I have not yet seen in any other place.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+The genius of Calvin had made Geneva a kind of Protestant city state
+&kappa;&alpha;&tau;' &epsilon;&upsilon;&chi;&eta;&nu;; a Calvinistic
+Utopia&mdash;everywhere the vigilant eyes of the preachers and magistrates
+were upon every detail of daily life.&nbsp; Monthly and weekly the magistrates
+and ministers met to point out each other&rsquo;s little failings.&nbsp;
+Knox felt as if he were indeed in the City of God, and later he introduced
+into Scotland, and vehemently abjured England to adopt, the Genevan
+&ldquo;discipline.&rdquo;&nbsp; England would none of it, and would
+not, even in the days of the Solemn League and Covenant, suffer the
+excommunication by preachers to pass without lay control.</p>
+<p>It is unfortunate that the ecclesiastical polity and discipline of
+a small city state, like a Greek &pi;&omicron;&lambda;&iota;&sigmaf;,
+feasible in such a community as Geneva at a moment of spiritual excitement,
+was brought by Knox and his brethren into a nation like Scotland.&nbsp;
+The results were a hundred and twenty-nine years of unrest, civil war,
+and persecution.</p>
+<p>Though happy in the affection of his wife and Mrs. Bowes, Knox, at
+this time, needed more of feminine society.&nbsp; On November 19, 1556,
+he wrote to his friend, Mrs. Locke, wife of a Cheapside merchant: &ldquo;You
+write that your desire is earnest to see me.&nbsp; Dear sister, if I
+should express the thirst and languor which I have had for your presence,
+I should appear to pass measure. . . .&nbsp; Your presence is so dear
+to me that if the charge of this little flock . . . did not impede me,
+my presence should anticipate my letter.&rdquo;&nbsp; Thus Knox was
+ready to brave the fires of Smithfield, or, perhaps, forgot them for
+the moment in his affection for Mrs. Locke.&nbsp; He writes to no other
+woman in this fervid strain.&nbsp; On May 8, 1557, Mrs. Locke with her
+son and daughter (who died after her journey), joined Knox at Geneva.
+<a name="citation73"></a><a href="#footnote73">{73}</a></p>
+<p>He was soon to be involved in Scottish affairs.&nbsp; After his departure
+from his country, omens and prodigies had ensued.&nbsp; A comet appeared
+in November-December 1556.&nbsp; Next year some corn-stacks were destroyed
+by lightning.&nbsp; Worse, a calf with two heads was born, and was exhibited
+as a warning to Mary of Guise by Robert Ormistoun.&nbsp; The idolatress
+merely sneered, and said &ldquo;it was but a common thing.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Such a woman was incorrigible.&nbsp; Mary of Guise is always blamed
+for endangering Scotland in the interests of her family, the Guises
+of the House of Lorraine.&nbsp; In fact, so far as she tried to make
+Scotland a province of France, she was serving the ambition of Henri
+II.&nbsp; It could not be foreseen, in 1555, that Henri II. would be
+slain in 1559, leaving the two kingdoms in the hands of Francis II.
+and Mary Stuart, who were so young, that they would inevitably be ruled
+by the Queen&rsquo;s uncles of the House of Lorraine.&nbsp; Shortly
+before Knox arrived in Scotland in 1555, the Duc de Guise had advised
+the Regent to &ldquo;use sweetness and moderation,&rdquo; as better
+than &ldquo;extremity and rigour&rdquo;; advice which she acted on gladly.</p>
+<p>Unluckily the war between France and Spain, in 1557, brought English
+troops into collision with French forces in the Low Countries (Philip
+II. being king of England); this led to complications between Scotland,
+as ally of France, and the English on the Borders.&nbsp; Border raids
+began; d&rsquo;Oysel fortified Eyemouth, as a counterpoise to Berwick,
+war was declared in November, and the discontented Scots, such as Chatelherault,
+Huntly, Cassilis, and Argyll, mutinied and refused to cross Tweed. <a name="citation74"></a><a href="#footnote74">{74}</a>&nbsp;
+Thus arose a breach between the Regent and some of her nobles, who at
+last, in 1559, rebelled against her on the ground of religion.&nbsp;
+While the weak war languished on, in 1557-58, &ldquo;the Evangel of
+Jesus Christ began wondrously to flourish,&rdquo; says Knox.&nbsp; Other
+evangelists of his pattern, Harlaw, Douglas, Willock, and a baker, Methuen
+(later a victim of the intolerably cruel &ldquo;discipline&rdquo; of
+the Kirk Triumphant), preached at Dundee, and Methuen started a reformed
+Kirk (though not without being declared rebels at the horn).&nbsp; When
+these persons preached, their hearers were apt to raise riots, wreck
+churches, and destroy works of sacred art.&nbsp; No Government could
+for ever wink at such lawless actions, and it was because the pulpiteers,
+Methuen, Willock, Douglas, and the rest, were again &ldquo;put at,&rdquo;
+after being often suffered to go free, that the final crash came, and
+the Reformation began in the wrack and ruin of monasteries and churches.</p>
+<p>There was drawing on another thunder-cloud.&nbsp; The policy of Mary
+of Guise certainly tended to make Scotland a mere province of France,
+a province infested by French forces, slender, but ill-paid and predacious.&nbsp;
+Before marrying the Dauphin, in April 1558, Mary Stuart, urged it is
+said by the Guises, signed away the independence of her country, to
+which her husband, by these deeds, was to succeed if she died without
+issue.&nbsp; Young as she was, Mary was perfectly able to understand
+the infamy of the transaction, and probably was not so careless as to
+sign the deeds unread.</p>
+<p>Even before this secret treaty was drafted, on March 10, 1557, Glencairn,
+Lorne, Erskine, and the Prior of St. Andrews&mdash;best known to us
+in after years as James Stewart, Earl of Moray&mdash;informed Knox that
+no &ldquo;cruelty&rdquo; by way of persecution was being practised;
+that his presence was desired, and that they were ready to jeopard their
+lives and goods for the cause.&nbsp; The rest would be told to Knox
+by the bearer of the letter.&nbsp; Knox received the letter in May 1557,
+with verbal reports by the bearers, but was so far from hasty that he
+did not leave Geneva till the end of September, and did not reach Dieppe
+on his way to Scotland till October 24.&nbsp; Three days later he wrote
+to the nobles who had summoned him seven months earlier.&nbsp; He had
+received, he said, at Dieppe two private letters of a discouraging sort;
+one correspondent said that the enterprise was to be reconsidered, the
+other that the boldness and constancy required &ldquo;for such an enterprise&rdquo;
+were lacking among the nobles.&nbsp; Meanwhile Knox had spent his time,
+or some of it, in asking the most godly and the most learned of Europe,
+including Calvin, for opinions of such an adventure, for the assurance
+of his own conscience and the consciences of the Lord James, Erskine,
+Lorne, and the rest. <a name="citation76a"></a><a href="#footnote76a">{76a}</a>&nbsp;
+This indicates that Knox himself was not quite sure of the lawfulness
+of an armed rising, and perhaps explains his long delay.&nbsp; Knox
+assures us that Calvin and other godly ministers insisted on his going
+to Scotland.&nbsp; But it is quite certain that of an armed rising Calvin
+absolutely disapproved.&nbsp; On April 16, 1561, writing to Coligny,
+Calvin says that he was consulted several months before the tumult of
+Amboise (March 1560) and absolutely discouraged the appeal to arms.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Better that we all perish a hundred times than that the name
+of Christianity and the Gospel should come under such disgrace.&rdquo;
+<a name="citation76b"></a><a href="#footnote76b">{76b}</a>&nbsp; If
+Calvin bade Knox go to Scotland, he must have supposed that no rebellion
+was intended.&nbsp; Knox tells his correspondents that they have betrayed
+themselves and their posterity (&ldquo;in conscience I can except none
+that bear the name of nobility&rdquo;), they have made him and their
+own enterprise ridiculous, and they have put him to great trouble.&nbsp;
+What is he to say when he returns to Geneva, and is asked why he did
+not carry out his purpose?&nbsp; He then encourages them to be resolute.</p>
+<p>Knox &ldquo;certainly made the most,&rdquo; says Professor Hume Brown,
+&ldquo;of the two letters from correspondents unknown to us.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+He at once represented them as the cause of his failure to keep tryst;
+but, in April 1558, writing from Geneva to &ldquo;the sisters,&rdquo;
+he said, &ldquo;the cause of my stop to this day I do not clearly understand.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+He did not know why he left England before the Marian persecutions;
+and he did not know why he had not crossed over to Scotland in 1557.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;It may be that God justly permitted Sathan to put in my mind
+such cogitations as these: I heard such troubles as appeared in that
+realm;&rdquo;&mdash;troubles presently to be described.</p>
+<p>Hearing, at Dieppe, then, in October 1557, of the troubles, and of
+the faint war with England, and moved, perhaps, he suggests, by Satan,
+<a name="citation77a"></a><a href="#footnote77a">{77a}</a> Knox &ldquo;began
+to dispute with himself, as followeth, &lsquo;Shall Christ, the author
+of peace, concord, and quietness, be preached where war is proclaimed,
+and tumults appear to rise?&nbsp; What comfort canst thou have to see
+the one part of the people rise up against the other,&rsquo;&rdquo;
+and so forth.&nbsp; These truly Christian reflections, as we may think
+them, &ldquo;yet do trouble and move my wicked heart,&rdquo; says Knox.&nbsp;
+He adds, hypothetically, that perhaps the letters received at Dieppe
+&ldquo;did somewhat discourage me.&rdquo; <a name="citation77b"></a><a href="#footnote77b">{77b}</a>&nbsp;
+He was only certain that the devil was at the bottom of the whole affair.</p>
+<p>The &ldquo;tumults that appear to arise&rdquo; are probably the dissensions
+between the Regent and the mutinous nobles who refused to invade England
+at her command.&nbsp; D&rsquo;Oysel needed a bodyguard; and he feared
+that the Lords would seize and carry off the Regent.&nbsp; Arran, in
+1564, speaks of a plot to capture her in Holyrood.&nbsp; Here were promises
+of tumults.&nbsp; There were also signs of a renewed feud between the
+house of Hamilton and the Stewart Earl of Lennox, the rival claimant
+of the crown.&nbsp; There seems, moreover, to have been some tumultuary
+image-breaking. <a name="citation78"></a><a href="#footnote78">{78}</a></p>
+<p>Knox may have been merely timid: he is not certain, but his delay
+passed in consulting the learned, for the satisfaction of his conscience,
+and his confessed doubts as to whether Christianity should be pushed
+by civil war, seem to indicate that he was not always the prophet patron
+of modern Jehus, that he did, occasionally, consult the Gospel as well
+as the records of pre-Christian Israel.</p>
+<p>The general result was that, from October 1557 to March 1558, Knox
+stayed in Dieppe, preaching with great success, raising up a Protestant
+church, and writing.</p>
+<p>His condition of mind was unenviable.&nbsp; He had been brought all
+the way across France, leaving his wife and family; he had, it seems,
+been met by no letters from his noble friends, who may well have ceased
+to expect him, so long was his delay.&nbsp; He was not at ease in his
+conscience, for, to be plain, he was not sure that he was not afraid
+to risk himself in Scotland, and he was not certain that his new scruples
+about the justifiableness of a rising for religion were not the excuses
+suggested by his own timidity.&nbsp; Perhaps they were just that, not
+whisperings either of conscience or of Satan.&nbsp; Yet in this condition
+Knox was extremely active.&nbsp; On December 1 and 17 he wrote, from
+Dieppe, a &ldquo;Letter to His Brethren in Scotland,&rdquo; and another
+to &ldquo;The Lords and Others Professing the Truth in Scotland.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+In the former he censures, as well he might, &ldquo;the dissolute life
+of (some) such as have professed Christ&rsquo;s holy Evangel.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+That is no argument, he says, against Protestantism.&nbsp; Many Turks
+are virtuous; many orthodox Hebrews, Saints, and Patriarchs occasionally
+slipped; the Corinthians, though of a &ldquo;trew Kirk,&rdquo; were
+notoriously profligate.&nbsp; Meanwhile union and virtue are especially
+desirable; for Satan &ldquo;fiercely stirreth his terrible tail.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+We do not know what back-slidings of the brethren prompted this letter.</p>
+<p>The Lords, in the other letter, are reminded that they had resolved
+to hazard life, rank, and fortune for the delivery of the brethren:
+the first step must be to achieve a godly frame of mind.&nbsp; Knox
+hears rumours &ldquo;that contradiction and rebellion is made by some
+to the Authority&rdquo; in Scotland.&nbsp; He advises &ldquo;that none
+do suddenly disobey or displease the established authority in things
+lawful,&rdquo; nor rebel from private motives.&nbsp; By &ldquo;things
+lawful&rdquo; does he mean the command of the Regent to invade England,
+which the nobles refused to do?&nbsp; They may &ldquo;lawfully attempt
+the extremity,&rdquo; if Authority will not cease to persecute, and
+permit Protestant preaching and administration of the Sacraments (which
+usually ended in riot and church-wrecking).&nbsp; Above all, they are
+not to back the Hamiltons, whose chief, Chatelherault, had been a professor,
+had fallen back, and become a persecutor.&nbsp; &ldquo;Flee all confederacy
+with that generation,&rdquo; the Hamiltons; with whom, after all, Knox
+was presently to be allied, though by no means fully believing in the
+&ldquo;unfeigned and speedy repentance&rdquo; of their chief. <a name="citation80a"></a><a href="#footnote80a">{80a}</a></p>
+<p>All the movements of that time are not very clear.&nbsp; Apparently
+Lorne, Lord James, and the rest, in their letter of March 10, 1557,
+intended an armed rising: they were &ldquo;ready to jeopardise lives
+and goods&rdquo; for &ldquo;the glory of God.&rdquo;&nbsp; If no more
+than an appeal to &ldquo;the Authority&rdquo; for tolerance was meant,
+why did Knox consult the learned so long, on the question of conscience?&nbsp;
+Yet, in December 1557, he bids his allies first of all seek the favour
+of &ldquo;the Authority,&rdquo; for bare toleration of Protestantism.</p>
+<p>From the scheme of March 10, of which the details, unknown to us,
+were <i>orally</i> delivered by bearer, he appears to have expected
+civil war.</p>
+<p>Again, just when Knox was writing to Scotland in December 1557, his
+allies there, he says, made &ldquo;a common Band,&rdquo; a confederacy
+and covenant such as the Scots usually drew up before a murder, as of
+Riccio or Darnley, or for slaying Argyll and &ldquo;the bonny Earl o&rsquo;
+Murray,&rdquo; under James VI.&nbsp; These Bands were illegal.&nbsp;
+A Band, says Knox, was now signed by Argyll, Lorne, Glencairn, Morton,
+and Erskine of Dun, and many others unknown, on December 3, 1557.&nbsp;
+It is alleged that &ldquo;Satan cruelly doth rage.&rdquo;&nbsp; Now,
+how was Satan raging in December 1557?&nbsp; Myln, the last martyr,
+was not pursued till April 1558, by Knox&rsquo;s account.</p>
+<p>The first godly Band being of December 1557, <a name="citation80b"></a><a href="#footnote80b">{80b}</a>
+and drawn up, perhaps, on the impulse of Knox&rsquo;s severe letter
+from Dieppe of October 27, in that year; just after they signed the
+Band, what were the demands of the Banders?&nbsp; They asked, apparently,
+that the Second Prayer Book of Edward VI. should be read in all parish
+churches, with the Lessons: <i>if the curates are able to read</i>:
+if not, then by any qualified parishioner.&nbsp; Secondly, preaching
+must be permitted in private houses, &ldquo;without great conventions
+of the people.&rdquo; <a name="citation81a"></a><a href="#footnote81a">{81a}</a>&nbsp;
+Whether the Catholic service was to be concurrently permitted does not
+appear; it is not very probable, for that service is idolatrous, and
+the Band itself denounces the Church as &ldquo;the Congregation of Satan.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Dr. M&lsquo;Crie thinks that the Banders, or Congregation of God, did
+not ask for the universal adoption of the English Prayer Book, but only
+requested that they themselves might bring it in &ldquo;in places to
+which their authority and influence extended.&rdquo;&nbsp; They took
+that liberty, certainly, without waiting for leave, but their demand
+appears to apply to all parish churches.&nbsp; War, in fact, was denounced
+against Satan&rsquo;s Congregation; <a name="citation81b"></a><a href="#footnote81b">{81b}</a>
+if it troubles the Lords&rsquo; Congregation, there could therefore
+be little idea of tolerating their nefarious creed and ritual.</p>
+<p>Probably Knox, at Dieppe in 1557 and early in 1558, did not know
+about the promising Band made in Scotland.&nbsp; He was composing his
+&ldquo;First Blast of the Trumpet against the Monstrous Regiment of
+Women.&rdquo;&nbsp; In England and in Scotland were a Catholic Queen,
+a Catholic Queen Mother, and the Queen of Scotland was marrying the
+idolatrous Dauphin.&nbsp; It is not worth while to study Knox&rsquo;s
+general denunciation of government by ladies: he allowed that (as Calvin
+suggested) miraculous exceptions to their inability might occur, as
+in the case of Deborah.&nbsp; As a rule, a Queen was an &ldquo;idol,&rdquo;
+and that was enough.&nbsp; England deserved an idol, and an idolatrous
+idol, for Englishmen rejected Kirk discipline; &ldquo;no man would have
+his life called in trial&rdquo; by presbyter or preacher.&nbsp; A Queen
+regnant has, <i>ex officio</i>, committed treason against God: the Realm
+and Estates may have conspired with her, but her rule is unlawful.&nbsp;
+Naturally this skirl on the trumpet made Knox odious to Elizabeth, for
+to impeach her succession might cause a renewal of the wars of the Roses.&nbsp;
+Nothing less could have happened, if a large portion of the English
+people had believed in the Prophet of God, John Knox.&nbsp; He could
+predict vengeance on Mary Tudor, but could not see that, as Elizabeth
+would succeed, his Blast would bring inconvenience to his cause; or,
+seeing it, he stood to his guns.</p>
+<p>He presently reprinted and added to his letter to Mary of Guise,
+arguing that civil magistrates have authority in religion, but, of course,
+he must mean only as far as they carry out his ideas, which are the
+truth.&nbsp; In an &ldquo;Appellation&rdquo; against the condemnation
+of himself, in absence, by the Scottish clergy, he labours the same
+idea.&nbsp; Moreover, &ldquo;no idolater can be exempted from punishment
+by God&rsquo;s law.&rdquo;&nbsp; Now the Queen of Scotland happened
+to be an idolater, and every true believer, as a private individual,
+has a right to punish idolaters.&nbsp; That right and duty are not limited
+to the King, or to &ldquo;the chief Nobility and Estates,&rdquo; whom
+Knox addresses.&nbsp; &ldquo;I would your Honours should note for the
+first, that no idolater can be exempted from punishment by God&rsquo;s
+Law.&nbsp; The second is, that the punishment of such crimes as are
+idolatry, blasphemy, and others, that touch the Majesty of God, doth
+not appertain to kings and chief rulers only&rdquo; (as he had argued
+that they do, in 1554), &ldquo;but also to the whole body of that people,
+and to every member of the same, according to the vocation of every
+man, and according to that possibility and occasion which God doth minister
+to revenge the injury done against His glory, what time that impiety
+is manifestly known. . . .&nbsp; <i>Who dare be so impudent as to deny
+this to be most reasonable and just</i>?&rdquo; <a name="citation83"></a><a href="#footnote83">{83}</a></p>
+<p>Knox&rsquo;s method of argument for his doctrine is to take, among
+other texts, Deuteronomy xiii. 12-18, and apply the sanguinary precepts
+of Hebrew fanatics to the then existing state of affairs in the Church
+Christian.&nbsp; Thus, in Deuteronomy, cities which serve &ldquo;other
+gods,&rdquo; or welcome missionaries of other religions, are to be burned,
+and every living thing in them is to be destroyed.&nbsp; &ldquo;To the
+carnal man, . . . &rdquo; says Knox, &ldquo;this may rather seem to
+be pronounced in a rage than in wisdom.&rdquo;&nbsp; God wills, however,
+that &ldquo;all creatures stoop, cover their faces, <i>and desist from
+reasoning</i>, when commandment is given to execute his judgement.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Knox, then, desists from reasoning so far as to preach that every Protestant,
+with a call that way, has a right to punish any Catholic, if he gets
+a good opportunity.&nbsp; This doctrine he publishes to his own countrymen.&nbsp;
+Thus any fanatic who believed in the prophet Knox, and was conscious
+of a &ldquo;vocation,&rdquo; might, and should, avenge God&rsquo;s wrongs
+on Mary of Guise or Mary Stuart, &ldquo;he had a fair opportunity, for
+both ladies were idolaters.&nbsp; This is a plain inference from the
+passage just cited.</p>
+<p>Appealing to the Commonalty of Scotland, Knox next asked that he
+might come and justify his doctrine, and prove Popery &ldquo;abominable
+before God.&rdquo;&nbsp; Now, could any Government admit a man who published
+the tidings that any member of a State might avenge God on an idolater,
+the Queen being, according to him, an idolater?&nbsp; This doctrine
+of the right of the Protestant individual is merely monstrous.&nbsp;
+Knox has wandered far from his counsel of &ldquo;passive resistance&rdquo;
+in his letter to his Berwick congregation; he has even passed beyond
+his &ldquo;Admonition,&rdquo; which merely prayed for a Phinehas or
+Jehu: he has now proclaimed the right and duty of the private Protestant
+assassin.&nbsp; The &ldquo;Appellation&rdquo; containing these ideas
+was published at Geneva in 1558, with the author&rsquo;s, but without
+the printer&rsquo;s name on the title-page.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The First Blast&rdquo; had neither the author&rsquo;s nor
+printer&rsquo;s name, nor the name of the place of publication.&nbsp;
+Calvin soon found that it had given grave offence to Queen Elizabeth.&nbsp;
+He therefore wrote to Cecil that, though the work came from a press
+in his town, he had not been aware of its existence till a year after
+its publication.&nbsp; He now took no public steps against the book,
+not wishing to draw attention to its origin in Geneva, lest, &ldquo;by
+reason of the reckless arrogance of one man&rdquo; (&lsquo;the ravings
+of others&rsquo;), &ldquo;the miserable crowd of exiles should have
+been driven away, not only from this city, but even from almost the
+whole world.&rdquo; <a name="citation84"></a><a href="#footnote84">{84}</a>&nbsp;
+As far as I am aware, no one approached Calvin with remonstrance about
+the monstrosities of the &ldquo;Appellation,&rdquo; nor are the passages
+which I have cited alluded to by more than one biographer of Knox, to
+my knowledge.&nbsp; Professor Hume Brown, however, justly remarks that
+what the Kirk, immediately after Knox&rsquo;s death, called &ldquo;Erastianism&rdquo;
+(in ordinary parlance the doctrine that the Civil power may interfere
+in religion) could hardly &ldquo;be approved in more set terms&rdquo;
+than by Knox.&nbsp; He avers that &ldquo;the ordering and reformation
+of religion . . . doth especially appertain to the Civil Magistrate
+. . . &rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;The King taketh upon him to command the Priests.&rdquo;
+<a name="citation85"></a><a href="#footnote85">{85}</a>&nbsp; The opposite
+doctrine, that it appertains to the Church, is an invention of Satan.&nbsp;
+To that diabolical invention, Andrew Melville and the Kirk returned
+in the generation following, while James VI. held to Knox&rsquo;s theory,
+as stated in the &ldquo;Appellation.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The truth is that Knox contemplates a State in which the civil power
+shall be entirely and absolutely of his own opinions; the King, as &ldquo;Christ&rsquo;s
+silly vassal,&rdquo; to quote Andrew Melville, being obedient to such
+prophets as himself.&nbsp; The theories of Knox regarding the duty to
+revenge God&rsquo;s feud by the private citizen, and regarding religious
+massacre by the civil power, ideas which would justify the Bartholomew
+horrors, appear to be forgotten in modern times.&nbsp; His address to
+the Commonalty, as citizens with a voice in the State, represents the
+progressive and permanent element in his politics.&nbsp; We have shown,
+however, that, before Knox&rsquo;s time, the individual Scot was a thoroughly
+independent character.&nbsp; &ldquo;The man hath more words than the
+master, and will not be content unless he knows the master&rsquo;s counsel.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>By March 1558, Knox had returned from Dieppe to Geneva.&nbsp; In
+Scotland, since the godly Band of December 1557, events were moving
+in two directions.&nbsp; The Church was continuing in a belated and
+futile attempt at reformation of manners (and wonderfully bad manners
+they confessedly were), and of education from within.&nbsp; The Congregation,
+the Protestants, on the other hand, were preparing openly to defend
+themselves and their adherents from persecution, an honest, manly, and
+laudable endeavour, so long as they did not persecute other Christians.&nbsp;
+Their preachers&mdash;such as Harlaw, Methuen, and Douglas&mdash;were
+publicly active.&nbsp; A moment of attempted suppression must arrive,
+greatly against the personal wishes of Archbishop Hamilton, who dreaded
+the conflict.</p>
+<p>In March 1558, Hamilton courteously remonstrated with Argyll for
+harbouring Douglas.&nbsp; He himself was &ldquo;heavily murmured against&rdquo;
+for his slackness in the case of Argyll, by churchmen and other &ldquo;well
+given people,&rdquo; and by Mary of Guise, whose daughter, by April
+24, 1558, was married to the Dauphin of France.&nbsp; Argyll replied
+that he knew how the Archbishop was urged on, but declined to abandon
+Douglas.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is a far cry to Loch Awe&rdquo;; Argyll, who died soon
+after, was too powerful to be attacked.&nbsp; But, sometime in April
+1558 apparently, a poor priest of Forfarshire, Walter Myln, who had
+married and got into trouble under Cardinal Beaton, was tried for heresy,
+and, without sentence of a secular judge, it is said, was burned at
+St. Andrews, displaying serene courage, and hoping to be the last martyr
+in Scotland.&nbsp; Naturally there was much indignation; if the Lords
+and others were to keep their Band they must bestir themselves.&nbsp;
+They did bestir themselves in defence of their favourite preachers&mdash;Willock,
+Harlaw, Methuen; a <i>ci-devant</i> friar, Christison; and Douglas.&nbsp;
+Some of these men were summoned several times throughout 1558, and Methuen
+and Harlaw, at least, were &ldquo;at the horn&rdquo; (outlawed), but
+were protected&mdash;Harlaw at Dumfries, Methuen at Dundee&mdash;by
+powerful laymen.&nbsp; At Dundee, as we saw, by 1558, Methuen had erected
+a church of reformed aspect; and &ldquo;reformed&rdquo; means that the
+Kirk had already been purged of altars and images.&nbsp; Attempts to
+bring the ringleaders of Protestant riots to law were made in 1558,
+but the precise order of events, and of the protests of the Reformers,
+appears to be dislocated in Knox&rsquo;s narrative.&nbsp; He himself
+was not present, and he seems never to have mastered the sequence of
+occurrences.&nbsp; Fortunately there exists a fragment by a well-informed
+writer, apparently a contemporary, the &ldquo;Historie of the Estate
+of Scotland&rdquo; covering the events from July 1558 to 1560. <a name="citation87a"></a><a href="#footnote87a">{87a}</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
+There are also imperfect records of the Parliament of November-December
+1558, and of the last Provincial Council of the Church, in March 1559.</p>
+<p>For July 28 <a name="citation87b"></a><a href="#footnote87b">{87b}</a>
+four or five of the brethren were summoned to &ldquo;a day of law,&rdquo;
+in Edinburgh; their allies assembled to back them, and they were released
+on bail to appear, if called on, within eight days.&nbsp; At this time
+the &ldquo;idol&rdquo; of St. Giles, patron of the city, was stolen,
+and a great riot occurred at the saint&rsquo;s <i>f&ecirc;te</i>, September
+3. <a name="citation87c"></a><a href="#footnote87c">{87c}</a></p>
+<p>Knox describes the discomfiture of his foes in one of his merriest
+passages, frequently cited by admirers of &ldquo;his vein of humour.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+The event, we know, was at once reported to him in Geneva, by letter.</p>
+<p>Some time after October, if we rightly construe Knox, <a name="citation88a"></a><a href="#footnote88a">{88a}</a>
+a petition was delivered to the Regent, from the Reformers, by Sandilands
+of Calder. <a name="citation88b"></a><a href="#footnote88b">{88b}</a>&nbsp;
+They asserted that they should have defended the preachers, or testified
+with them.&nbsp; The wisdom of the Regent herself sees the need of reform,
+spiritual and temporal, and has exhorted the clergy and nobles to employ
+care and diligence thereon, a fact corroborated by Mary of Guise herself,
+in a paper, soon to be quoted, of July 1559. <a name="citation88c"></a><a href="#footnote88c">{88c}</a>&nbsp;
+They ask, as they have the reading of the Scriptures in the vernacular,
+for common prayers in the same.&nbsp; They wish for freedom to interpret
+and discuss the Bible &ldquo;in our conventions,&rdquo; and that Baptism
+and the Communion may be done in Scots, and they demand the reform of
+the detestable lives of the prelates. <a name="citation88d"></a><a href="#footnote88d">{88d}</a></p>
+<p>Knox&rsquo;s account, in places, appears really to refer to the period
+of the Provincial Council of March 1559, though it does not quite fit
+that date either.</p>
+<p>The Regent is said on the occasion of Calder&rsquo;s petition, and
+after the unsatisfactory replies of the clergy (apparently at the Provincial
+Council, March 1559), to have made certain concessions, till Parliament
+established uniform order.&nbsp; But the Parliament was of November-December
+1558. <a name="citation89a"></a><a href="#footnote89a">{89a}</a>&nbsp;
+Before that Parliament, at all events (which was mainly concerned with
+procuring the &ldquo;Crown Matrimonial&rdquo; for the Dauphin, husband
+of Mary Stuart), the brethren offered a petition, in the first place
+shown to the Regent, asking for (1) the suspension of persecuting laws
+till after a General Council has &ldquo;decided all controversies in
+religion&rdquo;&mdash;that is, till the Greek Calends.&nbsp; (2) That
+prelates shall not be judges in cases of heresy, but only accusers before
+secular tribunals.&nbsp; (3) That all lawful defences be granted to
+persons accused.&nbsp; (4) That the accused be permitted to explain
+&ldquo;his own mind and meaning.&rdquo;&nbsp; (5) That &ldquo;none be
+condemned for heretics unless by the manifest Word of God they be convicted
+to have erred from the faith which the Holy Spirit witnesses to be necessary
+to salvation.&rdquo;&nbsp; According to Knox this petition the Regent
+put in her pocket, saying that the Churchmen would oppose it, and thwart
+her plan for getting the &ldquo;Crown Matrimonial&rdquo; given to her
+son-in-law, Francis II., and, in short, gave good words, and drove time.
+<a name="citation89b"></a><a href="#footnote89b">{89b}</a></p>
+<p>The Reformers then drew up a long Protestation, which was read in
+the House, but not enrolled in its records.&nbsp; They say that they
+have had to postpone a formal demand for Reformation, but protest that
+&ldquo;it be lawful to us to use ourselves in matters of religion and
+conscience as we must answer to God,&rdquo; and they are ready to prove
+their case.&nbsp; They shall not be liable, meanwhile, to any penalties
+for breach of the existing Acts against heresy, &ldquo;nor for violating
+such rites as man, without God&rsquo;s commandment or word, hath commanded.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+They disclaim all responsibility for the ensuing tumults. <a name="citation90a"></a><a href="#footnote90a">{90a}</a>&nbsp;
+In fact, they aver that they will not only worship in their own way,
+but prevent other people from worshipping in the legal way, and that
+the responsibility for the riots will lie on the side of those who worship
+legally.&nbsp; And this was the chief occasion of the ensuing troubles.&nbsp;
+The Regent promised to &ldquo;put good order&rdquo; in controverted
+matters, and was praised by the brethren in a letter to Calvin, not
+now to be found.</p>
+<p>Another threat had been made by the brethren, in circumstances not
+very obscure.&nbsp; As far as they are known they suggest that in January
+1559 the zealots deliberately intended to provoke a conflict, and to
+enlist &ldquo;the rascal multitude&rdquo; on their side, at Easter,
+1559.&nbsp; The obscurity is caused by a bookbinder.&nbsp; He has, with
+the fatal ingenuity of his trade, cut off the two top lines from a page
+in one manuscript copy of Knox&rsquo;s &ldquo;History.&rdquo; <a name="citation90b"></a><a href="#footnote90b">{90b}</a>&nbsp;
+The text now runs thus (in its mutilated condition): &ldquo; . . . Zealous
+Brether . . . upon the gates and posts of all the Friars&rsquo; places
+within this realm, in the month of January 1558 (1559), preceding that
+Whitsunday that they dislodged, which is this . . . &rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then follows the Proclamation.</p>
+<p>Probably we may supply the words: &ldquo;. . .&nbsp; Zealous Brethren
+caused a paper to be affixed upon the gates and posts,&rdquo; and so
+on.&nbsp; The paper so promulgated purported to be a warning from the
+poor of Scotland that, before Whitsunday, &ldquo;we, the lawful proprietors,&rdquo;
+will eject the Friars and residents on the property, unlawfully withheld
+by the religious&mdash;&ldquo;our patrimony.&rdquo;&nbsp; This feat
+will be performed, &ldquo;with the help of God, <i>and assistance of
+his Saints on earth</i>, <i>of whose ready support we doubt not</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As the Saints, in fact, were the &ldquo;Zealous Brether . . .&rdquo;
+who affixed the written menace on &ldquo;all the Friars&rsquo; places,&rdquo;
+they knew what they were talking about, and could prophesy safely.&nbsp;
+To make so many copies of the document, and fix them on &ldquo;all the
+Friars&rsquo; places,&rdquo; implies organisation, and a deliberate
+plan&mdash;riots and revolution&mdash;before Whitsunday.&nbsp; The poor,
+of course, only exchanged better for worse landlords, as they soon discovered.&nbsp;
+The &ldquo;Zealous Brethren&rdquo;&mdash;as a rule small lairds, probably,
+and burgesses&mdash;were the nucleus of the Revolution.&nbsp; When townsfolk
+and yeomen in sufficient number had joined them in arms, then nobles
+like Argyll, Lord James, Glencairn, Ruthven, and the rest, put themselves
+at the head of the movement, and won the prizes which had been offered
+to the &ldquo;blind, crooked, widows, orphans, and all other poor.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>After Parliament was over, at the end of December 1558, the Archbishop
+of St. Andrews again summoned the preachers, Willock, Douglas, Harlaw,
+Methuen, and Friar John Christison to a &ldquo;day of law&rdquo; at
+St. Andrews, on February 2, 1559.&nbsp; (This is the statement of the
+&ldquo;Historie.&rdquo;) <a name="citation91"></a><a href="#footnote91">{91}</a>&nbsp;
+The brethren then &ldquo;caused inform the Queen Mother that the said
+preachers would appear with such multitude of men professing their doctrine,
+as was never seen before in such like cases in this country,&rdquo;
+and kept their promise.&nbsp; The system of overawing justice by such
+gatherings was usual, as we have already seen; Knox, Bothwell, Lethington,
+and the Lord James Stewart all profited by the practice on various occasions.</p>
+<p>Mary of Guise, &ldquo;fearing some uproar or sedition,&rdquo; bade
+the bishops put off the summons, and, in fact, the preachers never were
+summoned, finally, for any offences prior to this date.</p>
+<p>On February 9, 1559, the Regent issued proclamations against eating
+flesh in Lent (this rule survived the Reformation by at least seventy
+years) and against such disturbances of religious services as the Protest
+just described declared to be imminent, all such deeds being denounced
+under &ldquo;pain of death&rdquo;&mdash;as pain of death was used to
+be threatened against poachers of deer and wild fowl. <a name="citation92a"></a><a href="#footnote92a">{92a}</a></p>
+<p>Mary, however, had promised, as we saw, that she would summon the
+nobles and Estates, &ldquo;to advise for some reformation in religion&rdquo;
+(March 7, 1559), and the Archbishop called a Provincial Council to Edinburgh
+for March.&nbsp; At this, or some other juncture, for Knox&rsquo;s narrative
+is bewildering, <a name="citation92b"></a><a href="#footnote92b">{92b}</a>
+the clergy offered free discussion, but refused to allow exiles like
+himself to be present, and insisted on the acceptance of the Mass, Purgatory,
+the invocation of saints, with security for their ecclesiastical possessions.&nbsp;
+In return they would grant prayers and baptism in English, if done privately
+and not in open assembly.&nbsp; The terms, he says, were rejected; appeal
+was made to Mary of Guise, and she gave toleration, except for public
+assemblies in Edinburgh and Leith, pending the meeting of Parliament.&nbsp;
+To the clergy, who, &ldquo;some say,&rdquo; bribed her, she promised
+to &ldquo;put order&rdquo; to these matters.&nbsp; The Reformers were
+deceived, and forbade Douglas to preach in Leith.&nbsp; So writes Knox.</p>
+<p>Now the &ldquo;Historie&rdquo; dates all this, bribe and all, <i>after
+the end of December</i> 1558.&nbsp; Knox, however, by some confusion,
+places the facts, bribe and all, <i>before April</i> 28, 1558, Myln&rsquo;s
+martyrdom! <a name="citation93a"></a><a href="#footnote93a">{93a}</a>&nbsp;
+Yet he had before him as he wrote the Chronicle of Bruce of Earlshall,
+who states the bribe, Knox says, at &pound;40,000; the &ldquo;Historie&rdquo;
+says &ldquo;within &pound;15,000.&rdquo; <a name="citation93b"></a><a href="#footnote93b">{93b}</a></p>
+<p>In any case Knox, who never saw his book in print, has clearly dislocated
+the sequence of events.&nbsp; At this date, namely March 1559, the preaching
+agitators were at liberty, nor were they again put at for any of their
+previous proceedings.&nbsp; But defiances had been exchanged.&nbsp;
+The Reformers in their Protestation (December 1558) had claimed it as
+lawful, we know, that they should enjoy their own services, and put
+down those of the religion by law established, until such time as the
+Catholic clergy &ldquo;be able to prove themselves the true ministers
+of Christ&rsquo;s Church&rdquo; and guiltless of all the crimes charged
+against them by their adversaries. <a name="citation93c"></a><a href="#footnote93c">{93c}</a>&nbsp;
+That was the challenge of the Reformers, backed by the menace affixed
+to the doors of all the monasteries.&nbsp; The Regent in turn had thrown
+down her glove by the proclamation of February 9, 1559, against disturbing
+services and &ldquo;bosting&rdquo; (bullying) priests.&nbsp; How could
+she possibly do less in the circumstances?&nbsp; If her proclamation
+was disobeyed, could she do less than summon the disobedient to trial?&nbsp;
+Her hand was forced.</p>
+<p>It appears to myself, under correction, that all this part of the
+history of the Reformation has been misunderstood by our older historians.&nbsp;
+Almost without exception, they represent the Regent as dissembling with
+the Reformers till, on conclusion of the peace of Cateau Cambresis (which
+left France free to aid her efforts in Scotland), April 2, 1559, and
+on the receipt of a message from the Guises, &ldquo;she threw off the
+mask,&rdquo; and initiated an organised persecution.&nbsp; But there
+is no evidence that any such message commanding her to persecute at
+this time came from the Guises before the Regent had issued her proclamations
+of February 9 and March 23, <a name="citation94a"></a><a href="#footnote94a">{94a}</a>
+denouncing attacks on priests, disturbance of services, administering
+of sacraments by lay preachers, and tumults at large.&nbsp; Now, Sir
+James Melville of Halhill, the diplomatist, writing in old age, and
+often erroneously, makes the Cardinal of Lorraine send de Bettencourt,
+or Bethencourt, to the Regent with news of the peace of Cateau Cambresis
+and an order to punish heretics with fire and sword, and says that,
+though she was reluctant, she consequently published her proclamation
+of March 23.&nbsp; Dates prove part of this to be impossible. <a name="citation94b"></a><a href="#footnote94b">{94b}</a></p>
+<p>Obviously the Regent had issued her proclamations of February-March
+1559 in anticipation of the tumults threatened by the Reformers in their
+&ldquo;Beggar&rsquo;s Warning&rdquo; and in their Protestation of December,
+and arranged to occur with violence at Easter, as they did.&nbsp; The
+three or four preachers (two of them apparently &ldquo;at the horn&rdquo;
+in 1558) were to preach publicly, and riots were certain to ensue, as
+the Reformers had threatened.&nbsp; Riots were part of the evangelical
+programme.&nbsp; Of Paul Methuen, who first &ldquo;reformed&rdquo; the
+Church in Dundee, Pitscottie writes that he &ldquo;ministered the sacraments
+of the communion at Dundee and Cupar, and caused the images thereof
+to be cast down, and abolished the Pope&rsquo;s religion so far as he
+passed or preached.&rdquo;&nbsp; For this sort of action he was now
+summoned. <a name="citation95a"></a><a href="#footnote95a">{95a}</a></p>
+<p>The Regent, therefore, warned in her proclamations men, often challenged
+previously, and as often allowed, under fear of armed resistance, to
+escape.&nbsp; All that followed was but a repetition of the feeble policy
+of outlawing these four or five men.&nbsp; Finally, in May 1559, these
+preachers had a strong armed backing, and seized a central strategic
+point, so the Revolution blazed out on a question which had long been
+smouldering and on an occasion that had been again and again deferred.&nbsp;
+The Regent, far from having foreseen and hardened her heart to carry
+out an organised persecution and &ldquo;cut the throats&rdquo; of all
+Protestants in Scotland, was, in fact, intending to go to France, being
+in the earlier stages of her fatal malady.&nbsp; This appears from a
+letter of Sir Henry Percy, from Norham Castle, to Cecil and Parry (April
+12, 1559) <a name="citation95b"></a><a href="#footnote95b">{95b}</a>&nbsp;
+Percy says that the news in his latest letters (now lost) was erroneous.&nbsp;
+The Regent, in fact, &ldquo;is not as yet departed.&rdquo;&nbsp; She
+is very ill, and her life is despaired of.&nbsp; She is at Stirling,
+where the nobles had assembled to discuss religious matters.&nbsp; Only
+her French advisers were on the side of the Regent.&nbsp; &ldquo;The
+matter is pacified for the time,&rdquo; and in case of the Regent&rsquo;s
+death, Chatelherault, d&rsquo;Oysel, and de Rubay are to be a provisional
+committee of Government, till the wishes of the King and Queen, Francis
+and Mary, are known.&nbsp; Again, in her letter of May 16 to Henri II.
+of France, she stated that she was in very bad health, <a name="citation96a"></a><a href="#footnote96a">{96a}</a>
+and, at about the same date (May 18), the English ambassador in France
+mentions her intention to visit that country at once. <a name="citation96b"></a><a href="#footnote96b">{96b}</a>&nbsp;
+But the Revolution of May 11, breaking out in Perth, condemned her to
+suffer and die in Scotland.</p>
+<p>This, however, does not amount to proof that no plan of persecution
+in Scotland was intended.&nbsp; Throckmorton writes, on May 18, that
+the Marquis d&rsquo;Elboeuf is to go thither.&nbsp; &ldquo;He takes
+with him both men of conduct and some of war; it is thought his stay
+will not be long.&rdquo;&nbsp; Again (May 23, 24), Throckmorton reports
+that Henri II. means to persecute extremely in Poitou, Guienne, and
+Scotland.&nbsp; &ldquo;Cecil may take occasion to use the matter in
+Scotland as may seem best to serve the turn.&rdquo; <a name="citation96c"></a><a href="#footnote96c">{96c}</a>&nbsp;
+This was before the Perth riot had been reported (May 26) by Cecil to
+Throckmorton.&nbsp; Was d&rsquo;Elboeuf intended to direct the persecution?&nbsp;
+The theory has its attractions, but Henri, just emerged with maimed
+forces from a ruinous war, knew that a persecution which served Cecil&rsquo;s
+&ldquo;turn&rdquo; did not serve <i>his</i>.&nbsp; To persecute in Scotland
+would mean renewed war with England, and could not be contemplated.&nbsp;
+If Sir James Melville can be trusted for once, the Constable, about
+June 1, told him, in the presence of the French King, that if the Perth
+revolt were only about religion, &ldquo;we mon commit Scottismen&rsquo;s
+saules unto God.&rdquo; <a name="citation97"></a><a href="#footnote97">{97}</a>&nbsp;
+Melville was then despatched with promise of aid to the Regent&mdash;if
+the rising was political, not religious.</p>
+<p>It is quite certain that the Regent issued her proclamations without
+any commands from France; and her health was inconsistent with an intention
+to put Protestants to fire and sword.</p>
+<p>In the records of the Provincial Council of March 1559, the foremost
+place is given to &ldquo;Articles&rdquo; presented to the Regent by
+&ldquo;some temporal Lords and Barons,&rdquo; and by her handed to the
+clergy.&nbsp; They are the proposals of conservative reformers.&nbsp;
+They ask for moral reformation of the lives of the clergy: for sermons
+on Sundays and holy days: for due examination of the doctrine, life,
+and learning of all who are permitted to preach.&nbsp; They demand that
+no vicar or curate shall be appointed unless he can read the catechism
+(of 1552) plainly and distinctly: that expositions of the sacraments
+should be clearly pronounced in the vernacular: that common prayer should
+be read in the vernacular: that certain exactions of gifts and dues
+should be abolished.&nbsp; Again, no one should be allowed to dishonour
+the sacraments, or the service of the Mass: no unqualified person should
+administer the sacraments: Kirk rapine, destruction of religious buildings
+and works of art, should not be permitted.</p>
+<p>The Council passed thirty-four statutes on these points.&nbsp; The
+clergy were to live cleanly, and not to keep their bastards at home.&nbsp;
+They were implored, &ldquo;in the bowels of Christ&rdquo; to do their
+duty in the services of the Church.&nbsp; No one in future was to be
+admitted to a living without examination by the Ordinary.&nbsp; Ruined
+churches were to be rebuilt or repaired.&nbsp; Breakers of ornaments
+and violators or burners of churches were to be pursued.&nbsp; There
+was to be preaching as often as the Ordinary thought fit: if the Rector
+could not preach he must find a substitute who could.&nbsp; Plain expositions
+of the sacraments were made out, were to be read aloud to the congregations,
+and were published at twopence (&ldquo;The Twopenny Faith&rdquo;).&nbsp;
+Administration of the Eucharist except by priests was to be punished
+by excommunication. <a name="citation98a"></a><a href="#footnote98a">{98a}</a>&nbsp;
+Knox himself desired <i>death</i> for others than true ministers who
+celebrated the sacrament. <a name="citation98b"></a><a href="#footnote98b">{98b}</a>&nbsp;
+His &ldquo;true ministers,&rdquo; about half-a-dozen of them at this
+time, of course came under the penalty of the last statute.</p>
+<p>He says, with the usual error, that <i>after</i> peace was made between
+France and England, on April 2, 1559 (the treaty of Cateau Cambresis),
+the Regent &ldquo;began to spew forth and disclose the latent venom
+of her double heart.&rdquo;&nbsp; She looked &ldquo;frowardly&rdquo;
+on Protestants, &ldquo;commanded her household to use all abominations
+at Easter,&rdquo; she herself communicated, &ldquo;and it is supposed
+that after that day the devil took more violent and strong possession
+in her than he had before . . .&nbsp; For incontinent she caused our
+preachers to be summoned.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But <i>why</i> did she summon the same set of preachers as before,
+for no old offence?&nbsp; The Regent, says the &ldquo;Historie,&rdquo;
+made proclamation, during the Council (as the moderate Reformers had
+asked her to do), &ldquo;that no manner of person should . . . preach
+or minister the sacraments, except they were admitted by the Ordinary
+or a Bishop on no less pain than death.&rdquo;&nbsp; The Council, in
+fact, made excommunication the penalty.&nbsp; Now it was for ministering
+the sacrament after the proclamation of March 13, for preaching heresy,
+and stirring up &ldquo;seditions and tumults,&rdquo; that Methuen, Brother
+John Christison, William Harlaw, and John Willock were summoned to appear
+at Stirling on May 10, 1559. <a name="citation99a"></a><a href="#footnote99a">{99a}</a></p>
+<p>How could any governor of Scotland abstain from summoning them in
+the circumstances?&nbsp; There seems to be no new suggestion of the
+devil, no outbreak of Guisian fury.&nbsp; The Regent was in a situation
+whence there was no &ldquo;outgait&rdquo;: she must submit to the seditions
+and tumults threatened in the Protestation of the brethren, the disturbances
+of services, the probable wrecking of churches, or she must use the
+powers legally entrusted to her.&nbsp; She gave insolent answers to
+remonstrances from the brethren, says Knox.&nbsp; She would banish the
+preachers (not execute them), &ldquo;albeit they preached as truly as
+ever did St. Paul.&rdquo;&nbsp; Being threatened, as before, with the
+consequent &ldquo;inconvenients,&rdquo; she said &ldquo;she would advise.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+However, summon the preachers she did, for breach of her proclamations,
+&ldquo;tumults and seditions.&rdquo; <a name="citation99b"></a><a href="#footnote99b">{99b}</a></p>
+<p>Knox himself was present at the Revolution which ensued, but we must
+now return to his own doings in the autumn and winter of 1558-59. <a name="citation100"></a><a href="#footnote100">{100}</a></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER IX: KNOX ON THE ANABAPTISTS: HIS APPEAL TO ENGLAND: 1558-1559</h2>
+<p>While the inevitable Revolution was impending in Scotland, Knox was
+living at Geneva.&nbsp; He may have been engaged on his &ldquo;Answer&rdquo;
+to the &ldquo;blasphemous cavillations&rdquo; of an Anabaptist, his
+treatise on Predestination.&nbsp; Laing thought that this work was &ldquo;chiefly
+written&rdquo; at Dieppe, in February-April 1559, but as it contains
+more than 450 pages it is probably a work of longer time than two months.&nbsp;
+In November 1559 the English at Geneva asked leave to print the book,
+which was granted, provided that the name of Geneva did not appear as
+the place of printing; the authorities knowing of what Knox was capable
+from the specimen given in his &ldquo;First Blast.&rdquo;&nbsp; There
+seem to be several examples of the Genevan edition, published by Crispin
+in 1560; the next edition, less rare, is of 1591 (London). <a name="citation101"></a><a href="#footnote101">{101}</a></p>
+<p>The Anabaptist whom Knox is discussing had been personally known
+to him, and had lucid intervals.&nbsp; &ldquo;Your chief Apollos,&rdquo;
+he had said, addressing the Calvinists, &ldquo;be persecutors, on whom
+the blood of Servetus crieth a vengeance. . . .&nbsp; They have set
+forth books affirming it to be lawful to persecute and put to death
+such as dissent from them in controversies of religion. . . .&nbsp;
+Notwithstanding they, before they came to authority, were of another
+judgment, and did both say and write that no man ought to be persecuted
+for his conscience&rsquo; sake. . . .&rdquo; <a name="citation102a"></a><a href="#footnote102a">{102a}</a>&nbsp;
+Knox replied that Servetus was a blasphemer, and that Moses had been
+a more wholesale persecutor than the Edwardian burners of Joan of Kent,
+and the Genevan Church which roasted Servetus <a name="citation102b"></a><a href="#footnote102b">{102b}</a>
+(October 1553).&nbsp; He incidentally proves that he was better than
+his doctrine.&nbsp; In England an Anabaptist, after asking for secrecy,
+showed him a manuscript of his own full of blasphemies.&nbsp; &ldquo;In
+me I confess there was great negligence, that neither did retain his
+book nor present him to the magistrate&rdquo; to burn.&nbsp; Knox could
+not have done that, for the author &ldquo;earnestly required of me closeness
+and fidelity,&rdquo; which, probably, Knox promised.&nbsp; Indeed, one
+fancies that his opinions and character would have been in conflict
+if a chance of handing an idolater over to death had been offered to
+him. <a name="citation102c"></a><a href="#footnote102c">{102c}</a></p>
+<p>The death of Mary Tudor on November 17, 1558, does not appear to
+have been anticipated by him.&nbsp; The tidings reached him before January
+12, 1559, when he wrote from Geneva a singular &ldquo;Brief Exhortation
+to England for the Spedie Embrasing of Christ&rsquo;s Gospel heretofore
+by the Tyrannie of Marie Suppressed and Banished.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The gospel to be embraced by England is, of course, not nearly so
+much Christ&rsquo;s as John Knox&rsquo;s, in its most acute form and
+with its most absolute, intolerant, and intolerable pretensions.&nbsp;
+He begins by vehemently rebuking England for her &ldquo;shameful defection&rdquo;
+and by threatening God&rsquo;s &ldquo;horrible vengeances which thy
+monstrous unthankfulness hath long deserved,&rdquo; if the country does
+not become much more puritan than it had ever been, or is ever likely
+to be.&nbsp; Knox &ldquo;wraps you all in idolatry, all in murder, all
+in one and the same iniquity,&rdquo; except the actual Marian martyrs;
+those who &ldquo;abstained from idolatry;&rdquo; and those who &ldquo;avoided
+the realm&rdquo; or ran away.&nbsp; He had set one of the earliest examples
+of running away: to do so was easier for him than for family men and
+others who had &ldquo;a stake in the country,&rdquo; for which Knox
+had no relish.&nbsp; He is hardly generous in blaming all the persons
+who felt no more &ldquo;ripe&rdquo; for martyrdom than he did, yet stayed
+in England, where the majority were, and continued to be, Catholics.</p>
+<p>Having asserted his very contestable superiority and uttered pages
+of biblical threatenings, Knox says that the repentance of England &ldquo;requireth
+two things,&rdquo; first, the expulsion of &ldquo;all dregs of Popery&rdquo;
+and the treading under foot of all &ldquo;glistering beauty of vain
+ceremonies.&rdquo;&nbsp; Religious services must be reduced, in short,
+to his own bare standard.&nbsp; Next, the Genevan and Knoxian &ldquo;kirk
+discipline&rdquo; must be introduced.&nbsp; No &ldquo;power or liberty
+(must) be permitted to any, of what estate, degree, or authority they
+be, either to live without the yoke of discipline by God&rsquo;s word
+commanded,&rdquo; or &ldquo;to alter . . . one jot in religion which
+from God&rsquo;s mouth thou hast received. . . . If prince, king, or
+emperor would enterprise to change or disannul the same, that he be
+of thee reputed enemy to God,&rdquo; while a prince who erects idolatry
+. . . &ldquo;must be adjudged to death.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Each bishopric is to be divided into ten.&nbsp; The Founder of the
+Church and the Apostles &ldquo;all command us to preach, to preach.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+A brief sketch of what The Book of Discipline later set forth for the
+edification of Scotland is recommended to England, and is followed by
+more threatenings in the familiar style.</p>
+<p>England did not follow the advice of Knox: her whole population was
+not puritan, many of her martyrs had died for the prayer book which
+Knox would have destroyed.&nbsp; His tract cannot have added to the
+affection which Elizabeth bore to the author of &ldquo;The First Blast.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+In after years, as we shall see, Knox spoke in a tone much more moderate
+in addressing the early English nonconformist secessionists (1568).&nbsp;
+Indeed, it is as easy almost to prove, by isolated passages in Knox&rsquo;s
+writings, that he was a sensible, moderate man, loathing and condemning
+active resistance in religion, as to prove him to be a senselessly violent
+man.&nbsp; All depends on the occasion and opportunity.&nbsp; He speaks
+with two voices.&nbsp; He was very impetuous; in the death of Mary Tudor
+he suddenly saw the chance of bringing English religion up, or down,
+to the Genevan level, and so he wrote this letter of vehement rebuke
+and inopportune advice.</p>
+<p>Knox must have given his biographers &ldquo;medicines to make them
+love him.&rdquo;&nbsp; The learned Dr. Lorimer finds in this epistle,
+one of the most fierce of his writings, &ldquo;a programme of what this
+Reformation reformed should be&mdash;a programme which was honourable
+alike to Knox&rsquo;s zeal and his moderation.&rdquo;&nbsp; The &ldquo;moderation&rdquo;
+apparently consists in not abolishing bishoprics, but substituting &ldquo;ten
+bishops of moderate income for one lordly prelate.&rdquo;&nbsp; Despite
+this moderation of the epistle, &ldquo;its intolerance is extreme,&rdquo;
+says Dr. Lorimer, and Knox&rsquo;s advice &ldquo;cannot but excite astonishment.&rdquo;
+<a name="citation104"></a><a href="#footnote104">{104}</a>&nbsp; The
+party which agreed with him in England was the minority of a minority;
+the Catholics, it is usually supposed, though we have no statistics,
+were the majority of the English nation.&nbsp; Yet the only chance,
+according to Knox, that England has of escaping the vengeance of an
+irritable Deity, is for the smaller minority to alter the prayer book,
+resist the Queen, if she wishes to retain it unaltered, and force the
+English people into the &ldquo;discipline&rdquo; of a Swiss Protestant
+town.</p>
+<p>Dr. Lorimer, a most industrious and judicious writer, adds that,
+in these matters of &ldquo;discipline,&rdquo; and of intolerance, Knox
+&ldquo;went to a tragical extreme of opinion, of which none of the other
+leading reformers had set an example;&rdquo; also that what he demanded
+was substantially demanded by the Puritans all through the reign of
+Elizabeth.&nbsp; But Knox averred publicly, and in his &ldquo;History,&rdquo;
+that for everything he affirmed in Scotland he had heard the judgments
+&ldquo;of the most godly and learned that be known in Europe . . . and
+for my assurance I have the handwritings of many.&rdquo;&nbsp; Now he
+had affirmed frequently, in Scotland, the very doctrines of discipline
+and persecution &ldquo;of which none of the other leading Reformers
+had set an example,&rdquo; according to Dr. Lorimer.&nbsp; Therefore,
+either they agreed with Knox, or what Knox told the Lords in June 1564
+was not strictly accurate. <a name="citation105"></a><a href="#footnote105">{105}</a>&nbsp;
+In any case Knox gave to his country the most extreme of Reformations.</p>
+<p>The death of Mary Tudor, and the course of events at home, were now
+to afford our Reformer the opportunity of promulgating, in Scotland,
+those ideas which we and his learned Presbyterian student alike regret
+and condemn.&nbsp; These persecuting ideas &ldquo;were only a mistaken
+theory of Christian duty, and nothing worse,&rdquo; says Dr. Lorimer.&nbsp;
+Nothing could possibly be worse than a doctrine contrary in the highest
+degree to the teaching of Our Lord, whether the doctrine was proclaimed
+by Pope, Prelate, or Calvinist.</p>
+<p>Here it must be observed that a most important fact in Knox&rsquo;s
+career, a most important element in his methods, has been little remarked
+upon by his biographers.&nbsp; Ever since he failed, in 1554, to obtain
+the adhesion of Bullinger and Calvin to his more extreme ideas, he had
+been his own prophet, and had launched his decrees of the right of the
+people, of part of the people, and of the individual, to avenge the
+insulted majesty of God upon idolaters, not only without warrant from
+the heads of the Calvinistic Church, but to their great annoyance and
+disgust.&nbsp; Of this an example will now be given.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER X: KNOX AND THE SCOTTISH REVOLUTION, 1559</h2>
+<p>Knox had learned from letters out of Scotland that Protestants there
+now ran no risks; that &ldquo;without a shadow of fear they might hear
+prayers in the vernacular, and receive the sacraments in the right way,
+the impure ceremonies of Antichrist being set aside.&rdquo;&nbsp; The
+image of St. Giles had been broken by a mob, and thrown into a sewer;
+&ldquo;the impure crowd of priests and monks&rdquo; had fled, throwing
+away the shafts of the crosses they bore, and &ldquo;hiding the golden
+heads in their robes.&rdquo;&nbsp; Now the Regent thinks of reforming
+religion, on a given day, at a convention of the whole realm.&nbsp;
+So William Cole wrote to Bishop Bale, then at Basle, without date.&nbsp;
+The riot was of the beginning of September 1558, and is humorously described
+by Knox. <a name="citation107"></a><a href="#footnote107">{107}</a></p>
+<p>This news, though regarded as &ldquo;very certain,&rdquo; was quite
+erroneous except as to the riot.&nbsp; One may guess that it was given
+to Knox in letters from the nobles, penned in October 1558, which he
+received in November 1558; there was also a letter to Calvin from the
+nobles, asking for Knox&rsquo;s presence.&nbsp; It seemed that a visit
+to Scotland was perfectly safe; Knox left Geneva in January, he arrived
+in Dieppe in February, where he learned that Elizabeth would not allow
+him to travel through England.&nbsp; He had much that was private to
+say to Cecil, and was already desirous of procuring English aid to Scottish
+reformers.&nbsp; The tidings of the Queen&rsquo;s refusal to admit him
+to England came through Cecil, and Knox told him that he was &ldquo;worthy
+of Hell&rdquo; (for conformity with Mary Tudor); and that Turks actually
+granted such safe conducts as were now refused to him. <a name="citation108a"></a><a href="#footnote108a">{108a}</a>&nbsp;
+Perhaps he exaggerated the amenity of the Turks.&nbsp; His &ldquo;First
+Blast,&rdquo; if acted on, disturbed the succession in England, and
+might beget new wars, a matter which did not trouble the prophet.&nbsp;
+He also asked leave to visit his flock at Berwick.&nbsp; This too was
+refused.</p>
+<p>Doubtless Knox, with his unparalleled activity, employed the period
+of delay in preaching the Word at Dieppe.&nbsp; After his arrival in
+Scotland, he wrote to his Dieppe congregation, upbraiding them for their
+Laodicean laxity in permitting idolatry to co-exist with true religion
+in their town.&nbsp; Why did they not drive out the idolatrous worship?&nbsp;
+These epistles were intercepted by the Governor of Dieppe, and their
+contents appear to have escaped the notice of the Reformer&rsquo;s biographers.&nbsp;
+A revolt followed in Dieppe. <a name="citation108b"></a><a href="#footnote108b">{108b}</a>&nbsp;
+Meanwhile Knox&rsquo;s doings at Dieppe had greatly exasperated Fran&ccedil;ois
+Morel, the chief pastor of the Genevan congregation in Paris, and president
+of the first Protestant Synod held in that town.&nbsp; The affairs of
+the French Protestants were in a most precarious condition; persecution
+broke into fury early in June 1559.&nbsp; A week earlier, Morel wrote
+to Calvin, &ldquo;Knox was for some time in Dieppe, waiting on a wind
+for Scotland.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;He dared publicly to profess the worst
+and most infamous of doctrines: &lsquo;Women are unworthy to reign;
+Christians may protect themselves by arms against tyrants!&rsquo;&rdquo;&nbsp;
+The latter excellent doctrine was not then accepted by the Genevan learned.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I fear that Knox may fill Scotland with his madness.&nbsp; He
+is said to have a boon companion at Geneva, whom we hear that the people
+of Dieppe have called to be their minister.&nbsp; If he be infected
+with such opinions, for Christ&rsquo;s sake pray that he be not sent;
+or if he has already departed, warn the Dieppe people to beware of him.&rdquo;
+<a name="citation109a"></a><a href="#footnote109a">{109a}</a>&nbsp;
+A French ex-capuchin, Jacques Trouill&eacute;, was appointed as Knox&rsquo;s
+successor at Dieppe. <a name="citation109b"></a><a href="#footnote109b">{109b}</a></p>
+<p>Knox&rsquo;s ideas, even the idea that Christians may bear the sword
+against tyrants, were all his own, were anti-Genevan; and though Calvin
+(1559-60) knew all about the conspiracy of Amboise to kill the Guises,
+he ever maintained that he had discouraged and preached against it.&nbsp;
+We must, therefore, credit Knox with originality, both in his ideas
+and in his way of giving it to be understood that they had the approval
+of the learned of Switzerland.&nbsp; The reverse was true.</p>
+<p>By May 3, Knox was in Edinburgh, &ldquo;come in the brunt of the
+battle,&rdquo; as the preachers&rsquo; summons to trial was for May
+10.&nbsp; He was at once outlawed, &ldquo;blown loud to the horn,&rdquo;
+but was not dismayed.&nbsp; On this occasion the battle would be a fair
+fight, the gentry, under their Band, stood by the preachers, and, given
+a chance in open field with the arm of the flesh to back him, Knox&rsquo;s
+courage was tenacious and indomitable.&nbsp; It was only for lonely
+martyrdom that he never thought himself ready, and few historians have
+a right to throw the first stone at him for his backwardness.</p>
+<p>As for armed conflict, at this moment Mary of Guise could only reckon
+surely on the small French garrison of Scotland, perhaps 1500 or 2000
+men.&nbsp; She could place no confidence in the feudal levies that gathered
+when the royal standard was raised.&nbsp; The Hamiltons merely looked
+to their own advancement; Lord James Stewart was bound to the Congregation;
+Huntly was a double dealer and was remote; the minor <i>noblesse</i>
+and the armed burghers, with Glencairn representing the south-west,
+Lollard from of old, were attached to Knox&rsquo;s doctrines, while
+the mob would flock in to destroy and plunder.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/knox3b.jpg">
+<img alt="Bridal medal of Mary Stuart and the Dauphin, 1558" src="images/knox3s.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>Meanwhile Mary of Guise was at Stirling, and a multitude of Protestants
+were at Perth, where the Reformation had just made its entry, and had
+secured a walled city, a thing unique in Scotland.&nbsp; The gentry
+of Angus and the people of Dundee, at Perth, were now anxious to make
+a &ldquo;demonstration&rdquo; (unarmed, says Knox) at Stirling, if the
+preachers obeyed the summons to go thither, on May 10.&nbsp; Their strategy
+was excellent, whether carefully premeditated or not.</p>
+<p>The Regent, according to Knox, amused Erskine of Dun with promises
+of &ldquo;taking some better order&rdquo; till the day of May 10 arrived,
+when, the preachers and their backers having been deluded into remaining
+at Perth instead of &ldquo;demonstrating&rdquo; at Stirling, she outlawed
+the preachers and fined their sureties (&ldquo;assisters&rdquo;).&nbsp;
+She did not outlaw the sureties.&nbsp; Her treachery (alleged only by
+Knox and others who follow him) is examined in Appendix A.&nbsp; Meanwhile
+it is certain that the preachers were put to the horn in absence, and
+that the brethren, believing themselves (according to Knox) to have
+been disgracefully betrayed, proceeded to revolutionary extremes, such
+as Calvin energetically denounced.</p>
+<p>If we ask who executed the task of wrecking the monasteries at Perth,
+Knox provides two different answers.</p>
+<p>In the &ldquo;History&rdquo; Knox says that after the news came of
+the Regent&rsquo;s perfidy, and after a sermon &ldquo;vehement against
+idolatry,&rdquo; a priest began to celebrate, and &ldquo;opened a glorious
+tabernacle&rdquo; on the high altar.&nbsp; &ldquo;Certain godly men
+and a young boy&rdquo; were standing near; they all, or the boy alone
+(the sentence may be read either way), cried that this was intolerable.&nbsp;
+The priest struck the boy, who &ldquo;took up a stone&rdquo; and hit
+the tabernacle, and &ldquo;the whole multitude&rdquo; wrecked the monuments
+of idolatry.&nbsp; Neither the exhortation of the preacher nor the command
+of the magistrate could stay them in their work of destruction. <a name="citation111"></a><a href="#footnote111">{111}</a>&nbsp;
+Presently &ldquo;the rascal multitude&rdquo; convened, <i>without</i>
+the gentry and &ldquo;earnest professors,&rdquo; and broke into the
+Franciscan and Dominican monasteries.&nbsp; They wrecked as usual, and
+the &ldquo;common people&rdquo; robbed, but the godly allowed Forman,
+Prior of the Charter House, to bear away about as much gold and silver
+as he was able to carry.&nbsp; We learn from Mary of Guise and Lesley&rsquo;s
+&ldquo;History&rdquo; that the very orchards were cut down.</p>
+<p>If, thanks to the preachers, &ldquo;no honest man was enriched the
+value of a groat,&rdquo; apparently dishonest men must have sacked the
+gold and silver plate of the monasteries; nothing is said by Knox on
+this head, except as to the Charter House.</p>
+<p>Writing to Mrs. Locke, on the other hand, on June 23, Knox tells
+her that &ldquo;the brethren,&rdquo; after &ldquo;complaint and appeal
+made&rdquo; against the Regent, levelled with the ground the three monasteries,
+burned all &ldquo;monuments of idolatry&rdquo; accessible, &ldquo;and
+priests were commanded under pain of death, to desist from their blasphemous
+mass.&rdquo;&nbsp; <a name="citation112"></a><a href="#footnote112">{112}</a>&nbsp;
+Nothing is said about a spontaneous and uncontrollable popular movement.&nbsp;
+The professional &ldquo;brethren,&rdquo; earnest professors of course,
+reap the glory.&nbsp; Which is the true version?</p>
+<p>If the version given to Mrs. Locke be accurate, Knox had sufficient
+reasons for producing a different account in that portion of his &ldquo;History&rdquo;
+(Book ii.) which is a tract written in autumn, 1559, and in purpose
+meant for contemporary foreign as well as domestic readers.&nbsp; The
+performances attributed to the brethren, in the letter to the London
+merchant&rsquo;s wife, were of a kind which Calvin severely rebuked.&nbsp;
+Similar or worse violences were perpetrated by French brethren at Lyons,
+on April 30, 1562.&nbsp; The booty of the church of St. Jean had been
+sold at auction.&nbsp; There must be no more robbery and pillage, says
+Calvin, writing on May 13, to the Lyons preachers.&nbsp; The ruffians
+who rob ought rather to be abandoned, than associated with to the scandal
+of the Gospel.&nbsp; &ldquo;Already reckless zeal was shown in the ravages
+committed in the churches&rdquo; (altars and images had been overthrown),
+&ldquo;but those who fear God will not rigorously judge what was done
+in hot blood, from devout emotion, but what can be said in defence of
+looting?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Calvin spoke even more distinctly to the &ldquo;consistory&rdquo;
+of N&icirc;mes, who suspended a preacher named Tartas for overthrowing
+crosses, altars, and images in churches (July-August, 1561).&nbsp; The
+zealot was even threatened with excommunication by his fellow religionists.
+<a name="citation113a"></a><a href="#footnote113a">{113a}</a>&nbsp;
+Calvin heard that this fanatic had not only consented to the outrages,
+but had incited them, and had &ldquo;the insupportable obstinacy&rdquo;
+to say that such conduct was, with him, &ldquo;a matter of conscience.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+&ldquo;But <i>we</i>&rdquo; says Calvin, &ldquo;know that the reverse
+is the case, for God never commanded any one to overthrow idols, except
+every man in his own house, and, in public, those whom he has armed
+with authority.&nbsp; Let that fire-brand&rdquo; (the preacher) &ldquo;show
+us by what title <i>he</i> is lord of the land where he has been burning
+things.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Knox must have been aware of Calvin&rsquo;s opinion about such outrages
+as those of Perth, which, in a private letter, he attributes to the
+brethren: in his public &ldquo;History&rdquo; to the mob.&nbsp; At St.
+Andrews, when similar acts were committed, he says that &ldquo;the provost
+and bailies . . . did agree to remove all monuments of idolatry,&rdquo;
+whether this would or would not have satisfied Calvin.</p>
+<p>Opponents of my view urge that Knox, though he knew that the brethren
+had nothing to do with the ruin at Perth, yet, in the enthusiasm of
+six weeks later, claimed this honour for them, when writing to Mrs.
+Locke.&nbsp; Still later, when cool, he told, in his &ldquo;History,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;the frozen truth,&rdquo; the mob alone was guilty, despite his
+exhortations and the commandment of the magistrate.&nbsp; Neither alternative
+is very creditable to the prophet.</p>
+<p>In the &ldquo;Historie of the Estate of Scotland,&rdquo; it is &ldquo;the
+brethren&rdquo; who break, burn, and destroy. <a name="citation113b"></a><a href="#footnote113b">{113b}</a>&nbsp;
+In Knox&rsquo;s &ldquo;History&rdquo; no mention is made of the threat
+of death against the priests.&nbsp; In the letter to Mrs. Locke he says,
+apparently of the threat, perhaps of the whole affair, &ldquo;which
+thing did so enrage the venom of the serpent&rsquo;s seed,&rdquo; that
+she decreed death against man, woman, and child in Perth, after the
+fashion of Knox&rsquo;s favourite texts in Deuteronomy and Chronicles.&nbsp;
+This was &ldquo;beastlie crueltie.&rdquo;&nbsp; The &ldquo;History&rdquo;
+gives the same account of the Regent&rsquo;s threatening &ldquo;words
+which might escape her in choler&rdquo; (of course we have no authority
+for her speaking them at all), but, in the &ldquo;History,&rdquo; Knox
+omits the threat by the brethren of death against the priests&mdash;a
+threat which none of his biographers mentions!</p>
+<p>If the menace against the priests and the ruin of monasteries were
+not seditious, what is sedition?&nbsp; But Knox&rsquo;s business, in
+Book II. of his &ldquo;History&rdquo; (much of it written in September-October
+1559), is to prove that the movement was <i>not</i> rebellious, was
+purely religious, and all for &ldquo;liberty of conscience&rdquo;&mdash;for
+Protestants.&nbsp; Therefore, in the &ldquo;History,&rdquo; he disclaims
+the destruction by the brethren of the monasteries&mdash;the mob did
+that; and he burkes the threat of death to priests: though he told the
+truth, privately, to Mrs. Locke.</p>
+<p>Mary did not move at once.&nbsp; The Hamiltons joined her, and she
+had her French soldiers, perhaps 1500 men.&nbsp; On May 22 &ldquo;The
+Faithful Congregation of Christ Jesus in Scotland,&rdquo; but a few
+gentlemen being concerned, wrote from Perth, which they were fortifying,
+to the Regent.&nbsp; If she proceeds in her &ldquo;cruelty,&rdquo; they
+will take up the sword, and inform all Christian princes, and their
+Queen in France, that they have revolted solely because of &ldquo;this
+cruel, unjust, and most tyrannical murder, intended against towns and
+multitudes.&rdquo;&nbsp; As if they had not revolted already!&nbsp;
+Their pretext seems to mean that they do not want to alter the sovereign
+authority, a quibble which they issued for several months, long after
+it was obviously false.&nbsp; They also wrote to the nobles, to the
+French officers in the Regent&rsquo;s service, and to the clergy.</p>
+<p>What really occurred was that many of the brethren left Perth, after
+they had &ldquo;made a day of it,&rdquo; as they had threatened earlier:
+that the Regent called her nobles to Council, concentrated her French
+forces, and summoned the levies of Clydesdale and Stirlingshire.&nbsp;
+Meanwhile the brethren flocked again into Perth, at that time, it is
+said, the only wall-girt town in Scotland: they strengthened the works,
+wrote everywhere for succour, and loudly maintained that they were not
+rebellious or seditious.</p>
+<p>Of these operations Knox was the life and soul.&nbsp; There is no
+mistaking his hand in the letter to Mary of Guise, or in the epistle
+to the Catholic clergy.&nbsp; That letter is courteously addressed &ldquo;To
+the Generation of Anti-Christ, the Pestilent Prelates and their Shavelings
+within Scotland, the Congregation of Jesus within the same saith.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The gentle Congregation saith that, if the clergy &ldquo;proceed
+in their cruelty,&rdquo; they shall be &ldquo;apprehended as murderers.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+&ldquo;We shall begin that same war which God commanded Israel to execute
+against the Canaanites . . .&rdquo;&nbsp; This they promise in the names
+of God, Christ, and the Gospel.&nbsp; Any one can recognise the style
+of Knox in this composition.&nbsp; David Hume remarks: &ldquo;With these
+outrageous symptoms commenced in Scotland that hypocrisy and fanaticism
+which long infested that kingdom, and which, though now mollified by
+the lenity of the civil power, is still ready to break out on all occasions.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Hume was wrong, there was no touch of hypocrisy in Knox; he believed
+as firmly in the &ldquo;message&rdquo; which he delivered as in the
+reality of the sensible universe.</p>
+<p>A passage in the message to the nobility displays the intense ardour
+of the convictions that were to be potent in the later history of the
+Kirk.&nbsp; That priests, by the prescription of fifteen centuries,
+should have persuaded themselves of their own power to damn men&rsquo;s
+souls to hell, cut them off from the Christian community, and hand them
+over to the devil, is a painful circumstance.&nbsp; But Knox, from Perth,
+asserts that the same awful privilege is vested in the six or seven
+preachers of the nascent Kirk with the fire-new doctrine!&nbsp; Addressing
+the signers of the godly Band and other sympathisers who have not yet
+come in, he (if he wrote these fiery appeals) observes, that if they
+do <i>not</i> come in, &ldquo;ye shall be <i>excommunicated</i> from
+our Society, and from all participation with us in the administration
+of the Sacraments . . .&nbsp; Doubt we nothing but that our church,
+<i>and the true ministers of the same</i>, have the power which our
+Master, Jesus Christ, granted to His apostles in these words, &lsquo;Whose
+sins ye shall forgive, shall be forgiven, and whose sins ye shall retain,
+shall be retained&rsquo; . . . &rdquo;&nbsp; Men were to be finally
+judged by Omnipotence on the faith of what Willock, Knox, Harlaw, poor
+Paul Methuen, and the apostate Friar Christison, &ldquo;trew ministeris,&rdquo;
+thought good to decide!&nbsp; With such bugbears did Guthrie and his
+companions think, a century later, to daunt &ldquo;the clear spirit
+of Montrose.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>While reading the passages just cited, we are enabled to understand
+the true cause of the sorrows of Scotland for a hundred and thirty years.&nbsp;
+The situation is that analysed by Thomas L&uuml;ber, a Professor of
+Medicine at Heidelberg, well or ill known in Scottish ecclesiastical
+disputes by his Graecised name, Erastus.&nbsp; He argued, about 1568,
+that excommunication has no certain warrant in Holy Writ, under a Christian
+prince.&nbsp; Erastus writes:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Some men were seized on by a certain excommunicatory fever,
+which they did adorn with the name of &lsquo;ecclesiastical discipline.&rsquo;
+. . .&nbsp; They affirmed the manner of it to be this: that certain
+presbyters should sit in the name of the whole Church, and should judge
+who were worthy or unworthy to come to the Lord&rsquo;s Supper.&nbsp;
+I wonder that then they consulted about these matters, when we neither
+had men to be excommunicated, nor fit excommunicators; for scarcely
+a thirtieth part of the people did understand or approve of the reformed
+religion.&rdquo; <a name="citation117"></a><a href="#footnote117">{117}</a></p>
+<p>&ldquo;There was,&rdquo; adds Erastus, &ldquo;another fruit of the
+same tree, that almost every one thought men had the power of opening
+and shutting heaven to whomsoever they would.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>What men have this power in Scotland in 1559?&nbsp; Why, some five
+or six persons who, being fluent preachers, have persuaded local sets
+of Protestants to accept them as ministers.&nbsp; These preachers having
+a &ldquo;call&rdquo;&mdash;it might be from a set of perfidious and
+profligate murderers&mdash;are somehow gifted with the apostolic grace
+of binding on earth what shall be bound in heaven.&nbsp; Their successors,
+down to Mr. Cargill, who, of his own fantasy, excommunicated Charles
+II., were an intolerable danger to civilised society.&nbsp; For their
+edicts of &ldquo;boycotting&rdquo; they claimed the sanction of the
+civil magistrate, and while these almost incredibly fantastic pretentions
+lasted, there was not, and could not be, peace in Scotland.</p>
+<p>The seed of this Upas tree was sown by Knox and his allies in May
+1559.&nbsp; An Act of 1690 repealed civil penalties for the excommunicated.</p>
+<p>To face the supernaturally gifted preachers the Regent had but a
+slender force, composed in great part of sympathisers with Knox.&nbsp;
+Croft, the English commander at Berwick, writing to the English Privy
+Council, on May 22, anticipated that there would be no war.&nbsp; The
+Hamiltons, numerically powerful, and strong in martial gentlemen of
+the name, were with the Regent.&nbsp; But of the Hamiltons it might
+always be said, as Charles I. was to remark of their chief, that &ldquo;they
+were very active for their own preservation,&rdquo; and for no other
+cause.&nbsp; For centuries but one or two lives stood between them and
+the throne, the haven where they would be.&nbsp; They never produced
+a great statesman, but their wealth, numbers, and almost royal rank
+made them powerful.</p>
+<p>At this moment the eldest son of the house, the Earl of Arran, was
+in France.&nbsp; As a boy, he had been seized by the murderers of Cardinal
+Beaton, and held as a hostage in the Castle of St. Andrews.&nbsp; Was
+he there converted to the Reformers&rsquo; ideas by the eloquence of
+Knox?&nbsp; We know not, but, as heir to his father&rsquo;s French duchy
+of Chatelherault, he had been some years in France, commanding the Scottish
+Archer Guard.&nbsp; In France too, perhaps, he was more or less a pledge
+for his father&rsquo;s loyalty in Scotland.&nbsp; He was now a Protestant
+in earnest, had retired from the French Court, had refused to return
+thither when summoned, and fled from the troops who were sent to bring
+him; lurking in woods and living on strawberries.&nbsp; Cecil despatched
+Thomas Randolph to steer him across the frontier to Zurich.&nbsp; He
+was a piece in the game much more valuable than his father, whose portrait
+shows us a weak, feebly cunning, good-natured, and puzzled-looking old
+nobleman.</p>
+<p>Till Arran returned to Scotland, the Hamiltons, it was certain, would
+be trusty allies of neither faith and of neither party.&nbsp; When the
+Perth tumult broke out, Lord James rode with the Regent, as did Argyll.&nbsp;
+But both had signed the godly Band of December 3, 1557, and could no
+more be trusted by the Regent than the Hamiltons.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile, the gentry of Fife and Forfarshire, with the town of Dundee,
+joined Knox in the walled town of Perth, though Lord Ruthven, provost
+of Perth, deserted, for the moment, to the Regent.&nbsp; On the other
+hand, the courageous Glencairn, with a strong body of the zealots of
+Renfrewshire and Ayrshire, was moving by forced marches to join the
+brethren.&nbsp; On May 24, the Regent, instead of attacking, halted
+at Auchterarder, fourteen miles away, and sent Argyll and Lord James
+to parley.&nbsp; They were told that the brethren meant no rebellion
+(as the Regent said and doubtless thought that they did), but only desired
+security for their religion, and were ready to &ldquo;be tried&rdquo;
+(by whom?) &ldquo;in lawful judgment.&rdquo;&nbsp; Argyll and Lord James
+were satisfied.&nbsp; On May 25, Knox harangued the two lords in his
+wonted way, but the Regent bade the brethren leave Perth on pain of
+treason.&nbsp; By May 28, however, she heard of Glencairn&rsquo;s approach
+with Lord Ochiltree, a Stewart (later Knox&rsquo;s father-in-law); Glencairn,
+by cross roads, had arrived within six miles of Perth, with 1200 horse
+and 1300 foot.&nbsp; The western Reformers were thus nearer Perth than
+her own untrustworthy levies at Auchterarder.&nbsp; Not being aware
+of this, the brethren proposed obedience, if the Regent would amnesty
+the Perth men, let their faith &ldquo;go forward,&rdquo; and leave no
+garrison of &ldquo;French soldiers.&rdquo;&nbsp; To Mrs. Locke Knox
+adds that no idolatry should be erected, or alteration made within the
+town. <a name="citation120"></a><a href="#footnote120">{120}</a>&nbsp;
+The Regent was now sending Lord James, Argyll, and Mr. Gawain Hamilton
+to treat, when Glencairn and his men marched into Perth.&nbsp; Argyll
+and Lord James then promised to join the brethren, if the Regent broke
+her agreement; Knox and Willock assured their hearers that break it
+she would&mdash;and so the agreement was accepted (May 28).</p>
+<p>It was thus necessary for the brethren to allege that the covenant
+was broken; and it was not easy for Mary to secure order in Perth without
+taking some step that could be seized on as a breach of her promise;
+Argyll and Lord James could then desert her for the party of Knox.&nbsp;
+The very Band which Argyll and Lord James signed with the Congregation
+provided that the godly should go on committing the disorders which
+it was the duty of the Regent to suppress, and they proceeded in that
+holy course, &ldquo;breaking down the altars and idols in all places
+where they came.&rdquo; <a name="citation121a"></a><a href="#footnote121a">{121a}</a>&nbsp;
+&ldquo;At their whole powers&rdquo; the Congregations are &ldquo;to
+destroy and put away all that does dishonour to God&rsquo;s name&rdquo;;
+that is, monasteries and works of sacred art.&nbsp; They are all to
+defend each other against &ldquo;any power whatsoever&rdquo; that shall
+trouble them in their pious work.&nbsp; Argyll and Lord James signed
+this new Band, with Glencairn, Lord Boyd, and Ochiltree.&nbsp; The Queen&rsquo;s
+emissaries thus deserted her cause on the last day of May 1559, or earlier,
+for the chronology is perplexing. <a name="citation121b"></a><a href="#footnote121b">{121b}</a></p>
+<p>As to the terms of truce with the Regent, Knox gives no document,
+but says that no Perth people should be troubled for their recent destruction
+of idolatry &ldquo;and for down casting the places of the same; that
+she would suffer the religion begun to go forward, and leave the town
+at her departing free from the garrisons of French soldiers.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+The &ldquo;Historie&rdquo; mentions no terms except that &ldquo;she
+should leave no men of war behind her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Thus, as it seems, the brethren by their Band were to go on wrecking
+the homes of the Regent&rsquo;s religion, while she was not to enjoy
+her religious privileges in the desecrated churches of Perth, for to
+do that was to prevent &ldquo;the religion begun&rdquo; from &ldquo;going
+forward.&rdquo;&nbsp; On the Regent&rsquo;s entry her men &ldquo;discharged
+their volley of hackbuts,&rdquo; probably to clear their pieces, a method
+of unloading which prevailed as late as Waterloo.&nbsp; But some aimed,
+says Knox, at the house of Patrick Murray and hit a son of his, a boy
+of ten or twelve, &ldquo;who, being slain, was had to the Queen&rsquo;s
+presence.&rdquo;&nbsp; She mocked, and wished it had been his father,
+&ldquo;but seeing that it so chanced, we cannot be against fortune.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+It is not very probable that Mary of Guise was &ldquo;merry,&rdquo;
+in Knox&rsquo;s manner of mirth, over the death of a child (to Mrs.
+Locke Knox says &ldquo;children&rdquo;), who, for all we know, may have
+been the victim of accident, like the Jacobite lady who was wounded
+at a window as Prince Charles&rsquo;s men discharged their pieces when
+entering Edinburgh after the victory of Prestonpans.&nbsp; (This brave
+lady said that it was fortunate she was not a Whig, or the accident
+would have been ascribed to design.)&nbsp; This event at Perth was called
+a breach of terms, so was the attendance at Mass, celebrated on any
+chance table, as &ldquo;the altars were not so easy to be repaired again.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+The soldiers were billeted on citizens, whose houses were &ldquo;oppressed
+by&rdquo; the Frenchmen, and the provost, Ruthven (who had anew deserted
+to the Congregation), and the bailies, were deposed.</p>
+<p>These magistrates probably had been charged with the execution of
+priests who dared to do their duty; at least in the following year,
+on June 10, 1560, we find the provost, bailies, and town council of
+Edinburgh decreeing death for the third offence against idolaters who
+do not instantly profess their conversion. <a name="citation122"></a><a href="#footnote122">{122}</a>&nbsp;
+The Edinburgh municipality did this before the abolition of Catholicism
+by the Convention of Estates in August 1560.&nbsp; It does not appear
+that any authority in Perth except that of the provost and bailies could
+sentence priests to death; was their removal, then, a breach of truce?&nbsp;
+At all events it seemed necessary in the circumstances, and Mary of
+Guise when she departed left no <i>French</i> soldiers to protect the
+threatened priests, but four companies of Scots who had been in French
+service, under Stewart of Cardonell and Captain Cullen, the Captain
+of Queen Mary&rsquo;s guard after the murder of Riccio.&nbsp; The Regent
+is said by Knox to have remarked that she was not bound to keep faith
+with heretics, and that, with as fair an excuse, she would make little
+scruple to take the lives and goods of &ldquo;all that sort.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+We do not know Knox&rsquo;s authority for these observations of the
+Regent.</p>
+<p>The Scots soldiers left by Mary of Guise may have been Protestants,
+they certainly were not Frenchmen; and, in a town where death had just
+been threatened to all priests who celebrated the Mass, Mary could not
+abandon her clerics unprotected.</p>
+<p>Taking advantage of what they called breach of treaty as regards
+the soldiers left in Perth, Lord James and Argyll, with Ruthven, had
+joined the brethren, accompanied by the Earl of Menteith and Murray
+of Tullibardine, ancestor of the ducal house of Atholl.&nbsp; Argyll
+and Lord James went to St. Andrews, summoning their allies thither for
+June 3.&nbsp; Knox meanwhile preached in Crail and Anstruther, with
+the usual results.&nbsp; On Sunday, June 11, <a name="citation123a"></a><a href="#footnote123a">{123a}</a>
+and for three days more, despising the threats of the Archbishop, backed
+by a hundred spears, and referring to his own prophecy made when he
+was in the galleys, he thundered at St. Andrews.&nbsp; The poor ruins
+of some sacred buildings &ldquo;are alive to testify&rdquo; to the consequences,
+and a head of the Redeemer found in the latrines of the abbey is another
+mute witness to the destruction of that day. <a name="citation123b"></a><a href="#footnote123b">{123b}</a></p>
+<p>It is not my purpose to dilate on the universal destruction of so
+much that was beautiful, and that to Scots, however godly, should have
+been sacred.&nbsp; The tomb of the Bruce in Dunfermline, for example,
+was wrecked by the mob, as the statue of Jeanne d&rsquo;Arc on the bridge
+of Orleans was battered to pieces by the Huguenots.&nbsp; Nor need we
+ask what became of church treasures, perhaps of great value and antiquity.&nbsp;
+In some known cases, the magistrates held and sold those of the town
+churches.&nbsp; Some of the plate and vestments at Aberdeen were committed
+to the charge of Huntly, but about 1900 ounces of plate were divided
+among the Prebendaries, who seem to have appropriated them. <a name="citation124"></a><a href="#footnote124">{124}</a>&nbsp;
+The Church treasures of Glasgow were apparently carried abroad by Archbishop
+Beaton.&nbsp; If Lord James, as Prior, took possession of the gold and
+silver of St. Andrews, he probably used the bullion (he spent some 13,000
+crowns) in his defence of the approaches to the town, against the French,
+in December 1559.&nbsp; A silver mace of St. Salvator&rsquo;s College
+escaped the robbers.</p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/knox4b.jpg">
+<img alt="Head of Christ. St. Andrews. Excavated from the ruins of the Abbey by the late Marquis of Bute" src="images/knox4s.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>There is no sign of the possession of much specie by the Congregation
+in the months that followed the sack of so many treasuries of pious
+offerings.&nbsp; Lesley says that they wanted to coin the plate in Edinburgh,
+and for that purpose seized, as they certainly did, the dies of the
+mint.&nbsp; In France, when the brethren sacked Tours, they took twelve
+hundred thousand <i>livres d&rsquo;or</i>; the country was enriched
+for the moment.&nbsp; Not so Scotland.&nbsp; In fact the plate of Aberdeen
+cathedral, as inventoried in the Register, is no great treasure.&nbsp;
+Monasteries and cathedrals were certain to perish sooner or later, for
+the lead of every such roof except Coldingham had been stripped and
+sold by 1585, while tombs had been desecrated for their poor spoils,
+and the fanes were afterwards used as quarries of hewn stone.&nbsp;
+Lord James had a peculiar aversion to idolatrous books, and is known
+to have ordered the burning of many manuscripts;&mdash;the loss to art
+was probably greater than the injury to history or literature.&nbsp;
+The fragments of things beautiful that the Reformers overlooked, were
+destroyed by the Covenanters.&nbsp; An attempt has been made to prove
+that the Border abbeys were not wrecked by Reformers, but by English
+troops in the reign of Henry VIII., who certainly ravaged them.&nbsp;
+Lesley, however, says that the abbeys of Kelso and Melrose were &ldquo;by
+them (the Reformers) broken down and wasted.&rdquo; <a name="citation125a"></a><a href="#footnote125a">{125a}</a>&nbsp;
+If there was nothing left to destroy on the Border, why did the brethren
+march against Kelso, as Cecil reports, on July 9, 1559? <a name="citation125b"></a><a href="#footnote125b">{125b}</a></p>
+<p>After the devastation the Regent meant to attack the destroyers,
+intending to occupy Cupar, six miles, by Knox&rsquo;s reckoning, from
+St. Andrews.&nbsp; But, by June 13, the brethren had anticipated her
+with a large force, rapidly recruited, including three thousand men
+under the Lothian professors; Ruthven&rsquo;s horse; the levies of the
+Earl of Rothes (Leslie), and many burgesses.&nbsp; Next day the Regent&rsquo;s
+French horse found the brethren occupying a very strong post; their
+numbers were dissembled, their guns commanded the plains, and the Eden
+was in their front.&nbsp; A fog hung over the field; when it lifted,
+the French commander, d&rsquo;Oysel, saw that he was outnumbered and
+outman&oelig;uvred.&nbsp; He sent on an envoy to parley, &ldquo;which
+gladly of us being granted, the Queen offered a free remission for all
+crimes past, so that they would no further proceed against friars and
+abbeys, and that no more preaching should be used publicly,&rdquo; for
+<i>that</i> always meant kirk-wrecking.&nbsp; When Wishart preached
+at Mauchline, long before, in 1545, it was deemed necessary to guard
+the church, where there was a tempting tabernacle, &ldquo;beutyfull
+to the eie.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Lords and the whole brethren &ldquo;refused such appointment&rdquo;
+. . . says Knox to Mrs. Locke; they would not &ldquo;suffer idolatrie
+to be maintained in the bounds committed to their charge.&rdquo; <a name="citation126a"></a><a href="#footnote126a">{126a}</a>&nbsp;
+To them liberty of conscience from the first meant liberty to control
+the consciences and destroy the religion of all who differed from them.&nbsp;
+An eight days&rsquo; truce was made for negotiations; during the truce
+neither party was to &ldquo;enterprize&rdquo; anything.&nbsp; Knox in
+his &ldquo;History&rdquo; does not mention an attack on the monastery
+of Lindores during the truce.&nbsp; He says that his party expected
+envoys from the Regent, as in the terms of truce, but perceived &ldquo;her
+craft and deceit.&rdquo; <a name="citation126b"></a><a href="#footnote126b">{126b}</a></p>
+<p>In fact, the brethren were the truce-breakers.&nbsp; Knox gives only
+the assurances signed by the Regent&rsquo;s envoys, the Duke of Chatelherault
+and d&rsquo;Oysel.&nbsp; They include a promise &ldquo;not to invade,
+trouble, or disquiet the Lords,&rdquo; the reforming party.&nbsp; But,
+though Knox omits the fact, the Reformers made a corresponding and equivalent
+promise: &ldquo;That the Congregation should enterprise nothing nor
+make no invasion, for the space of six days following, for the Lords
+and principals of the Congregation read the rest on another piece of
+paper.&rdquo; <a name="citation126c"></a><a href="#footnote126c">{126c}</a></p>
+<p>The situation is clear.&nbsp; The two parties exchanged assurances.&nbsp;
+Knox prints that of the Regent&rsquo;s party, not that, &ldquo;on another
+piece of paper,&rdquo; of the Congregation.&nbsp; They broke their word;
+they &ldquo;made invasion&rdquo; at Lindores, during truce, as Knox
+tells Mrs. Locke, but does not tell the readers of his &ldquo;History.&rdquo;
+<a name="citation127a"></a><a href="#footnote127a">{127a}</a>&nbsp;
+It is true that Knox was probably preaching at St. Andrews on June 13,
+and was not present at Cupar Muir.&nbsp; But he could easily have ascertained
+what assurances the Lords of the Congregation &ldquo;read from another
+piece of paper&rdquo; on that historic waste. <a name="citation127b"></a><a href="#footnote127b">{127b}</a></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XI: KNOX&rsquo;S INTRIGUES, AND HIS ACCOUNT OF THEM, 1559</h2>
+<p>The Reformers, and Knox as their secretary and historian, had now
+reached a very difficult and delicate point in their labours.&nbsp;
+Their purpose was, not by any means to secure toleration and freedom
+of conscience, but to extirpate the religion to which they were opposed.&nbsp;
+It was the religion by law existing, the creed of &ldquo;Authority,&rdquo;
+of the Regent and of the King and Queen whom she represented.&nbsp;
+The position of the Congregation was therefore essentially that of rebels,
+and, in the state of opinion at the period, to be rebels was to be self-condemned.&nbsp;
+In the eyes of Calvin and the learned of the Genevan Church, kings were
+the Lord&rsquo;s appointed, and the Gospel must not be supported by
+the sword.&nbsp; &ldquo;Better that we all perish a hundred times,&rdquo;
+Calvin wrote to Coligny in 1561.&nbsp; Protestants, therefore, if they
+would resist in arms, had to put themselves in order, and though Knox
+had no doubt that to exterminate idolaters was thoroughly in order,
+the leaders of his party were obliged to pay deference to European opinion.</p>
+<p>By a singular coincidence they adopted precisely the same device
+as the more militant French Protestants laid before Calvin in August
+1559-March 1560.&nbsp; The Scots and the Protestant French represented
+that they were illegally repressed by foreigners: in Scotland by Mary
+of Guise with her French troops; in France by the Cardinal and Duc de
+Guise, foreigners, who had possession of the persons and authority of
+the &ldquo;native prince&rdquo; of Scotland, Mary, and the &ldquo;native
+prince&rdquo; of France, Francis II., both being minors.&nbsp; The French
+idea was that, if they secured the aid of a native Protestant prince
+(Cond&eacute;), they were in order, as against the foreign Guises, and
+might kill these tyrants, seize the King, and call an assembly of the
+Estates.&nbsp; Calvin was consulted by the chief of the conspiracy,
+La Renaudie; he disapproved; the legality lent by one native prince
+was insufficient; the details of the plot were &ldquo;puerile,&rdquo;
+and Calvin waited to see how the country would take it.&nbsp; The plot
+failed, at Amboise, in March 1560.</p>
+<p>In Scotland, as in France, devices about a prince of the native blood
+suggested themselves.&nbsp; The Regent, being of the house of Guise,
+was a foreigner, like her brothers in France.&nbsp; The &ldquo;native
+princes&rdquo; were Chatelherault and his eldest son, Arran.&nbsp; The
+leaders, soon after Lord James and Argyll formally joined the zealous
+brethren, saw that without foreign aid their enterprise was desperate.&nbsp;
+Their levies must break up and go home to work; the Regent&rsquo;s nucleus
+of French troops could not be ousted from the sea fortress of Dunbar,
+and would in all probability be joined by the army promised by Henri
+II.&nbsp; His death, the Huguenot risings, the consequent impotence
+of the Guises to aid the Regent, could not be foreseen.&nbsp; Scotland,
+it seemed, would be reduced to a French province; the religion would
+be overthrown.</p>
+<p>There was thus no hope, except in aid from England.&nbsp; But by
+the recent treaty of Cateau Cambresis (April 2, 1559), Elizabeth was
+bound not to help the rebels of the French Dauphin, the husband of the
+Queen of Scots.&nbsp; Moreover, Elizabeth had no stronger passion than
+a hatred of rebels.&nbsp; If she was to be persuaded to help the Reformers,
+they must produce some show of a legitimate &ldquo;Authority&rdquo;
+with whom she could treat.&nbsp; This was as easy to find as it was
+to the Huguenots in the case of Cond&eacute;.&nbsp; Chatelherault and
+Arran, native princes, next heirs to the crown while Mary was childless,
+could be produced as legitimate &ldquo;Authority.&rdquo;&nbsp; But to
+do this implied a change of &ldquo;Authority,&rdquo; an upsetting of
+&ldquo;Authority,&rdquo; which was plain rebellion in the opinion of
+the Genevan doctors.&nbsp; Knox was thus obliged, in sermons and in
+the pamphlet (Book II. of his &ldquo;History&rdquo;), to maintain that
+nothing more than freedom of conscience and religion was contemplated,
+while, as a matter of fact, he was foremost in the intrigue for changing
+the &ldquo;Authority,&rdquo; and even for depriving Mary Stuart of &ldquo;entrance
+and title&rdquo; to her rights.&nbsp; He therefore, in Book II. (much
+of which was written in August-October or September-October 1559, as
+an apologetic contemporary tract), conceals the actual facts of the
+case, and, while perpetually accusing the Regent of falsehood and perfidy,
+displays an extreme &ldquo;economy of truth,&rdquo; and cannot hide
+the pettifogging prevarications of his party.&nbsp; His wiser plan would
+have been to cancel this Book, or much of it, when he set forth later
+to write a history of the Reformation.&nbsp; His party being then triumphant,
+he could have afforded to tell most of the truth, as in great part he
+does in his Book III.&nbsp; But he could not bring himself to throw
+over the narrative of his party pamphlet (Book II.), and it remains
+much as it was originally written, though new touches were added.</p>
+<p>The point to be made in public and in the apologetic tract was that
+the Reformers contemplated no alteration of &ldquo;Authority.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+This was untrue.</p>
+<p>Writing later (probably in 1565-66) in his Third Book, Knox boasts
+of his own initiation of the appeal to England, which included a scheme
+for the marriage of the Earl of Arran, son of the Hamilton chief, Chatelherault,
+to Queen Elizabeth.&nbsp; Failing issue of Queen Mary, Arran was heir
+to the Scottish throne, and if he married the Queen of England, the
+rightful Queen of Scotland would not be likely to wear her crown.&nbsp;
+The contemplated match was apt to involve a change of dynasty.&nbsp;
+The lure of the crown for his descendants was likely to bring Chatelherault,
+and perhaps even his brother the Archbishop, over to the side of the
+Congregation: in short it was an excellent plot.&nbsp; Probably the
+idea occurred to the leaders of the Congregation at or shortly after
+the time when Argyll and Lord James threw in their lot definitely with
+the brethren on May 31.&nbsp; On June 14 Croft, from Berwick, writes
+to Cecil that the leaders, &ldquo;from what I hear, will likely seek
+her Majesty&rsquo;s&rdquo; (Elizabeth&rsquo;s) &ldquo;assistance,&rdquo;
+and mean to bring Arran home.&nbsp; Some think that he is already at
+Geneva, and he appears to have made the acquaintance of Calvin, with
+whom later he corresponded.&nbsp; &ldquo;They are likely to motion a
+marriage you know where&rdquo;; of Arran, that is, with Elizabeth. <a name="citation131"></a><a href="#footnote131">{131}</a>&nbsp;
+Moreover, one Whitlaw was at this date in France, and by June 28, communicated
+the plan to Throckmorton, the English Ambassador.&nbsp; Thus the scheme
+was of an even earlier date than Knox claims for his own suggestion.</p>
+<p>He tells us that at St. Andrews, after the truce of Cupar Muir (June
+13), he &ldquo;burstit forth,&rdquo; in conversation with Kirkcaldy
+of Grange, on the necessity of seeking support from England.&nbsp; Kirkcaldy
+long ago had watched the secret exit from St. Andrews Castle, while
+his friends butchered the Cardinal.&nbsp; He was taken in the castle
+when Knox was taken; he was a prisoner in France; then he entered the
+French service, acting, while so engaged, as an English spy.&nbsp; Before
+and during the destruction of monasteries he was in the Regent&rsquo;s
+service, but she justly suspected him of intending to desert her at
+this juncture.&nbsp; Kirkcaldy now wrote to Cecil, without date, but
+probably on June 21, and with the signature &ldquo;Zours as ye knaw.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Being in the Regent&rsquo;s party openly, he was secretly betraying
+her; he therefore accuses her of treachery.&nbsp; (He left her publicly,
+after a pension from England had been procured for him.)&nbsp; He says
+that the Regent averred that &ldquo;favourers of God&rsquo;s word should
+have liberty to live after their consciences,&rdquo; &ldquo;yet, in
+the conclusion of the peace&rdquo; (the eight days&rsquo; truce) &ldquo;she
+has uttered her deceitful mind, having now declared that she will be
+enemy to all them that shall not live after her religion.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+<i>Consequently</i>, the Protestants are wrecking &ldquo;all the friaries
+within their bounds.&rdquo;&nbsp; But Knox has told us that they declared
+their intention of thus enjoying liberty of conscience <i>before</i>
+&ldquo;the conclusion of the peace,&rdquo; and wrecked Lindores Abbey
+during the peace!&nbsp; Kirkcaldy adds that the Regent already suspects
+him.</p>
+<p>Kirkcaldy, having made the orthodox charge of treachery against the
+woman whom he was betraying, then asks Cecil whether Elizabeth will
+accept their &ldquo;friendship,&rdquo; and adds, with an eye to Arran,
+&ldquo;I wish likewise her Majesty were not too hasty in her marriage.&rdquo;
+<a name="citation133a"></a><a href="#footnote133a">{133a}</a>&nbsp;
+On June 23, writing from his house, Grange, and signing his name, Kirkcaldy
+renews his proposals.&nbsp; In both letters he anticipates the march
+of the Reformers to turn the Regent&rsquo;s garrison out of Perth.&nbsp;
+On June 25 he announces that the Lords are marching thither.&nbsp; They
+had already the secret aid of Lethington, who remained, like the traitor
+that he was, in the Regent&rsquo;s service till the end of October.
+<a name="citation133b"></a><a href="#footnote133b">{133b}</a>&nbsp;
+Knox also writes at this time to Cecil from St. Andrews.</p>
+<p>On June 1, Henri II. of France had written to the Regent promising
+to send her strong reinforcements, <a name="citation133c"></a><a href="#footnote133c">{133c}</a>
+but he was presently killed in a tourney by the broken lance shaft of
+Montgomery.</p>
+<p>The Reformers now made tryst at Perth for June 25, to restore &ldquo;religion&rdquo;
+and expel the Scots in French service.&nbsp; The little garrison surrendered
+(their opponents are reckoned by Kirkcaldy at 10,000 men), idolatry
+was again suppressed, and Perth restored to her municipal constitution.&nbsp;
+The ancient shrines of Scone were treated in the usual way, despite
+the remonstrances of Knox, Lord James, and Argyll.&nbsp; They had threatened
+Hepburn, Bishop of Moray, that if he did not join them &ldquo;they neither
+could spare nor save his place.&rdquo;&nbsp; This was on June 20, on
+the same day he promised to aid them and vote with them in Parliament.
+<a name="citation133d"></a><a href="#footnote133d">{133d}</a>&nbsp;
+Knox did his best, but the Dundee people began the work of wrecking;
+and the Bishop, in anger, demanded and received the return of his written
+promise of joining the Reformers.&nbsp; On the following day, irritated
+by some show of resistance, the people of Dundee and Perth burned the
+palace of Scone and the abbey, &ldquo;whereat no small number of us
+was offended.&rdquo;&nbsp; An old woman said that &ldquo;filthy beasts&rdquo;
+dwelt &ldquo;in that den,&rdquo; to her private knowledge, &ldquo;at
+whose words many were pacified.&rdquo;&nbsp; The old woman is an excellent
+authority. <a name="citation134"></a><a href="#footnote134">{134}</a></p>
+<p>The pretext of perfect loyalty was still maintained by the Reformers;
+their honesty we can appreciate.&nbsp; They did not wish, they said,
+to overthrow &ldquo;authority&rdquo;; merely to be allowed to worship
+in their own way (and to prevent other people from worshipping in theirs,
+which was the order appointed by the State).&nbsp; That any set of men
+may rebel and take their chances is now recognised, but the Reformers
+wanted to combine the advantages of rebellion with the reputation of
+loyal subjects.&nbsp; Persons who not only band against the sovereign,
+but invoke foreign aid and seek a foreign alliance, are, however noble
+their motives, rebels.&nbsp; There is no other word for them.&nbsp;
+But that they were <i>not</i> rebels Knox urged in a sermon at Edinburgh,
+which the Reformers, after devastating Stirling, reached by June 28-29
+(?), and the Second Book of his &ldquo;History&rdquo; labours mainly
+to prove this point; no change of &ldquo;authority&rdquo; is intended.</p>
+<p>What Knox wanted is very obvious.&nbsp; He wanted to prevent Mary
+Stuart from enjoying her hereditary crown.&nbsp; She was a woman, as
+such under the curse of &ldquo;The First Blast of the Trumpet,&rdquo;
+and she was an idolatress.&nbsp; Presently, as we shall see, he shows
+his hand to Cecil.</p>
+<p>Before the Reformers entered Edinburgh Mary of Guise retired to the
+castle of Dunbar, where she had safe access to the sea.&nbsp; In Edinburgh
+Knox says that the poor sacked the monasteries &ldquo;before our coming.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+The contemporary <i>Diurnal of Occurrents</i> attributes the feat to
+Glencairn, Ruthven, Argyll, and the Lord James. <a name="citation135a"></a><a href="#footnote135a">{135a}</a></p>
+<p>Knox was chosen minister of Edinburgh, and as soon as they arrived
+the Lords, according to the &ldquo;Historie of the Estate of Scotland,&rdquo;
+sent envoys to the Regent, offering obedience if she would &ldquo;relax&rdquo;
+the preachers, summoned on May 10, &ldquo;from the horn&rdquo; and allow
+them to preach.&nbsp; The Regent complied, but, of course, peace did
+not ensue, for, according to Knox, in addition to a request &ldquo;that
+we might enjoy liberty of conscience,&rdquo; a demand for the withdrawal
+of all French forces out of Scotland was made. <a name="citation135b"></a><a href="#footnote135b">{135b}</a>&nbsp;
+This could not be granted.</p>
+<p>Presently Mary of Guise issued before July 2, in the name of the
+King and Queen, Francis II. and Mary Stuart, certain charges against
+the Reformers, which Knox in his &ldquo;History&rdquo; publishes. <a name="citation135c"></a><a href="#footnote135c">{135c}</a>&nbsp;
+A remark that Mary Stuart lies like her mother, seems to be written
+later than the period (September-October 1559) when this Book II. was
+composed.&nbsp; The Regent says that the rising was only under pretence
+of religion, and that she has offered a Parliament for January 1560.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;A manifest lie,&rdquo; says Knox, &ldquo;for she never thought
+of it till we demanded it.&rdquo;&nbsp; He does not give a date to the
+Regent&rsquo;s paper, but on June 25 Kirkcaldy wrote to Percy that the
+Regent &ldquo;is like to grant the other party&rdquo; (the Reformers)
+&ldquo;all they desire, which in part she has offered already.&rdquo;
+<a name="citation136a"></a><a href="#footnote136a">{136a}</a></p>
+<p>Knox seizes on the word &ldquo;offered&rdquo; as if it necessarily
+meant &ldquo;offered though unasked,&rdquo; and so styles the Regent&rsquo;s
+remark &ldquo;a manifest lie.&rdquo;&nbsp; But Kirkcaldy, we see, uses
+the words &ldquo;has in part offered already&rdquo; when he means that
+the Regent has &ldquo;offered&rdquo; to grant some of the wishes of
+his allies.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile the Regent will allow freedom of conscience in the country,
+and especially in Edinburgh.&nbsp; But the Reformers, her paper goes
+on, desire to subvert the crown.&nbsp; To prove this she says that they
+daily receive messengers from England and send their own; and they have
+seized the stamps in the Mint (a capital point as regards the crown)
+and the Palace of Holyrood, which Lesley says that they sacked.&nbsp;
+Knox replies, &ldquo;there is never a sentence in the narrative true,&rdquo;
+except that his party seized the stamps merely to prevent the issue
+of base coin (not to coin the stolen plate of the churches and monasteries
+for themselves, as Lesley says they did).&nbsp; But Knox&rsquo;s own
+letters, and those of Kirkcaldy of Grange and Sir Henry Percy, prove
+that they <i>were</i> intriguing with England as early as June 23-25.&nbsp;
+Their conduct, with the complicity of Percy, was perfectly well known
+to the Regent&rsquo;s party, and was denounced by d&rsquo;Oysel to the
+French ambassador in London in letters of July. <a name="citation136b"></a><a href="#footnote136b">{136b}</a>&nbsp;
+Elizabeth, on August 7, answered the remonstrances of the Regent, promising
+to punish her officials if guilty.&nbsp; Nobody lied more frankly than
+&ldquo;that imperial votaress.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>When Knox says &ldquo;there is never a sentence in the narrative
+true,&rdquo; he is very bold.&nbsp; It was not true that the rising
+was merely under pretext of religion.&nbsp; It may have been untrue
+that messengers went <i>daily</i> to England, but five letters were
+written between June 21 and June 28.&nbsp; To stand on the words of
+the Regent&mdash;&ldquo;<i>every day</i>&rdquo;&mdash;would be a babyish
+quibble.&nbsp; All the rest of her narrative was absolutely true.</p>
+<p>Knox, on June 28, asked leave to enter England for secret discourse;
+he had already written to the same effect from St. Andrews. <a name="citation137a"></a><a href="#footnote137a">{137a}</a>&nbsp;
+If Henri sends French reinforcement, Knox &ldquo;is uncertain what will
+follow&rdquo;; we may guess that authority would be in an ill way.&nbsp;
+Cecil temporised; he wanted a better name than Kirkcaldy&rsquo;s&mdash;a
+man in the Regent&rsquo;s service&mdash;to the negotiations (July 4).&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Anywise kindle the fire,&rdquo; he writes to Croft (July 8).&nbsp;
+Croft is to let the Reformers know that Arran has escaped out of France.&nbsp;
+Such a chance will not again &ldquo;come in our lives.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+We see what the chance is!</p>
+<p>On July 19 Knox writes again to Cecil, enclosing what he means to
+be an apology for his &ldquo;Blast of the Trumpet,&rdquo; to be given
+to Elizabeth.&nbsp; He says, while admitting Elizabeth&rsquo;s right
+to reign, as &ldquo;judged godly,&rdquo; though a woman, that they &ldquo;must
+be careful not to make entrance and title to many, by whom not only
+shall the truth be impugned, but also shall the country be brought to
+bondage and slavery.&nbsp; God give you eyes to foresee and wisdom to
+avoid the apparent danger.&rdquo; <a name="citation137b"></a><a href="#footnote137b">{137b}</a></p>
+<p>The &ldquo;many&rdquo; to whom &ldquo;entrance and title&rdquo; are
+not to be given, manifestly are Mary Stuart, Queen of France and Scotland.</p>
+<p>It is not very clear whether Knox, while thus working against a woman&rsquo;s
+&ldquo;entrance and title&rdquo; to the crown on the ground of her sex,
+is thinking of Mary Stuart&rsquo;s prospects of succession to the throne
+of England or of her Scottish rights, or of both.&nbsp; His phrase is
+cast in a vague way; &ldquo;many&rdquo; are spoken of, but it is not
+hard to understand what particular female claimant is in his mind.</p>
+<p>Thus Knox himself was intriguing with England against his Queen at
+the very moment when in his &ldquo;History&rdquo; he denies that communications
+were frequent between his party and England, or that any of the Regent&rsquo;s
+charges are true.&nbsp; As for opposing authority and being rebellious,
+the manifest fundamental idea of the plot is to marry Elizabeth to Arran
+and deny &ldquo;entrance and title&rdquo; to the rightful Queen.&nbsp;
+It was an admirable scheme, and had Arran not become a lunatic, had
+Elizabeth not been &ldquo;that imperial votaress&rdquo; vowed to eternal
+maidenhood, their bridal, with the consequent loss of the Scottish throne
+by Mary, would have been the most fortunate of all possible events.&nbsp;
+The brethren had, in short, a perfect right to defend their creed in
+arms; a perfect right to change the dynasty; a perfect right to intrigue
+with England, and to resist a French landing, if they could.&nbsp; But
+for a reformer of the Church to give a dead lady the lie in his &ldquo;History&rdquo;
+when the economy of truth lay rather on his own side, as he knew, is
+not so well.&nbsp; We shall see that Knox possibly had the facts in
+his mind during the first interview with Mary Stuart. <a name="citation138"></a><a href="#footnote138">{138}</a></p>
+<p>The Lords, July 2, replied to the proclamation of Mary of Guise,
+saying that she accused them of a purpose &ldquo;to invade her person.&rdquo;
+<a name="citation139a"></a><a href="#footnote139a">{139a}</a>&nbsp;
+There is not a word of the kind in the Regent&rsquo;s proclamation as
+given by Knox himself.&nbsp; They denied what the Regent in her proclamation
+had not asserted, and what she had asserted about their dealings with
+England they did not venture to deny; &ldquo;whereby,&rdquo; says Spottiswoode
+in his &ldquo;History,&rdquo; &ldquo;it seemed there was some dealing
+that way for expelling the Frenchmen, which they would not deny, and
+thought not convenient as then openly to profess.&rdquo; <a name="citation139b"></a><a href="#footnote139b">{139b}</a>&nbsp;
+The task of giving the lie to the Regent when she spoke truth was left
+to the pen of Knox.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile, at Dunbar, Mary of Guise was in evil case.&nbsp; She had
+sounded Erskine, the commander of the Castle, who, she hoped, would
+stand by her.&nbsp; But she had no money to pay her French troops, who
+were becoming mutinous, and d&rsquo;Oysel &ldquo;knew not to what Saint
+to vow himself.&rdquo;&nbsp; The Earl of Huntly, before he would serve
+the Crown, <a name="citation139c"></a><a href="#footnote139c">{139c}</a>
+insisted on a promise of the Earldom of Moray; this desire was to be
+his ruin.&nbsp; Huntly was a double dealer; &ldquo;the gay Gordons&rdquo;
+were ever brave, loyal, and bewildered by their chiefs.&nbsp; By July
+22, the Scots heard of the fatal wound of Henri II., to their encouragement.&nbsp;
+Both parties were in lack of money, and the forces of the Congregation
+were slipping home by hundreds.&nbsp; Mary, according to Knox, was exciting
+the Duke against Argyll and Lord James, by the charge that Lord James
+was aiming at the crown, in which if he succeeded, he would deprive
+not only her daughter of the sovereignty, but the Hamiltons of the succession.&nbsp;
+Young and ambitious as Lord James then was, and heavily as he was suspected,
+even in England, it is most improbable that he ever thought of being
+king.</p>
+<p>The Congregation refused to let Argyll and Lord James hold conference
+with the Regent.&nbsp; Other discussions led to no result, except waste
+of time, to the Regent&rsquo;s advantage; and, on July 22, Mary, in
+council with Lord Erskine, Huntly, and the Duke, resolved to march against
+the Reformers at Edinburgh, who had no time to call in their scattered
+levies in the West, Angus, and Fife.&nbsp; Logan of Restalrig, lately
+an ally of the godly, surrendered Leith, over which he was the superior,
+to d&rsquo;Oysel; and the Congregation decided to accept a truce (July
+23-24).</p>
+<p>At this point Knox&rsquo;s narrative becomes so embroiled that it
+reminds one of nothing so much as of Claude Nau&rsquo;s attempts to
+glide past an awkward point in the history of his employer, Mary Stuart.&nbsp;
+I have puzzled over Knox&rsquo;s narrative again and again, and hope
+that I have disentangled the knotted and slippery thread.</p>
+<p>It is not wonderful that the brethren made terms, for the &ldquo;Historie&rdquo;
+states that their force numbered but 1500 men, whereas d&rsquo;Oysel
+and the Duke led twice that number, horse and foot.&nbsp; They also
+heard from Erskine, in the Castle, that, if they did not accept &ldquo;such
+appointment as they might have,&rdquo; he &ldquo;would declare himself
+their enemy,&rdquo; as he had promised the Regent.&nbsp; It seems that
+she did not want war, for d&rsquo;Oysel&rsquo;s French alone should
+have been able to rout the depleted ranks of the Congregation.</p>
+<p>The question is, What were the terms of treaty? for it is Knox&rsquo;s
+endeavour to prove that the Regent broke them, and so justified the
+later proceedings of the Reformers.&nbsp; The terms, in French, are
+printed by Teulet. <a name="citation141"></a><a href="#footnote141">{141}</a>&nbsp;
+They run thus:&mdash;</p>
+<p>1.&nbsp; The Protestants, not being inhabitants of Edinburgh, shall
+depart next day.</p>
+<p>2.&nbsp; They shall deliver the stamps for coining to persons appointed
+by the Regent, hand over Holyrood, and Ruthven and Pitarro shall be
+pledges for performance.</p>
+<p>3.&nbsp; They shall be dutiful subjects, except in matters of religion.</p>
+<p>4.&nbsp; They shall not disturb the clergy in their persons or by
+withholding their rents, &amp;c., before January 10, 1560.</p>
+<p>5.&nbsp; They shall not attack churches or monasteries before that
+date.</p>
+<p>6.&nbsp; The town of Edinburgh shall enjoy liberty of conscience,
+and shall choose its form of religion as it pleases till that date.</p>
+<p>7.&nbsp; The Regent shall not molest the preachers nor suffer the
+clergy to molest them for cause of religion till that date.</p>
+<p>8.&nbsp; Keith, Knox, and Spottiswoode, add that no garrisons, French
+or Scots, shall occupy Edinburgh, but soldiers may repair thither from
+their garrisons for lawful business.</p>
+<p>The French soldiers are said to have swaggered in St. Giles&rsquo;s,
+but no complaint is made that they were garrisoned in Edinburgh.&nbsp;
+In fact, they abode in the Canongate and Leith.</p>
+<p>Now, these were the terms accepted by the Congregation.&nbsp; This
+is certain, not only because historians, Knox excepted, are unanimous,
+but because the terms were either actually observed, or were evaded,
+on a stated point of construction.</p>
+<p>1.&nbsp; The Congregation left Edinburgh.</p>
+<p>2.&nbsp; They handed over the stamps of the Mint, Holyrood, and the
+two pledges.</p>
+<p>3. 4, 5.&nbsp; We do not hear that they attacked any clerics or monastery
+before they broke off publicly from the treaty, and Knox (i. 381) admits
+that Article 4 was accepted.</p>
+<p>6.&nbsp; They would not permit the town of Edinburgh to choose its
+religion by &ldquo;voting of men.&rdquo;&nbsp; On July 29, when Huntly,
+Chatelherault, and Erskine, the neutral commander of the Castle, asked
+for a <i>pl&eacute;biscite</i>, as provided in the treaty of July 24,
+the Truth, said the brethren, was not a matter of human votes, and,
+as the brethren held St. Giles&rsquo;s Church before the treaty, under
+Article 7 they could not be dispossessed. <a name="citation142a"></a><a href="#footnote142a">{142a}</a>&nbsp;
+The Regent, to avoid shadow of offence, yielded the point as to Article
+6, and was accused of breach of treaty because, occupying Holyrood,
+she had her Mass there.&nbsp; Had Edinburgh been polled, the brethren
+knew that they would have been outvoted. <a name="citation142b"></a><a href="#footnote142b">{142b}</a></p>
+<p>Now, Knox&rsquo;s object, in that part of Book II. of his &ldquo;History,&rdquo;
+which was written in September-October 1559 as a tract for contemporary
+reading, is to prove that the Regent was the breaker of treaty.&nbsp;
+His method is first to give &ldquo;the heads drawn by us, which we desired
+to be granted.&rdquo;&nbsp; The heads are&mdash;</p>
+<p>1.&nbsp; No member of the Congregation shall be troubled in any respect
+by any authority for the recent &ldquo;innovation&rdquo; before the
+Parliament of January 10, 1560, decides the controversies.</p>
+<p>2.&nbsp; Idolatry shall not be restored where, on the day of treaty,
+it has been suppressed.</p>
+<p>3.&nbsp; Preachers may preach wherever they have preached and wherever
+they may chance to come.</p>
+<p>4.&nbsp; No soldiers shall be in garrison in Edinburgh.</p>
+<p>5.&nbsp; The French shall be sent away on &ldquo;a reasonable day&rdquo;
+and no more brought in without assent of the whole Nobility and Parliament.
+<a name="citation143a"></a><a href="#footnote143a">{143a}</a></p>
+<p>These articles make no provision for the safety of Catholic priests
+and churches, and insist on suppression of idolatry where it has been
+put down, and the entire withdrawal of French forces.&nbsp; Knox&rsquo;s
+party could not possibly denounce these terms which they demanded as
+&ldquo;things unreasonable and ungodly,&rdquo; for they were the very
+terms which they had been asking for, ever since the Regent went to
+Dunbar.&nbsp; Yet, when the treaty was made, the preachers did say &ldquo;our
+case is not yet so desperate that we need to grant to things unreasonable
+and ungodly.&rdquo; <a name="citation143b"></a><a href="#footnote143b">{143b}</a>&nbsp;
+Manifestly, therefore, the terms actually obtained, as being &ldquo;unreasonable
+and ungodly,&rdquo; were <i>not</i> those for which the Reformers asked,
+and which, <i>they publicly proclaimed</i>, had been conceded.</p>
+<p>Knox writes, &ldquo;These our articles were altered, and another
+form disposeth.&rdquo;&nbsp; And here he translates the terms as given
+in the French, terms which provide for the safety of Catholics, the
+surrender of Holyrood and the Mint, but say nothing about the withdrawal
+of the French troops or the non-restoration of &ldquo;idolatry&rdquo;
+where it has been suppressed.</p>
+<p>He adds, &ldquo;This alteration in words and order was made&rdquo;
+(so it actually <i>was</i> made) &ldquo;without the knowledge and consent
+of those whose counsel we had used in all cases before&rdquo;&mdash;clearly
+meaning the preachers, and also implying that the consent of the noble
+negotiators for the Congregation <i>was</i> obtained to the French articles.</p>
+<p>Next day the Congregation left Edinburgh, after making solemn proclamation
+of the conditions of truce, in which they omitted all the terms of the
+French version, except those in their own favour, and stated (in Knox&rsquo;s
+version) that all of their own terms, except the most important, namely,
+the removal of the French, and the promise to bring in no more, had
+been granted!&nbsp; It may be by accident, however, that the proclamation
+of the Lords, as given by Knox, omits the article securing the departure
+of the French. <a name="citation144a"></a><a href="#footnote144a">{144a}</a>&nbsp;
+There exist two MS. copies of the proclamation, in which the Lords dare
+to assert &ldquo;that the Frenchmen should be sent away at a reasonable
+date, and no more brought in except by assent of the whole nobility
+and Parliament.&rdquo; <a name="citation144b"></a><a href="#footnote144b">{144b}</a></p>
+<p>Of the terms really settled, except as regards the immunity of their
+own party, the Lords told the public not one word; they suppressed what
+was true, and added what was false.</p>
+<p>Against this formal, public, and impudent piece of mendacity, we
+might expect Knox to protest in his &ldquo;History&rdquo;; to denounce
+it as a cause of God&rsquo;s wrath.&nbsp; On the other hand he states,
+with no disapproval, the childish quibbles by which his party defended
+their action.</p>
+<p>On reading or hearing the Lords&rsquo; proclamation, the Catholics,
+who knew the real terms of treaty, said that the Lords &ldquo;in their
+proclamation had made no mention of anything promised to <i>them</i>,&rdquo;
+and &ldquo;had proclaimed more than was contained in the Appointment;&rdquo;
+among other things, doubtless, the promise to dismiss the French. <a name="citation145a"></a><a href="#footnote145a">{145a}</a></p>
+<p>The brethren replied to these &ldquo;calumnies of Papists&rdquo;
+(as Calderwood styles them), that they &ldquo;proclaimed nothing that
+was not <i>finally</i> agreed upon, <i>in word and promise</i>, betwixt
+us and those with whom the Appointment was made, <i>whatsoever their
+scribes had after written</i>, <a name="citation145b"></a><a href="#footnote145b">{145b}</a>
+who, in very deed, had altered, both in words and sentences, our Articles,
+<i>as they were first conceived</i>; and yet if their own writings were
+diligently examined, the self same thing shall be found <i>in substance</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This is most complicated quibbling!&nbsp; Knox uses his ink like
+the cuttle-fish, to conceal the facts.&nbsp; The &ldquo;own writings&rdquo;
+of the Regent&rsquo;s party are before us, and do not contain the terms
+proclaimed by the Congregation.&nbsp; Next, in drawing up the terms
+which the Congregation was compelled to accept, the &ldquo;scribes&rdquo;
+of the Regent&rsquo;s party necessarily, and with the consent of the
+Protestant negotiators, altered the terms proposed by the brethren,
+but not granted by the Regent&rsquo;s negotiators.&nbsp; Thirdly, the
+Congregation now asserted that &ldquo;<i>finally</i>&rdquo; an arrangement
+in conformity with their proclamation was &ldquo;agreed upon <i>in word
+and promise</i>&rdquo;; that is, verbally, which we never find them
+again alleging.&nbsp; The game was to foist false terms on public belief,
+and then to accuse the Regent of perfidy in not keeping them.</p>
+<p>These false terms were not only publicly proclaimed by the Congregation
+with sound of trumpets, but they were actually sent, by Knox or Kirkcaldy,
+or both, to Croft at Berwick, for English reading, on July 24.&nbsp;
+In a note I print the letter, signed by Kirkcaldy, but in the holograph
+of Knox, according to Father Stevenson. <a name="citation146"></a><a href="#footnote146">{146}</a>&nbsp;
+It will be remarked that the genuine articles forbidding attacks on
+monasteries and ensuring priests in their revenues are here omitted,
+while the false articles on suppression of idolatry, and expulsion of
+the French forces are inserted, and nothing is said about Edinburgh&rsquo;s
+special liberty to choose her religion.</p>
+<p>The sending of this false intelligence was not the result of a misunderstanding.&nbsp;
+I have shown that the French terms were perfectly well understood, and
+were observed, except Article 6, on which the Regent made a concession.&nbsp;
+How then could men professionally godly venture to misreport the terms,
+and so make them at once seem more favourable to themselves and less
+discouraging to Cecil than they really were, while at the same time
+(as the Regent could not keep terms which she had never granted) they
+were used as a ground of accusation against her?</p>
+<p>This is the point that has perplexed me, for Knox, no less than the
+Congregation, seems to have deliberately said good-bye to truth and
+honour, unless the Lords elaborately deceived their secretary and diplomatic
+agent.&nbsp; The only way in which I can suppose that Knox and his friends
+reconciled their consciences to their conduct is this:</p>
+<p>Knox tells us that &ldquo;when all points were communed and agreed
+upon by mid-persons,&rdquo; Chatelherault and Huntly had a private interview
+with Argyll, Glencairn, and others of his party.&nbsp; They promised
+that they would be enemies to the Regent if she broke any one jot of
+the treaty.&nbsp; &ldquo;As much promised the duke that <i>he</i> would
+do, if in case that she would not remove her French at a reasonable
+day . . . &rdquo; the duke being especially interested in their removal.&nbsp;
+But Huntly is not said to have made <i>this</i> promise&mdash;the removal
+of the French obviously not being part of the &ldquo;Appointment.&rdquo;
+<a name="citation148a"></a><a href="#footnote148a">{148a}</a></p>
+<p>Next, the brethren, in arguing with the Catholics about their own
+mendacious proclamation of the terms, said that &ldquo;we proclaimed
+nothing which was not <i>finally</i> agreed upon, <i>in word and promise</i>,
+betwixt us and those with whom the Appointment was made. . . . &rdquo;
+<a name="citation148b"></a><a href="#footnote148b">{148b}</a></p>
+<p>I can see no explanation of Knox&rsquo;s conduct, except that he
+and his friends pacified their consciences by persuading themselves
+that non-official words of Huntly and Chatelherault (whatever these
+words may have been), spoken after &ldquo;all was agreed upon,&rdquo;
+cancelled the treaty with the Regent, became the real treaty, and were
+binding on the Regent!&nbsp; Thus Knox or Kirkcaldy, or both, by letter;
+and Knox later, orally in conversation with Croft, could announce false
+terms of treaty.&nbsp; So great, if I am right, is a good man&rsquo;s
+power of self-persuasion!&nbsp; I shall welcome any more creditable
+theory of the Reformer&rsquo;s behaviour, but I can see no alternative,
+unless the Lords lied to Knox.</p>
+<p>That the French should be driven out was a great point with Cecil,
+for he was always afraid that the Scots might slip back from the English
+to the old French alliance.&nbsp; On July 28, after the treaty of July
+24, but before he heard of it, he insisted on the necessity of expelling
+the French, in a letter to the Reformers. <a name="citation149a"></a><a href="#footnote149a">{149a}</a>&nbsp;
+He &ldquo;marvels that they omit such an opportunity to help themselves.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+He sent a letter of vague generalities in answer to their petitions
+for aid.&nbsp; When he received, as he did, a copy of the terms of the
+treaty of July 24, in French, he would understand.</p>
+<p>As further proof that Cecil was told what Knox and Kirkcaldy should
+have known to be untrue, we note that on August 28 the Regent, weary
+of the perpetual charges of perfidy anew brought against her, &ldquo;ashamed
+not,&rdquo; writes Knox, to put forth a proclamation, in which she asserted
+that nothing, in the terms of July 23-24, forbade her to bring in more
+French troops, &ldquo;as may clearly appear by inspection of the said
+Appointment, which the bearer has presently to show.&rdquo; <a name="citation149b"></a><a href="#footnote149b">{149b}</a></p>
+<p>Why should the Regent have been &ldquo;ashamed&rdquo; to tell the
+truth?&nbsp; If the bearer showed a false and forged treaty, the Congregation
+must have denounced it, and produced the genuine document with the signatures.&nbsp;
+Far from that, in a reply (from internal evidence written by Knox),
+they admit, &ldquo;neither do we <i>here</i> <a name="citation149c"></a><a href="#footnote149c">{149c}</a>
+allege the breaking of the Appointment made at Leith (which, nevertheless,
+has manifestly been done), but&rdquo;&mdash;and here the writer wanders
+into quite other questions.&nbsp; Moreover, Knox gives another reply
+to the Regent, &ldquo;by some men,&rdquo; in which they write &ldquo;we
+dispute not so much whether the bringing in of more Frenchmen be violating
+of the Appointment, which the Queen and her faction cannot deny to be
+manifestly broken by them in more cases than one,&rdquo; in no way connected
+with the French.&nbsp; One of these cases will presently be stated&mdash;it
+is comic enough to deserve record&mdash;but, beyond denial, the brethren
+could not, and did not even attempt to make out their charge as to the
+Regent&rsquo;s breach of truce by bringing in new, or retaining old,
+French forces.</p>
+<p>Our historians, and the biographers of Knox, have not taken the trouble
+to unravel this question of the treaty of July 24.&nbsp; But the behaviour
+of the Lords and of Knox seems characteristic, and worthy of examination.</p>
+<p>It is not argued that Mary of Guise was, or became, incapable of
+worse than dissimulation (a case of forgery by her in the following
+year is investigated in Appendix B).&nbsp; But her practices at this
+time were such as Knox could not throw the first stone at.&nbsp; Her
+French advisers were in fact &ldquo;perplexed,&rdquo; as Throckmorton
+wrote to Elizabeth (August 8).&nbsp; They made preparations for sending
+large reinforcements: they advised concession in religion: they waited
+on events, and the Regent could only provide, at Leith (which was jealous
+of Edinburgh and anxious to be made a free burgh), a place whither she
+could fly in peril.&nbsp; Meantime she would vainly exert her woman&rsquo;s
+wit among many dangers.</p>
+<p>Knox, too, was exerting his wit in his own way.&nbsp; Busied in preaching
+and in acting as secretary and diplomatic agent to the Congregation
+as he was, he must also have begun in or not much later than August
+1559, the part of his &ldquo;History&rdquo; first written by him, namely
+Book II.&nbsp; That book, as he wrote to a friend named Railton <a name="citation150"></a><a href="#footnote150">{150}</a>
+on October 23, 1559 (when much of it was already penned), is meant as
+a defence of his party against the charge of sedition, and was clearly
+intended (we reiterate) for contemporary reading at home and abroad,
+while the strife was still unsettled.&nbsp; This being so, Knox continues
+his policy of blaming the Regent for breach of the misreported treaty
+of July 24: for treachery, which would justify the brethren&rsquo;s
+attack on her before the period of truce (January 10, 1559) ran out.</p>
+<p>One clause, we know, secured the Reformers from molestation before
+that date.&nbsp; Despite this, Knox records a case of &ldquo;oppressing&rdquo;
+a brother, &ldquo;which had been sufficient to prove the Appointment
+to be plainly violated.&rdquo;&nbsp; Lord Seton, of the Catholic party,
+<a name="citation151a"></a><a href="#footnote151a">{151a}</a> &ldquo;broke
+a chair on Alexander Whitelaw as he came from Preston (pans) accompanied
+by William Knox . . . and this he did supposing that Alexander Whitelaw
+had been John Knox.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>So much Knox states in his Book II., writing probably in September
+or October 1559.&nbsp; But he does not here say what Alexander Whitelaw
+and William Knox had been doing, or inform us how he himself was concerned
+in the matter.&nbsp; He could not reveal the facts when writing in the
+early autumn of 1559, because the brethren were then still taking the
+line that they were loyal, and were suffering from the Regent&rsquo;s
+breaches of treaty, as in the matter of the broken chair.</p>
+<p>The sole allusion here made by Knox to the English intrigues, before
+they were manifest to all mankind in September, is this, &ldquo;Because
+England was of the same religion, and lay next to us, it was judged
+expedient first to prove them, which we did by one or two messengers,
+as hereafter, in its own place, more amply shall be declared.&rdquo;
+<a name="citation151b"></a><a href="#footnote151b">{151b}</a>&nbsp;
+He later inserted in Book III. some account of the intrigues of July-August
+1559, &ldquo;in its own place,&rdquo; namely, in a part of his work
+occupied with the occurrences of January 1560. <a name="citation152a"></a><a href="#footnote152a">{152a}</a></p>
+<p>Cecil, prior to the compact of July 24, had wished to meet Knox at
+Stamford.&nbsp; On July 30 Knox received his instructions as negotiator
+with England. <a name="citation152b"></a><a href="#footnote152b">{152b}</a>&nbsp;
+His employers say that they hear that Huntly and Chatelherault have
+promised to join the Reformers if the Regent breaks a jot of the treaty
+of July 24, the terms of which Knox can declare.&nbsp; They ask money
+to enable them to take Stirling Castle, and &ldquo;strength by sea&rdquo;
+for the capture of Broughty Castle, on Tay.&nbsp; Yet they later complained
+of the Regent when she fortified Leith.&nbsp; They actually <i>did</i>
+take Broughty Castle, and then had the hardihood to aver that they only
+set about this when they heard in mid-September of the fortification
+of Leith by the Regent.&nbsp; They aimed at it six days after their
+treaty of July 24.&nbsp; They asked for soldiers to lie in garrison,
+for men, ships, and money for their Lords.</p>
+<p>Bearing these instructions Knox sailed from Fife to Holy Island,
+near Berwick, and there met Croft, the Governor of that town.&nbsp;
+Croft kept him, not with sufficient secrecy, in Berwick, where he was
+well known, while Whitelaw was coming from Cecil with his answers to
+the petitions of the brethren.&nbsp; Meanwhile Croft held converse with
+Knox, who, as he reports, says that, as to the change of &ldquo;Authority&rdquo;
+(that is of sovereignty, temporary at least), the choice of the brethren
+would be subject to Elizabeth&rsquo;s wishes.&nbsp; Yet the brethren
+contemplated no change of Authority!&nbsp; Arran ought to be kept secretly
+in England &ldquo;till wise men considered what was in him; if misliked
+he put Lord James second.&rdquo;&nbsp; As to what Knox told Croft about
+the terms of treaty of July 24, it is best to state the case in Croft&rsquo;s
+own words.&nbsp; &ldquo;He (Knox) excusys the Protestantes, for that
+the French as commyng apon them at Edynbrogh when theyr popoll were
+departed to make new provysyon of vytaylles, forcyd them to make composycyon
+wyth the quene.&nbsp; Whereyn (sayeth he) the frenchmen ar apoynted
+to departe out of Scotland by the xth of thys monthe, and they truste
+verely by thys caus to be stronger, for that the Duke, apon breche of
+promys on the quene&rsquo;s part, wyll take playne parte withe the Protestantes.&rdquo;
+<a name="citation153"></a><a href="#footnote153">{153}</a></p>
+<p>This is quite explicit.&nbsp; Knox, as envoy of the Lords, declares
+that in the treaty it is &ldquo;appointed&rdquo; that the French force
+shall leave Scotland on August 10.&nbsp; (The printed calendars are
+not accurate.)&nbsp; No such matter occurred in the treaty &ldquo;wyth
+the quene.&rdquo;&nbsp; Knox added, next day, that he himself &ldquo;was
+unfit to treat of so great matters,&rdquo; and Croft appears to have
+agreed with him, for, by the Reformer&rsquo;s lack of caution, his doings
+in Holy Island were &ldquo;well known and published.&rdquo;&nbsp; Consequently,
+when Whitelaw returned to Knox with Cecil&rsquo;s reply to the requests
+of the brethren, the performances of Knox and Whitelaw were no secrets,
+in outline at least, to the Regent&rsquo;s party.&nbsp; For this reason,
+Lord Seton, mistaking Whitelaw for Knox (who had set out on August 3
+to join the brethren at Stirling), pursued and broke a chair on the
+harmless Brother Whitelaw.&nbsp; Such was the Regent&rsquo;s treacherous
+breach of treaty!</p>
+<p>During this episode in his curious adventures as a diplomatist, Knox
+recommended Balnaves, author of a treatise on &ldquo;Justification by
+Faith,&rdquo; as a better agent in these courses, and with Balnaves
+the new envoy of Elizabeth, Sadleir, a veteran diplomatist (wheedled
+in 1543 by Mary of Guise), transacted business henceforth.&nbsp; Sadleir
+was ordered to Berwick on August 6.&nbsp; Elizabeth infringed the treaty
+of Cateau Cambresis, then only four months old, by giving Sadleir &pound;3000
+in gold, or some such sum, for the brethren.&nbsp; &ldquo;They were
+tempting the Duke by all means possible,&rdquo; <a name="citation154a"></a><a href="#footnote154a">{154a}</a>
+but he will only promise neutrality if it comes to the push, and they,
+Argyll and Lord James say (Glasgow, August 13), are not yet ready &ldquo;to
+discharge this authority,&rdquo; that is, to depose the Regent.&nbsp;
+Chatelherault&rsquo;s promise was less vigorous than it had been reported!</p>
+<p>Knox, who now acted as secretary for the Congregation, was not Sir
+Henry Wotton&rsquo;s ideal ambassador, &ldquo;an honest man sent to
+lie abroad for his country.&rdquo;&nbsp; When he stooped to statements
+which seem scarcely candid, to put it mildly, he did violence to his
+nature.&nbsp; He forced himself to proclaim the loyalty of his party
+from the pulpit, when he could not do so without some economy of truth.
+<a name="citation154b"></a><a href="#footnote154b">{154b}</a>&nbsp;
+He inserted things in his &ldquo;History,&rdquo; and spoke things to
+Croft, which he should have known to be false.&nbsp; But he carried
+his point.&nbsp; He did advance the &ldquo;union of hearts&rdquo; with
+England, if in a blundering fashion, and we owe him eternal gratitude
+for his interest in the match, though &ldquo;we like not the manner
+of the wooing.&rdquo;&nbsp; The reluctant hand of Elizabeth was now
+inextricably caught in the gear of that great machine which broke the
+ancient league of France and Scotland, and saved Scotland from some
+of the sorrows of France.</p>
+<p>The papers of Sadleir, Elizabeth&rsquo;s secret agent with the Scots,
+show the godly pursuing their old plan of campaign.&nbsp; To make treaty
+with the Regent; to predict from the pulpit that she would break it;
+to make false statements about the terms of the treaty; to accuse her
+of their infringement; to profess loyalty; to aim at setting up a new
+sovereign power; to tell the populace that Mary of Guise&rsquo;s scanty
+French reinforcements&mdash;some 1500 men&mdash;came by virtue of a
+broken treaty; to tell Sadleir that they were very glad that the French
+<i>had</i> come, as they would excite popular hatred; to make out that
+the fortification of Leith was breach of treaty;&mdash;such, in brief,
+were the methods of the Reformers. <a name="citation155"></a><a href="#footnote155">{155}</a></p>
+<p>They now took a new method of proving the Regent&rsquo;s breach of
+treaty, that she had &ldquo;set up the Mass in Holyrood, which they
+had before suppressed.&rdquo;&nbsp; <i>They</i> were allowed to have
+their sermons in St. Giles&rsquo;s, but <i>she</i> was not to have her
+rites in her own abbey.&nbsp; Balnaves still harped on the non-dismissal
+of the French as a breach of treaty!</p>
+<p>Arran, returning from Switzerland, had an interview with Elizabeth
+in England, in mid-September, was smuggled across the Border with the
+astute and unscrupulous Thomas Randolph in his train.&nbsp; With Arran
+among them, Chatelherault might waver as he would.&nbsp; Meanwhile Knox
+and Willock preached up and down the country, doubtless repeating to
+the people their old charges against the Regent.&nbsp; Lethington, the
+secretary of that lady, still betrayed her, telling Sadleir &ldquo;that
+he attended upon the Regent no longer than he might have a good occasion
+to revolt unto the Protestants&rdquo; (September 16).</p>
+<p>Balnaves got some two to three thousand pounds in gold (the sum is
+variously stated) from Sadleir.&nbsp; &ldquo;He saith, whatever pretence
+they make, the principal mark they shoot at is to make an alteration
+of the State and authority.&rdquo;&nbsp; This at least is explicit enough.&nbsp;
+The Reformers were actually renewing the civil war on charges so stale
+and so false.&nbsp; The Duke had possibly promised to desert her if
+she broke the truce, and now he seized on the flimsy pretence, because
+the Congregation, as the leaders said, had &ldquo;tempted him&rdquo;
+sufficiently.&nbsp; They had come up to his price.&nbsp; Arran, the
+hoped-for Hamilton king, the hoped-for husband of the Queen of England,
+had arrived, and with Arran the Duke joined the Reformers.&nbsp; About
+September 20 they forbade the Regent to fortify Leith.</p>
+<p>The brethren say that they have given no &ldquo;provocation.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Six weeks earlier they had requested England to help them to seize and
+hold Broughty Castle, though the Regent may not have known that detail.</p>
+<p>The Regent replied as became her, and Glencairn, with Erskine of
+Dun, wrecked the rich abbey of Paisley.&nbsp; The brethren now broke
+the truce with a vengeance.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XII: KNOX IN THE WAR OF THE CONGREGATION: THE REGENT ATTACKED:
+HER DEATH: CATHOLICISM ABOLISHED, 1559-1560</h2>
+<p>Though the Regent was now to be deposed and attacked by armed force,
+Knox tells us that there were dissensions among her enemies.&nbsp; Some
+held &ldquo;that the Queen was heavily done to,&rdquo; and that the
+leaders &ldquo;sought another end than religion.&rdquo;&nbsp; Consequently,
+when the Lords with their forces arrived at Edinburgh on October 16,
+the local brethren showed a want of enthusiasm.&nbsp; The Congregation
+nevertheless summoned the Regent to depart from Leith, and on October
+21 met at the Tolbooth to discuss her formal deposition from office.&nbsp;
+Willock moved that this might lawfully be done.&nbsp; Knox added, with
+more reserve than usual, that their hearts must not be withdrawn from
+their King and Queen, Mary and Francis.&nbsp; The Regent, too, ought
+to be restored when she openly repented and submitted.&nbsp; Willock
+dragged Jehu into his sermon, but Knox does not appear to have remarked
+that Francis and Mary were Ahab and Jezebel, idolaters.&nbsp; He was
+now in a position of less freedom and more responsibility than while
+he was a wandering prophet at large.</p>
+<p>On October 24 the Congregation summoned Leith, having deposed the
+Regent <i>in the name of the King and Queen</i>, <i>Francis and Mary</i>,
+and of themselves as Privy Council!&nbsp; They did more.&nbsp; They
+caused one James Cocky, a gold worker, to forge the great seal of Francis
+and Mary, &ldquo;wherewith they sealed their pretended laws and ordinances,
+tending to constrain the subjects of the kingdom to rebel and favour
+their usurpations.&rdquo;&nbsp; Their proclamations with the forged
+seal they issued at St. Andrews, Glasgow, Linlithgow, Perth, and elsewhere;
+using this seal in their letters to noblemen, who were ordered to obey
+Arran.&nbsp; The gold worker, whose name is variously spelled in the
+French record, says that the device for the coins which the Congregation
+meant to issue and ordered him to execute was on one side a cross with
+a crown of thorns, on the other the words VERBUM DEI.&nbsp; The artist,
+Cocky, was dilatory, and when the brethren were driven out of Edinburgh
+he gave the dies, unfinished, to John Achison, the chief official of
+the Mint, who often executed coins of Queen Mary. <a name="citation158a"></a><a href="#footnote158a">{158a}</a>&nbsp;
+As Professor Hume Brown says of the audacious statement of the brethren,
+that they acted in the name of their King and Queen, their use of the
+forged Royal seal, &ldquo;as covering their action with an appearance
+of law, served its purpose in their appeals to the people.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Cocky and Kirkcaldy were hanged by Morton in 1573.</p>
+<p>The idea of forging the great seal may have arisen in the fertile
+brain of Lethington, who about October 25 had at last deserted the Regent,
+and now took Knox&rsquo;s place as secretary of the Congregation.&nbsp;
+Henceforth their manifestoes say little about religion, and a great
+deal about the French design to conquer Scotland. <a name="citation158b"></a><a href="#footnote158b">{158b}</a></p>
+<p>To the wit of Lethington we may plausibly attribute a proposal which,
+on October 25, Knox submitted to Croft. <a name="citation159"></a><a href="#footnote159">{159}</a>&nbsp;
+It was that England should lend 1000 men for the attack on the Regent
+in Leith.&nbsp; Peace with France need not be broken, for the men may
+come as private adventurers, and England may denounce them as rebels.&nbsp;
+Croft declined this proposal as dishonourable, and as too clearly a
+breach of treaty.&nbsp; Knox replied that he had communicated Croft&rsquo;s
+letter &ldquo;to such as partly induced me before to write&rdquo; (October
+29).&nbsp; Very probably Lethington suggested the idea, leaving the
+burden of its proposal on Knox.&nbsp; Dr. M&lsquo;Crie says that it
+is a solitary case of the Reformer&rsquo;s recommending dissimulation;
+but the proceeding was in keeping with Knox&rsquo;s previous statements
+about the nature of the terms made in July; with the protestations of
+loyalty; with the lie given to Mary of Guise when she spoke, on the
+whole, the plain truth; and generally with the entire conduct of the
+prophet and of the Congregation.&nbsp; Dr. M&lsquo;Crie justly remarks
+that Knox &ldquo;found it difficult to preserve integrity and Christian
+simplicity amidst the crooked wiles of political intrigue.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>On the behaviour of the godly heaven did not smile&mdash;for the
+moment.&nbsp; Scaling-ladders had been constructed in St. Giles&rsquo;s
+church, &ldquo;so that preaching was neglected.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;The
+preachers spared not openly to say that they feared the success of that
+enterprise should not be prosperous,&rdquo; for this reason, &ldquo;God
+could not suffer such contempt of His word . . . long to be unpunished.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+The Duke lost heart; the waged soldiers mutinied for lack of pay; Morton
+deserted the cause; Bothwell wounded Ormiston as he carried money from
+Croft, and seized the cash <a name="citation160a"></a><a href="#footnote160a">{160a}</a>&mdash;behaving
+treacherously, if it be true that he was under promise not to act against
+the brethren.&nbsp; The French garrison of Leith made successful sorties;
+and despite the valour of Arran and Lord James and the counsel of Lethington,
+the godly fled from Edinburgh on November 5, under taunts and stones
+cast by the people of the town.</p>
+<p>The fugitives never stopped till they reached Stirling, when Knox
+preached to them.&nbsp; He lectured at great length on discomfitures
+of the godly in the Old Testament, and about the Benjamites, and the
+Levite and his wife.&nbsp; Coming to practical politics, he reminded
+his audience that after the accession of the Hamiltons to their party,
+&ldquo;there was nothing heard but This lord will bring these many hundred
+spears . . . if this Earl be ours, no man in such a district will trouble
+us.&rdquo;&nbsp; The Duke ought to be ashamed of himself.&nbsp; Before
+Knox came to Scotland we know he had warned the brethren against alliance
+with the Hamiltons.&nbsp; The Duke had been on the Regent&rsquo;s side,
+&ldquo;yet without his assistance they could not have compelled us to
+appoint with the Queen upon such unequal conditions&rdquo; in the treaty
+of July.&nbsp; So the terms <i>were</i> in favour of the Regent, after
+all is said and done! <a name="citation160b"></a><a href="#footnote160b">{160b}</a></p>
+<p>God had let the brethren fall, Knox said, into their present condition
+because they put their trust in man&mdash;in the Duke&mdash;a noble
+whose repentance was very dubious.</p>
+<p>Then Knox rose to the height of the occasion.&nbsp; &ldquo;Yea, whatsoever
+becomes of us and our mortal carcases, I doubt not but that this Cause
+(in despite of Satan) shall prevail in the realm of Scotland.&nbsp;
+For as it is the eternal truth of the eternal God, so shall it once
+prevail . . .&rdquo;&nbsp; Here we have the actual genius of Knox, his
+tenacity, his courage in an uphill game, his faith which might move
+mountains.&nbsp; He adjured all to amendment of life, prayer, and charity.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;The minds of men began to be wonderfully erected.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+In Arran and Lord James too, manifestly not jealous rivals, Randolph
+found &ldquo;more honour, stoutness, and courage than in all the rest&rdquo;
+(November 3).</p>
+<p>Already, before the flight, Lethington was preparing to visit England.&nbsp;
+The conduct of diplomacy with England was thus in capable hands, and
+Lethington was a <i>persona grata</i> to the English Queen.&nbsp; Meanwhile
+the victorious Regent behaved with her wonted moderation.&nbsp; &ldquo;She
+pursueth no man that hath showed himself against her at this time.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+She pardoned all burgesses of Edinburgh, and was ready to receive the
+Congregation to her grace, if they would put away the traitor Lethington,
+Balnaves, and some others. <a name="citation161a"></a><a href="#footnote161a">{161a}</a>&nbsp;
+Knox, however, says that she gave the houses of the most honest men
+to the French.&nbsp; The Regent was now very ill; <i>graviter aegrotat</i>,
+say Francis and Mary (Dec. 4, 1559). <a name="citation161b"></a><a href="#footnote161b">{161b}</a></p>
+<p>The truth is that the Cause of Knox, far from being desperate, as
+for an hour it seemed to the faint-hearted, had never looked so well.&nbsp;
+Cecil and the English Council saw that they were committed; their gift
+of money was known, they must bestir themselves.&nbsp; While they had
+&ldquo;nourished the garboil&rdquo; in Scotland, fanned the flame, they
+professed to believe that France was aiming, through Scotland, at England.&nbsp;
+They arranged for a large levy of forces at Berwick; they promised money
+without stint: and Cecil drew up the paper adopted, as I conceive, by
+the brethren in their Latin appeal to all Christian princes.&nbsp; The
+Scots were to say that they originally took arms in defence of their
+native dynasty (the Hamiltons), Mary Stuart having no heirs of her body,
+and France intending to annex Scotland&mdash;which was true enough,
+but was not the cause of the rising at Perth.&nbsp; That England is
+also aimed at is proved by the fact that Mary and Francis, on the seal
+of Scotland, quarter the arms of England.&nbsp; Knox himself had seen,
+and had imparted the fact to Cecil, a jewel on which these fatal heraldic
+pretensions were made.&nbsp; The Queen is governed by &ldquo;the new
+authority of the House of Guise.&rdquo;&nbsp; In short, Elizabeth must
+be asked to intervene for these political reasons, not in defence of
+the Gospel, and large preparations for armed action in Scotland were
+instantly made.&nbsp; Meanwhile Cecil&rsquo;s sketch of the proper manifesto
+for the Congregation to make, was embodied in Lethington&rsquo;s instructions
+(November 24) from the Congregation, as well as adapted in their Latin
+appeal to Christian princes.</p>
+<p>We may suppose that a man of Knox&rsquo;s unbending honesty was glad
+to have thrown off his functions as secretary to the brethren.&nbsp;
+Far from disclaiming their idolatrous King and Queen (the ideal policy),
+they were issuing proclamations headed &ldquo;Francis and Mary,&rdquo;
+and bearing the forged signet.&nbsp; Examples with the seal were, as
+late as 1652, in the possession of the Erskine of Dun of that day.&nbsp;
+In them Francis and Mary denounce the Pope as Antichrist!&nbsp; Keith,
+who wrote much later, styles these proclamations &ldquo;pretty singular,&rdquo;
+and Knox must have been of the same opinion.</p>
+<p>After Lethington took the office of secretary to the Congregation,
+Knox had for some time no great public part in affairs.&nbsp; Fife was
+invaded by &ldquo;these bloody worms,&rdquo; as he calls the French;
+and he preached what he tells us was a &ldquo;comfortable sermon&rdquo;
+to the brethren at Cupar.&nbsp; But Lethington had secured the English
+alliance: Lord Grey was to lead 4000 foot and 2000 horse to the Border;
+Lord Winter with fourteen ship set sail, and was incommoded by a storm,
+in which vessels of d&rsquo;Elboeuf, with French reinforcements for
+the Regent, were, some lost, some driven back to harbour.&nbsp; As in
+Jacobite times, French aid to the loyal party was always unfortunate,
+and the arrival of Winter&rsquo;s English fleet in the Forth caused
+d&rsquo;Oysel to retreat out of Fife back to Leith.&nbsp; He had nearly
+reached St. Andrews, where Knox dwelt in great agony of spirit.&nbsp;
+He had &ldquo;great need of a good horse,&rdquo; probably because, as
+in October 1559, money was offered for his head.&nbsp; But private assassination
+had no terrors for the Reformer. <a name="citation163"></a><a href="#footnote163">{163}</a></p>
+<p>Knox, as he wrote to a friend on January 29, 1560, had forsaken all
+public assemblies and retired to a life of study, because &ldquo;I am
+judged among ourselves too extreme.&rdquo;&nbsp; When the Duke of Norfolk,
+with the English army, was moving towards Berwick, where he was to make
+a league with the Protestant nobles of Scotland, Knox summoned Chatelherault,
+and the gentlemen of his party, then in Glasgow.&nbsp; They wished Norfolk
+to come to them by Carlisle, a thing inconvenient to Lord James.&nbsp;
+Knox chid them sharply for sloth, and want of wisdom and discretion,
+praising highly the conduct of Lord James.&nbsp; They had &ldquo;unreasonable
+minds.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Wise men do wonder what my Lord Duke&rsquo;s
+friends do mean, that are so slack and backward in this Cause.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+The Duke did not, however, write to France with an offer of submission.&nbsp;
+That story, <i>ben trovato</i> but not <i>vero</i>, rests on a forgery
+by the Regent! <a name="citation164"></a><a href="#footnote164">{164}</a>&nbsp;
+The fact is that the Duke was not a true Protestant, his advisers, including
+his brother the Archbishop, were Catholics, and the successes of d&rsquo;Oysel
+in winter had terrified him; but, seeing an English army at hand, he
+assented to the league with England at Berwick, as &ldquo;second person
+of the realm of Scotland&rdquo; (February 27, 1560).&nbsp; Elizabeth
+&ldquo;accepted the realm of Scotland&rdquo;&mdash;Chatelherault being
+recognised as heir-apparent to the throne thereof&mdash;for so long
+as the marriage of Queen Mary and Francis I. endured, and a year later.&nbsp;
+The Scots, however, remain dutiful subjects of Queen Mary, they say,
+except so far as lawless attempts to make Scotland a province of France
+are concerned.&nbsp; Chatelherault did not <i>sign</i> the league till
+May 10, with Arran, Huntly, Morton (at last committed to the Cause),
+and the usual leaders of the Congregation.</p>
+<p>With the details of the siege of Leith, and with the attempts at
+negotiation, we are not here concerned.&nbsp; France, in fact, was powerless
+to aid the Regent.&nbsp; Since the arrival of Throckmorton in France,
+as ambassador of England, in the previous summer (1559), the Huguenots
+had been conspiring.&nbsp; They were in touch with Geneva, in the east;
+on the north, in Brittany, they appear to have been stirred up by Tremaine,
+a Cornish gentleman, and emissary of Cecil, who joined Throckmorton
+at Blois, in March 1560.&nbsp; Stories were put about that the young
+French King was a leper, and was kidnapping fair-haired children, in
+whose blood he meant to bathe.&nbsp; The Huguenots had been conspiring
+ever since September 1559, when they seem to have sent to Elizabeth
+for aid in money. <a name="citation165a"></a><a href="#footnote165a">{165a}</a>&nbsp;
+More recently they had held a kind of secret convention at Nantes, and
+summoned bands who were to lurk in the woods, concentrate at Amboise,
+attack the ch&acirc;teau, slay the Guises, and probably put the King
+and Queen Mary under the Prince de Cond&eacute;, who was by the plotters
+expected to take the part which Arran played in Scotland.&nbsp; It is
+far from certain that Cond&eacute; had accepted the position.&nbsp;
+In all this we may detect English intrigue and the gold of Elizabeth.&nbsp;
+Calvin had been consulted; he disapproved of the method of the plot,
+still more of the plot itself.&nbsp; But he knew all about it.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;All turns on killing Antonius,&rdquo; he wrote, &ldquo;Antonius&rdquo;
+being either the Cardinal or the Duc de Guise. <a name="citation165b"></a><a href="#footnote165b">{165b}</a></p>
+<p>The conspiracy failed at Amboise, on March 17-19, 1560.&nbsp; Throckmorton
+was present, and describes the panic and perplexity of the Court, while
+he eagerly asks to be promptly and secretly recalled, as suspicion has
+fallen on himself.&nbsp; He sent Tremaine home through Brittany, where
+he gathered proposals for betraying French towns to Elizabeth, rather
+prematurely.&nbsp; Surrounded by treachery, and destitute of funds,
+the Guises could not aid the Regent, and Throckmorton kept advising
+Cecil to &ldquo;strike while the iron was hot,&rdquo; and paralyse French
+designs.&nbsp; The dying Regent of Scotland never lost heart in circumstances
+so desperate.</p>
+<p>Even before the outbreak at Perth, Mary of Guise had been in very
+bad health.&nbsp; When the English crossed the Border to beleaguer Leith,
+Lord Erskine, who had maintained neutrality in Edinburgh Castle, allowed
+her to come there to die (April 1, 1560).</p>
+<p>On April 29, from the Castle of Edinburgh, she wrote a letter to
+d&rsquo;Oysel, commanding in Leith.&nbsp; She told him that she was
+suffering from dropsy; &ldquo;one of her legs begins to swell. . . .&nbsp;
+You know there are but three days for the dropsy in this country.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+The letter was intercepted by her enemies, and deciphered. <a name="citation166a"></a><a href="#footnote166a">{166a}</a>&nbsp;
+On May 7, the English and Scots made an assault, and were beaten back
+with loss of 1000 men.&nbsp; According to Knox, the French stripped
+the fallen, and allowed the white carcases to lie under the wall, as
+also happened in 1746, after the English defeat at Falkirk.&nbsp; The
+Regent saw them, Knox says, from the Castle, and said they were &ldquo;a
+fair tapestry.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Her words were heard of some,&rdquo;
+and carried to Knox, who, from the pulpit, predicted &ldquo;that God
+should revenge that contumely done to his image . . . even in such as
+rejoiced thereat.&nbsp; And the very experience declared that he was
+not deceived, for within few days thereafter (yea, some say that same
+day) began her belly and loathsome legs to swell, and so continued,
+till that God did execute his judgments upon her.&rdquo; <a name="citation166b"></a><a href="#footnote166b">{166b}</a></p>
+<p>Knox wrote thus on May 16, 1566. <a name="citation167a"></a><a href="#footnote167a">{167a}</a>&nbsp;
+He was a little irritated at that time by Queen Mary&rsquo;s triumph
+over his friends, the murderers of Riccio, and his own hasty flight
+from Edinburgh to Kyle.&nbsp; This may excuse the somewhat unusual and
+even unbecoming nature of his language concerning the dying lady, but
+his memory was quite wrong about his prophecy.&nbsp; The symptoms of
+the Regent&rsquo;s malady had begun more than a week before the Anglo-Scottish
+defeat at Leith, and the nature of her complaint ought to have been
+known to the prophet&rsquo;s party, as her letter, describing her condition,
+had been intercepted and deciphered.&nbsp; But the deciphering may have
+been done in England, which would cause delay.&nbsp; We cannot, of course,
+prove that Knox was informed as to the Regent&rsquo;s malady before
+he prophesied; if so, he had forgotten the fact before he wrote as he
+did in 1566.&nbsp; But the circumstances fail to demonstrate that he
+had a supernormal premonition, or drew a correct deduction from Scripture,
+and make it certain that the Regent did not fall ill after his prophecy.</p>
+<p>The Regent died on June 11, half-an-hour after the midnight of June
+10.&nbsp; A report was written on June 13, from Edinburgh Castle, to
+the Cardinal of Lorraine, by Captain James Cullen, who some twelve years
+later was hanged by the Regent Morton.&nbsp; He says that since June
+7, Lord James and Argyll, Marischal, and Glencairn, had assiduously
+attended on the dying lady.&nbsp; Two hours before her death she spoke
+apart for a whole hour with Lord James.&nbsp; Chatelherault had seen
+her twice, and Arran once. <a name="citation167b"></a><a href="#footnote167b">{167b}</a>&nbsp;
+Knox mentions the visits of these lords, and says that d&rsquo;Oysel
+was forbidden to speak with her, &ldquo;belike she would have bidden
+him farewell, for auld familiarity was great.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>According to Knox, the Regent admitted the errors of her policy,
+attributing it to Huntly, who had deserted her, and to &ldquo;the wicked
+counsel of her friends,&rdquo; that is, her brothers.&nbsp; At the request
+of the Lords, she saw Willock, and said, as she naturally would, that
+&ldquo;there was no salvation but in and by the death of Jesus Christ.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+&ldquo;She was compelled . . . to approve the chief head of our religion,
+wherein we dissent from all papists and popery.&rdquo;&nbsp; Knox had
+strange ideas about the creed which he opposed.&nbsp; &ldquo;Of any
+virtue that ever was espied in King James V. (<i>whose daughter she</i>,&rdquo;
+Mary Stuart, &ldquo;<i>is called</i>&rdquo;), &ldquo;to this hour (1566)
+we have seen no sparkle to appear.&rdquo; <a name="citation168"></a><a href="#footnote168">{168}</a></p>
+<p>With this final fling at the chastity of Mary of Guise, the Reformer
+takes leave of the woman whom he so bitterly hated.&nbsp; Yet, &ldquo;Knox
+was not given to the practice so common in his day, of assassinating
+reputations by vile insinuations.&rdquo;&nbsp; Posterity has not accepted,
+contemporary English historians did not accept, Knox&rsquo;s picture
+of Mary of Guise as the wanton widow, the spawn of the serpent, who
+desired to cut the throat of every Protestant in Scotland.&nbsp; She
+was placed by circumstances in a position from which there was no issue.&nbsp;
+The fatal French marriage of her daughter was a natural step, at a moment
+when Scottish independence could only be maintained by help of France.&nbsp;
+Had she left the Regency in the hands of Chatelherault, that is, of
+Archbishop Hamilton, the prelate was not the man to put down Protestantism
+by persecution, and so save the situation.&nbsp; If he had been, Mary
+of Guise was not the woman to abet him in drastic violence.&nbsp; The
+nobles would have revolted against the feeble Duke. <a name="citation169"></a><a href="#footnote169">{169}</a></p>
+<p>On July 6, the treaty of Edinburgh was concluded by representatives
+of England (Cecil was one) and of France.&nbsp; The Reformers carried
+a point of essential importance, the very point which Knox told Croft
+had been secured by the Appointment of July 1559.&nbsp; All French forces
+were to be dismissed the country, except one hundred and twenty men
+occupying Dunbar and Inchkeith, in the Firth of Forth.&nbsp; A clause
+by which Cecil thought he had secured &ldquo;the kernel&rdquo; for England,
+and left the shell to France, a clause recognising the &ldquo;rightfulness&rdquo;
+of Elizabeth&rsquo;s alliance with the rebels, afforded Mary Stuart
+ground, or excuse, for never ratifying the treaty.</p>
+<p>It is needless here to discuss the question&mdash;was the Convention
+of Estates held after the treaty, in August, a lawful Parliament?&nbsp;
+There was doubt enough, at least, to make Protestants feel uneasy about
+the security of the religious settlement achieved by the Convention.&nbsp;
+Randolph, the English resident, foresaw that the Acts might be rescinded.</p>
+<p>Before the Convention of Estates met, a thanksgiving day was held
+by the brethren in St. Giles&rsquo;s, and Knox, if he was the author
+of the address to the Deity, said with scientific precision, &ldquo;Neither
+in us, nor yet in our confederates was there any cause why thou shouldst
+have given unto us so joyful and sudden a deliverance, for neither of
+us both ceased to do wickedly, even in the midst of our greatest troubles.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Elizabeth had lied throughout with all her natural and cultivated gift
+of falsehood: of the veracity of the brethren several instances have
+been furnished.</p>
+<p>Ministers were next appointed to churches, Knox taking Edinburgh,
+while Superintendents (who were by no means Bishops) were appointed,
+one to each province.&nbsp; Erskine of Dun, a layman, was Superintendent
+of Angus.&nbsp; A new anti-Catholic Kirk was thus set up on July 20,
+before the Convention met and swept away Catholicism. <a name="citation170"></a><a href="#footnote170">{170}</a>&nbsp;
+Knox preached vigorously on &ldquo;the prophet Haggeus&rdquo; meanwhile,
+and &ldquo;some&rdquo; (namely Lethington, Speaker in the Convention)
+&ldquo;said in mockage, we must now forget ourselves, and bear the barrow
+to build the houses of God.&rdquo;&nbsp; The unawakened Lethington,
+and the gentry at large, merely dilapidated the houses of God, so that
+they became unsafe, as well as odiously squalid.&nbsp; That such fervent
+piety should grudge repairs of church buildings (many of them in a wretched
+state already) is a fact creditable rather to the thrift than to the
+state of grace of the Reformers.&nbsp; After all their protestations,
+full of texts, the lords and lairds starved their preachers, but provided,
+by roofless aisles and unglazed windows, for the ventilation of the
+kirks.&nbsp; These men so bubbling over with gospel fervour were, in
+short, when it came to practice, traitors and hypocrites; nor did Knox
+spare their unseemly avarice.&nbsp; The cause of the poor, and of the
+preachers, lay near his heart, and no man was more insensible of the
+temptations of wealth.</p>
+<p>Lethington did not address the Parliament as Speaker till August
+9.&nbsp; Never had such a Parliament met in Scotland.&nbsp; One hundred
+and six barons, not of the higher order, assembled; in 1567, when Mary
+was a prisoner and the Regent Moray held the assembly, not nearly so
+many came together, nor on any later occasion at this period.&nbsp;
+The newcomers claimed to sit &ldquo;as of old custom&rdquo;; it was
+a custom long disused, and not now restored to vitality.</p>
+<p>A supplication was presented by &ldquo;the Barons, gentlemen, Burgesses,
+and others&rdquo; to &ldquo;the nobility and Estates&rdquo; (of whom
+they do not seem to reckon themselves part, contrasting <i>themselves</i>
+with &ldquo;yourselves&rdquo;).&nbsp; They reminded the Estates how
+they had asked the Regent &ldquo;for freedom and liberty of conscience
+with a godly reformation of abuses.&rdquo;&nbsp; They now, by way of
+freedom of conscience, ask that Catholic doctrine &ldquo;be abolished
+by Act of this Parliament, and punishment appointed for the transgressors.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+The Man of Sin has been distributing the whole patrimony of the Church,
+so that &ldquo;the trew ministers,&rdquo; the schools, and the poor
+are kept out of their own.&nbsp; The actual clergy are all thieves and
+murderers and &ldquo;rebels to the lawful authority of Emperors, Kings,
+and Princes.&rdquo;&nbsp; Against these charges (murder, rebellion,
+profligacy) they must answer now or be so reputed.&nbsp; In fact, it
+was the nobles, rather than the Pope, who had been robbing the Kirk,
+education, and the poor, which they continued to do, as Knox attests.&nbsp;
+But as to doctrine, the barons and ministers were asked to lay a Confession
+before the House. <a name="citation172"></a><a href="#footnote172">{172}</a></p>
+<p>It will be observed that, in the petition, &ldquo;Emperors, Kings,
+and Princes&rdquo; have &ldquo;lawful authority&rdquo; over the clergy.&nbsp;
+But that doctrine assumes, tacitly, that such rulers are of Knox&rsquo;s
+own opinions: the Kirk later resolutely stood up against kings like
+James VI., Charles I., and Charles II.</p>
+<p>The Confession was drawn up, presented, and ratified in a very few
+days: it was compiled in four.&nbsp; The Huguenots in Paris, in 1559,
+&ldquo;established a record&rdquo; by drawing up a Confession containing
+eighty articles in three days.&nbsp; Knox and his coadjutors were relatively
+deliberate.&nbsp; They aver that all points of belief necessary for
+salvation are contained in the canonical books of the Bible.&nbsp; Their
+interpretation pertains to no man or Church, but solely to &ldquo;the
+spreit of God.&rdquo;&nbsp; That &ldquo;spreit&rdquo; must have illuminated
+the Kirk as it then existed in Scotland, &ldquo;for we dare not receive
+and admit any interpretation which directly repugns to any principal
+point of our faith, to any other <i>plain</i> text of Scripture, or
+yet unto the rule of charity.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As we, the preachers of the Kirk then extant, were apostate monks
+or priests or artisans, about a dozen of us, in Scotland, mankind could
+not be expected to regard &ldquo;our&rdquo; interpretation, &ldquo;our
+faith&rdquo; as infallible.&nbsp; The framers of the Confession did
+not pretend that it was infallible.&nbsp; They request that, &ldquo;if
+any man will note in this our Confession any article or sentence repugning
+to God&rsquo;s Holy Word,&rdquo; he will favour them with his criticism
+in writing.&nbsp; As Knox had announced six years earlier, that, &ldquo;as
+touching the chief points of religion, I neither will give place to
+man or angel . . . teaching the contrair to that which ye have heard,&rdquo;
+a controversialist who thought it worth while to criticise the Confession
+must have deemed himself at least an archangel.&nbsp; Two years later,
+written criticism was offered, as we shall see, with a demand for a
+written reply.&nbsp; The critic escaped arrest by a lucky accident.</p>
+<p>The Confession, with practically no criticism or opposition, was
+passed <i>en bloc</i> on August 17.&nbsp; The Evangel is candidly stated
+to be &ldquo;death to the sons of perdition,&rdquo; but the Confession
+is offered hopefully to &ldquo;weak and infirm brethren.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Not to enter into the higher theology, we learn that the sacraments
+can only be administered &ldquo;by lawful ministers.&rdquo;&nbsp; We
+learn that <i>they</i> are &ldquo;such as are appointed to the preaching
+of the Word, or into whose mouth God has put some sermon of exhortation&rdquo;
+and who are &ldquo;lawfully chosen thereto by some Kirk.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Later, we find that rather more than this, and rather more than some
+of the &ldquo;trew ministeris&rdquo; then had, is required.</p>
+<p>As the document reaches us, it appears to have been &ldquo;mitigated&rdquo;
+by Lethington and Wynram, the Vicar of Bray of the Reformation.&nbsp;
+They altered, according to the English resident, Randolph, &ldquo;many
+words and sentences, which sounded to proceed rather of some evil conceived
+opinion than of any sound judgment.&rdquo;&nbsp; As Lethington certainly
+was not &ldquo;a lawful minister,&rdquo; it is surprising if Knox yielded
+to his criticism.</p>
+<p>Lethington and Wynram also advised that the chapter on obedience
+to the sovereign power should be omitted, as &ldquo;an unfit matter
+to be treated at this time,&rdquo; when it was not very obvious who
+the &ldquo;magistrate&rdquo; or authority might be.&nbsp; In this sense
+Randolph, Arran&rsquo;s English friend, wrote to Cecil. <a name="citation174a"></a><a href="#footnote174a">{174a}</a>&nbsp;
+The chapter, however, was left standing.&nbsp; The sovereign, whether
+in empire, kingdom, duke, prince, or in free cities, was accepted as
+&ldquo;of God&rsquo;s holy ordinance.&nbsp; To him chiefly pertains
+the reformation of the religion,&rdquo; which includes &ldquo;the suppression
+of idolatry and superstition&rdquo;; and Catholicism, we know, is idolatry.&nbsp;
+Superstition is less easily defined, but we cannot doubt that, in Knox&rsquo;s
+mind, the English liturgy was superstitious. <a name="citation174b"></a><a href="#footnote174b">{174b}</a>&nbsp;
+To resist the Supreme Power, &ldquo;doing that which pertains to his
+charge&rdquo; (that is, suppressing Catholicism and superstition, among
+other things), is to resist God.&nbsp; It thus appears that the sovereign
+is not so supreme but that he must be disobeyed when his mandates clash
+with the doctrine of the Kirk.&nbsp; Thus the &ldquo;magistrate&rdquo;
+or &ldquo;authority&rdquo;&mdash;the State, in fact&mdash;is limited
+by the conscience of the Kirk, which may, if it pleases, detect idolatry
+or superstition in some act of secular policy.&nbsp; From this theory
+of the Kirk arose more than a century of unrest.</p>
+<p>On August 24, the practical consequences of the Confession were set
+forth in an Act, by which all hearers or celebrants of the Mass are
+doomed, for the first offence, to mere confiscation of all their goods
+and to corporal punishment: exile rewards a repetition of the offence:
+the third is punished by death.&nbsp; &ldquo;Freedom from a persecuting
+spirit is one of the noblest features of Knox&rsquo;s character,&rdquo;
+says Laing; &ldquo;neither led away by enthusiasm nor party feelings
+nor success, to retaliate the oppressions and atrocities that disgraced
+the adherents of popery.&rdquo; <a name="citation174c"></a><a href="#footnote174c">{174c}</a>&nbsp;
+This is an amazing remark!&nbsp; Though we do not know that Knox was
+ever &ldquo;accessory to the death of a single individual for his religious
+opinions,&rdquo; we do know that he had not the chance; the Government,
+at most, and years later, put one priest to death.&nbsp; But Knox always
+insisted, vainly, that idolaters &ldquo;must die the death.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>To the carnal mind these rules appear to savour of harshness.&nbsp;
+The carnal mind would not gather exactly what the new penal laws were,
+if it confined its study to the learned Dr. M&lsquo;Crie&rsquo;s <i>Life
+of Knox</i>.&nbsp; This erudite man, a pillar of the early Free Kirk,
+mildly remarks, &ldquo;The Parliament . . . prohibited, under certain
+penalties, the celebration of the Mass.&rdquo;&nbsp; He leaves his readers
+to discover, in the Acts of Parliament and in Knox, what the &ldquo;certain
+penalties&rdquo; were. <a name="citation175"></a><a href="#footnote175">{175}</a>&nbsp;
+The Act seems, as Knox says about the decrees of massacre in Deuteronomy,
+&ldquo;rather to be written in a rage&rdquo; than in a spirit of wisdom.&nbsp;
+The majority of the human beings then in Scotland probably never had
+the dispute between the old and new faiths placed before them lucidly
+and impartially.&nbsp; Very many of them had never heard the ideas of
+Geneva stated at all.&nbsp; &ldquo;So late as 1596,&rdquo; writes Dr.
+Hay Fleming, &ldquo;there were above four hundred parishes, not reckoning
+Argyll and the Isles, which still lacked ministers.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;The
+rarity of learned and godly men&rdquo; of his own persuasion, is regretted
+by Knox in the Book of Discipline.&nbsp; Yet Catholics thus destitute
+of opportunity to know and recognise the Truth, are threatened with
+confiscation, exile, and death, if they cling to the only creed which
+they have been taught&mdash;after August 17, 1560.&nbsp; The death penalty
+was threatened often, by Scots Acts, for trifles.&nbsp; In this case
+the graduated scale of punishment shows that the threat is serious.</p>
+<p>This Act sounds insane, but the Convention was wise in its generation.&nbsp;
+Had it merely abolished the persecuting laws of the Church, Scotland
+might never have been Protestant.&nbsp; The old faith is infinitely
+more attractive to mankind than the new Presbyterian verity.&nbsp; A
+thing of slow and long evolution, the Church had assimilated and hallowed
+the world-old festivals of the year&rsquo;s changing seasons.&nbsp;
+She provided for the human love of recreation.&nbsp; Her Sundays were
+holidays, not composed of gloomy hours in stuffy or draughty kirks,
+under the current voice of the preacher.&nbsp; Her confessional enabled
+the burdened soul to lay down its weight in sacred privacy; her music,
+her ceremonies, the dim religious light of her fanes, naturally awaken
+religious emotion.&nbsp; While these things, with the native tendency
+to resist authority of any kind, appealed to the multitude, the position
+of the Church, in later years, recommended itself to many educated men
+in Scotland as more logical than that of Knox; and convert after convert,
+in the noble class, slipped over to Rome.&nbsp; The missionaries of
+the counter-Reformation, but for the persecuting Act, would have arrived
+in a Scotland which did not persecute, and the work of the Convention
+of 1560 might all have been undone, had not the stringent Act been passed.</p>
+<p>That Act apparently did not go so far as the preachers desired.&nbsp;
+Thus Archbishop Hamilton, writing to Archbishop Beaton in Paris, the
+day after the passing of the Act, says, &ldquo;All these new preachers
+openly persuade the nobility in the pulpit, to put violent hands, and
+slay all churchmen that will not concur and adopt their opinion.&nbsp;
+They only reproach my Lord Duke&rdquo; (the Archbishop&rsquo;s brother),
+&ldquo;that he will not begin first, and either cause me to do as they
+do, or else to use rigour on me by slaughter, sword, or, at least, perpetual
+prison.&rdquo; <a name="citation177a"></a><a href="#footnote177a">{177a}</a>&nbsp;
+It is probable that the Archbishop was well informed as to what the
+bigots were saying, though he is not likely to have &ldquo;sat under&rdquo;
+them; moreover, he would hear of their advice from his brother, the
+Duke, with whom he had just held a long conference. <a name="citation177b"></a><a href="#footnote177b">{177b}</a>&nbsp;
+Lesley, Bishop of Ross, in his &ldquo;History,&rdquo; praises the humanity
+of the nobles, &ldquo;for at this time few Catholics were banished,
+fewer were imprisoned, and none were executed.&rdquo;&nbsp; The nobles
+interfering, the threatened capital punishment was not carried out.&nbsp;
+Mob violence, oppression by Protestant landlords, Kirk censure, imprisonment,
+fine, and exile, did their work in suppressing idolatry and promoting
+hypocrisy.</p>
+<p>No doubt this grinding ceaseless daily process of enforcing Truth,
+did not go far enough for the great body of the brethren, especially
+the godly burgesses of the towns; indeed, as early as June 10, 1560,
+the Provost, Bailies, and Town Council of Edinburgh proclaimed that
+idolaters must instantly and publicly profess their conversion before
+the Ministers and Elders on the penalty of the pillory for the first
+offence, banishment from the town for the second, and death for the
+third. <a name="citation177c"></a><a href="#footnote177c">{177c}</a></p>
+<p>It must always be remembered that the threat of the death penalty
+often meant, in practice, very little.&nbsp; It was denounced, under
+Mary of Guise (February 9, 1559), against men who bullied priests, disturbed
+services, and ate meat in Lent.&nbsp; It was denounced against shooters
+of wild fowl, and against those, of either religious party, who broke
+the Proclamation of October 1561.&nbsp; Yet &ldquo;nobody seemed one
+penny the worse&rdquo; as regards their lives, though the punishments
+of fining and banishing were, on occasions, enforced against Catholics.</p>
+<p>We may marvel that, in the beginning, Catholic martyrs did not present
+themselves in crowds to the executioner.&nbsp; But even under the rule
+of Rome it would not be easy to find thirty cases of martyrs burned
+at the stake by &ldquo;the bloudie Bishops,&rdquo; between the fifteenth
+century and the martyrdom of Myln.&nbsp; By 1560 the old Church was
+in such a hideous decline&mdash;with ruffianly men of quality in high
+spiritual places; with priests who did not attend Mass, and in many
+cases could not read; with churches left to go to ruin; with license
+so notable that, in one foundation, the priest is only forbidden to
+keep a <i>constant</i> concubine&mdash;that faith had waxed cold, and
+no Catholic felt &ldquo;ripe&rdquo; for martyrdom.&nbsp; The elements
+of a League, as in France, did not exist.&nbsp; There was no fervently
+Catholic town population like that of Paris; no popular noble warriors,
+like the Ducs de Guise, to act as leaders.&nbsp; Thus Scotland, in this
+age, ran little risk of a religious civil war.&nbsp; No organised and
+armed faction existed to face the Congregation.&nbsp; When the counter-Reformation
+set in, many Catholics endured fines and exile with constancy.</p>
+<p>The theology of the Confession of Faith is, of course, Calvinistic.&nbsp;
+No &ldquo;works&rdquo; are, technically, &ldquo;good&rdquo; which are
+not the work of the Spirit of our Lord, dwelling in our hearts by faith.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Idolaters,&rdquo; and wicked people, not having that spirit,
+can do no good works.&nbsp; The blasphemy that &ldquo;men who live according
+to equity and justice shall be saved, what religion soever they have
+professed,&rdquo; is to be abhorred.&nbsp; &ldquo;The Kirk is invisible,&rdquo;
+consisting of the Elect, &ldquo;who are known only to God.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+This gave much cause of controversy to Knox&rsquo;s Catholic opponents.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;The notes of the true Church&rdquo; are those of Calvin&rsquo;s.&nbsp;
+As to the Sacrament, though the elements be not the <i>natural</i> body
+of Christ, yet &ldquo;the faithful, in the right use of the Lord&rsquo;s
+Table, so do eat the body and drink the blood of the Lord Jesus that
+He remains in them and they in Him . . . in such conjunction with Christ
+Jesus as the natural man cannot comprehend.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This is a highly sacramental and confessedly mystical doctrine, not
+less unintelligible to &ldquo;the natural man&rdquo; than the Catholic
+theory which Knox so strongly reprobated.&nbsp; Alas, that men called
+Christian have shed seas of blood over the precise sense of that touching
+command of our Lord, which, though admitted to be incomprehensible,
+they have yet endeavoured to comprehend and define!</p>
+<p>A serious task for Knox was to draw up, with others, a &ldquo;Book
+of the Policy and Discipline of the Kirk,&rdquo; a task entrusted to
+them in April 1560.&nbsp; In politics, till January 1561, the Lords
+hoped that they might induce Elizabeth (then entangled with Leicester,
+as Knox knew) to marry Arran, but whether &ldquo;Glycerium&rdquo; (as
+Bishop Jewel calls her) had already detected in &ldquo;the saucy youth&rdquo;
+&ldquo;a half crazy fool,&rdquo; as Mr. Froude says, or not, she firmly
+refused.&nbsp; She much preferred Lord Robert Dudley, whose wife had
+just then broken her neck.&nbsp; The unfortunate Arran had fought resolutely,
+Knox tells us, by the side of Lord James, in the winter of 1559, but
+he already, in 1560, showed strange moods, and later fell into sheer
+lunacy.&nbsp; In December died &ldquo;the young King of France, husband
+to our Jezebel&mdash;unhappy Francis . . . he suddenly perished of a
+rotten ear . . . in that deaf ear that never would hear the truth of
+God&rdquo; (December 5, 1560).&nbsp; We have little of Knox&rsquo;s
+poetry, but he probably composed a translation, in verse, of a Latin
+poem indited by one of &ldquo;the godly in France,&rdquo; whence he
+borrowed his phrase &ldquo;a rotten ear&rdquo; (<i>aure putrefacta corruit</i>).</p>
+<blockquote><p>&ldquo;Last Francis, that unhappy child,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; His father&rsquo;s footsteps following plain,<br />
+To Christ&rsquo;s crying deaf ears did yield,<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; A rotten ear was then his bane.&rdquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>The version is wonderfully close to the original Latin.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile, Francis was hardly cold before Arran wooed his idolatrous
+widow, Queen Mary, &ldquo;with a gay gold ring.&rdquo;&nbsp; She did
+not respond favourably, and &ldquo;the Earl bare it heavily in his heart,
+and more heavily than many would have wissed,&rdquo; says Knox, with
+whom Arran was on very confidential terms.&nbsp; Knox does not rebuke
+his passion for Jezebel.&nbsp; He himself &ldquo;was in no small heaviness
+by reason of the late death of his dear bedfellow, Marjorie Bowes,&rdquo;
+of whom we know very little, except that she worked hard to lighten
+the labours of Knox&rsquo;s vast correspondence.&nbsp; He had, as he
+says, &ldquo;great intelligence both with the churches and some of the
+Court of France,&rdquo; and was the first to receive news of the perilous
+illness of the young King.&nbsp; He carried the tidings to the Duke
+and Lord James, at the Hamilton house near Kirk o&rsquo; Field, but
+would not name his informant.&nbsp; Then came the news of the King&rsquo;s
+death from Lord Grey de Wilton, at Berwick, and a Convention of the
+Nobles was proclaimed for January 15, 1561, to &ldquo;peruse newly over
+again&rdquo; the Book of Discipline.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIII: KNOX AND THE BOOK OF DISCIPLINE</h2>
+<p>This Book of Discipline, containing the model of the Kirk, had been
+seen by Randolph in August 1560, and he observed that its framers would
+not come into ecclesiastical conformity with England.&nbsp; They were
+&ldquo;severe in that they profess, and loth to remit anything of that
+they have received.&rdquo;&nbsp; As the difference between the Genevan
+and Anglican models contributed so greatly to the Civil War under Charles
+I., the results may be regretted; Anglicans, by 1643, were looked on
+as &ldquo;Baal worshippers&rdquo; by the precise Scots.</p>
+<p>In February 1561, Randolph still thought that the Book of Discipline
+was rather in advance of what fallen human nature could endure.&nbsp;
+Idolatry, of course, was to be removed universally; thus the Queen,
+when she arrived, was constantly insulted about her religion.&nbsp;
+The Lawful Calling of Ministers was explained; we have already seen
+that a lawful minister is a preacher who can get a local set of men
+to recognise him as such.&nbsp; Knox, however, before his return to
+Scotland, had advised the brethren to be very careful in examining preachers
+before accepting them.&nbsp; The people and &ldquo;every several Congregation&rdquo;
+have a right to elect their minister, and, if they do not do so in six
+weeks, the Superintendent (a migratory official, in some ways superior
+to the clergy, but subject to periodical &ldquo;trial&rdquo; by the
+Assembly, who very soon became extinct), with his council, presents
+a man who is to be examined by persons of sound judgment, and next by
+the ministers and elders of the Kirk.&nbsp; Nobody is to be &ldquo;violently
+intrused&rdquo; on any congregation.&nbsp; Nothing is said about an
+university training; moral character is closely scrutinised.&nbsp; On
+the admission of a new minister, some other ministers should preach
+&ldquo;touching the obedience which the Kirk owe to their ministers.
+. . .&nbsp; The people should be exhorted to reverence and honour their
+chosen ministers as the servants and ambassadors of the Lord Jesus,
+obeying the commandments which they speak from God&rsquo;s mouth and
+Book, even as they would obey God himself. . . .&rdquo; <a name="citation182"></a><a href="#footnote182">{182}</a></p>
+<p>The practical result of this claim on the part of the preachers to
+implicit obedience was more than a century of turmoil, civil war, revolution,
+and reaction.&nbsp; The ministers constantly preached political sermons,
+and the State&mdash;the King and his advisers&mdash;was perpetually
+arraigned by them.&nbsp; To &ldquo;reject&rdquo; them, &ldquo;and despise
+their ministry and exhortation&rdquo; (as when Catholics were not put
+to death on their instance), was to &ldquo;reject and despise&rdquo;
+our Lord!&nbsp; If accused of libel, or treasonous libel, or &ldquo;leasing
+making,&rdquo; in their sermons, they demanded to be judged by their
+brethren.&nbsp; Their brethren acquitting them, where was there any
+other judicature?&nbsp; These pretensions, with the right to inflict
+excommunication (in later practice to be followed by actual outlawry),
+were made, we saw, when there were not a dozen &ldquo;true ministers&rdquo;
+in the nascent Kirk, and, of course, the claims became more exorbitant
+when &ldquo;true ministers&rdquo; were reckoned by hundreds.&nbsp; No
+State could submit to such a clerical tyranny.</p>
+<p>People who only know modern Presbyterianism have no idea of the despotism
+which the Fathers of the Kirk tried, for more than a century, to enforce.&nbsp;
+The preachers sat in the seats of the Apostles; they had the gift of
+the Keys, the power to bind and loose.&nbsp; Yet the Book of Discipline
+permits no other ceremony, at the induction of these mystically gifted
+men, than &ldquo;the public approbation of the people, and declaration
+of the chief minister&rdquo;&mdash;later there was no &ldquo;<i>chief</i>
+minister,&rdquo; there was &ldquo;parity&rdquo; of ministers.&nbsp;
+Any other ceremony &ldquo;we cannot approve&rdquo;; &ldquo;for albeit
+the Apostles used the imposition of hands, yet seeing the miracle is
+ceased, the using of the ceremony we judge it not necessary.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+The miracle had <i>not</i> ceased, if it was true that &ldquo;the commandments&rdquo;
+issued in sermons&mdash;political sermons often&mdash;really deserved
+to be obeyed, as men &ldquo;would obey God himself.&rdquo;&nbsp; <i>C&rsquo;est
+l&aacute; le miracle</i>!&nbsp; There could be no more amazing miracle
+than the infallibility of preachers!&nbsp; &ldquo;The imposition of
+hands&rdquo; was, twelve years later, restored; but as far as infallible
+sermons were concerned, the State agreed with Knox that &ldquo;the miracle
+had ceased.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The political sermons are sometimes justified by the analogy of modern
+discussion in the press.&nbsp; But leading articles do not pretend to
+be infallible, and editors do not assert a right to be obeyed by men,
+&ldquo;even as they would obey God himself.&rdquo;&nbsp; The preachers
+were often right, often wrong: their sermons were good, or were silly;
+but what no State could endure was the claim of preachers to implicit
+obedience.</p>
+<p>The difficulty in finding really qualified ministers must be met
+by fervent prayer, and by compulsion on the part of the Estates of Parliament.</p>
+<p>Failing ministers, Readers, capable of reading the Common Prayers
+(presently it was Knox&rsquo;s book of these) and the Bible must be
+found; they may later be promoted to the ministry.</p>
+<p>Stationary ministers are to receive less sustenance than the migratory
+Superintendents; the sons of the preachers must be educated, the daughters
+&ldquo;honestly dowered.&rdquo;&nbsp; The payment is mainly in &ldquo;bolls&rdquo;
+of meal and malt.&nbsp; The state of the poor, &ldquo;fearful and horrible&rdquo;
+to say, is one of universal contempt.&nbsp; Provision must be made for
+the aged and weak.&nbsp; Superintendents, after election, are to be
+examined by all the ministers of the province, and by three or more
+Superintendents.&nbsp; Other ceremonies &ldquo;we cannot allow.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+In 1581, a Scottish Catholic, Burne, averred that Willock objected to
+ceremonies of Ordination, because people would say, if these are necessary,
+what minister ordained <i>you</i>?&nbsp; The query was hard to answer,
+so ceremonies of Ordination could not be allowed.&nbsp; The story was
+told to Burne, he says, by an eyewitness, who heard Willock.</p>
+<p>Every church must have a schoolmaster, who ought to be able to teach
+grammar and Latin.&nbsp; Education should be universal: poor children
+of ability must be enabled to pass on to the universities, through secondary
+schools.&nbsp; At St. Andrews the three colleges were to have separate
+functions, not clashing, and culminating in Divinity.</p>
+<p>Whence are the funds to be obtained?&nbsp; Here the authors bid &ldquo;your
+Honours&rdquo; &ldquo;have respect to your poor brethren, the labourers
+of the ground, who by these cruel beasts, the papists, have been so
+oppressed . . . &rdquo;&nbsp; They ought only to pay &ldquo;reasonable
+teinds, that they may feel some benefit of Christ Jesus, now preached
+unto them.&nbsp; With grief of heart we hear that some gentlemen are
+now as cruel over their tenants as ever were the papists, requiring
+of them whatsoever they paid to the Church, so that the papistical tyranny
+shall only be changed into the tyranny of the landlord or laird.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Every man should have his own teinds, or tithes; whereas, in fact, the
+great lay holders of tithes took them off other men&rsquo;s lands, a
+practice leading to many blood-feuds.&nbsp; The attempt of Charles I.
+to let &ldquo;every man have his own tithes,&rdquo; and to provide the
+preachers with a living wage, was one of the causes of the distrust
+of the King which culminated in the great Civil War.&nbsp; But Knox
+could not &ldquo;recover for the Church her liberty and freedom, and
+that only for relief of the poor.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;<i>We speak not
+for ourselves</i>&rdquo; the Book says, &ldquo;but in favour of the
+poor, and the labourers defrauded . . .&nbsp; The Church is only bound
+to sustain and nourish her charges . . . to wit the Ministers of the
+Kirk, the Poor, and the teachers of youth.&rdquo;&nbsp; The funds must
+be taken out of the tithes, the chantries, colleges, chaplainries, and
+the temporalities of Bishops, Deans, and cathedrals generally.</p>
+<p>The ministers are to have their manses, and glebes of six acres;
+to this many of the Lords assented, except, oddly enough, those redoubtable
+leaders of the Congregation, Glencairn and Morton, with Marischal.&nbsp;
+All the part of the book which most commands our sympathy, the most
+Christian part of the book, regulating the disposition of the revenues
+of the fallen Church for the good of the poor, of education, and of
+the Kirk, remained a dead letter.&nbsp; The Duke, Arran, Lord James,
+and a few barons, including the ruffian Andrew Ker of Faldonside, with
+Glencairn and Ochiltree, signed it, in token of approval, but little
+came of it all.&nbsp; Lethington, probably, was the scoffer who styled
+these provisions &ldquo;devout imaginations.&rdquo;&nbsp; The nobles
+and lairds, many of them, were converted, in matter of doctrine; in
+conduct they were the most avaricious, bloody, and treacherous of all
+the generations which had banded, revelled, robbed, and betrayed in
+Scotland.</p>
+<p>There is a point in this matter of the Kirk&rsquo;s claim to the
+patrimony of the old Church which perhaps is generally misunderstood.&nbsp;
+That point is luminous as regards the absolute disinterestedness of
+Knox and his companions, both in respect to themselves and their fellow-preachers.&nbsp;
+The Book of Discipline contains a sentence already quoted, conceived
+in what we may justly style a chivalrous contempt of wealth.&nbsp; &ldquo;Your
+Honours may easily understand <i>that we speak not now for ourselves</i>,
+but in favour of the Poor, and the labourers defrauded . . . &rdquo;&nbsp;
+Not having observed a point which &ldquo;their Honours&rdquo; were not
+the men to &ldquo;understand easily,&rdquo; Father Pollen writes, &ldquo;the
+new preachers were loudly <i>claiming for themselves</i> the property
+of the rivals whom they had displaced.&rdquo; <a name="citation186"></a><a href="#footnote186">{186}</a>&nbsp;
+For themselves they were claiming a few merks, and a few bolls of meal,
+a decent subsistence.&nbsp; Mr. Taylor Innes points out that when, just
+before Darnley&rsquo;s murder, Mary offered &ldquo;a considerable sum
+for the maintenance of the ministers,&rdquo; Knox and others said that,
+for their sustentation, they &ldquo;craved of the auditors the things
+that were necessary, as of duty the pastors might justly crave of their
+flock.&nbsp; The General Assembly accepted the Queen&rsquo;s gift, but
+only of necessity; it was by their flock that they ought to be sustained.&nbsp;
+To take from others contrary to their will, whom they serve not, they
+judge it not their duty, nor yet reasonable.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Among other things the preachers, who were left with a hard struggle
+for bare existence, introduced a rule of honour scarcely known to the
+barons and nobles, except to the bold Buccleuch who rejected an English
+pension from Henry VIII., with a sympathetic explosion of strong language.&nbsp;
+The preachers would not take gifts from England, even when offered by
+the supporters of their own line of policy.</p>
+<p>Knox&rsquo;s failure in his admirable attempt to secure the wealth
+of the old Church for national purposes was, as it happened, the secular
+salvation of the Kirk.&nbsp; Neither Catholicism nor Anglicanism could
+be fully introduced while the barons and nobles held the tithes and
+lands of the ancient Church.&nbsp; Possessing the wealth necessary to
+a Catholic or Anglican establishment, they were resolutely determined
+to cling to it, and oppose any Church except that which they starved.&nbsp;
+The bishops of James I., Charles I., and Charles II. were detested by
+the nobles.&nbsp; Rarely from them came any lordly gifts to learning
+and the Universities, while from the honourably poor ministers such
+gifts could not come.&nbsp; The Universities were founded by prelates
+of the old Church, doing their duty with their wealth.</p>
+<p>The arrangements for discipline were of the drastic nature which
+lingered into the days of Burns and later.&nbsp; The results may be
+studied in the records of Kirk Sessions; we have no reason to suppose
+that sexual morality was at all improved, on the whole, by &ldquo;discipline,&rdquo;
+though it was easier to enforce &ldquo;Sabbath observance.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+A graduated scale of admonitions led up to excommunication, if the subject
+was refractory, and to boycotting with civil penalties.&nbsp; The processes
+had no effect, or none that is visible, in checking lawlessness, robbery,
+feuds, and manslayings; and, after the Reformation, witchcraft increased
+to monstrous proportions, at least executions of people accused of witchcraft
+became very numerous, in spite of provision for sermons thrice a week,
+and for weekly discussions of the Word.</p>
+<p>The Book of Discipline, modelled on the Genevan scheme, and on that
+of A&rsquo;Lasco for his London congregation, rather reminds us of the
+&ldquo;Laws&rdquo; of Plato.&nbsp; It was a well meant but impracticable
+ideal set before the country, and was least successful where it best
+deserved success.&nbsp; It certainly secured a thoroughly moral clergy,
+till, some twelve years later, the nobles again thrust licentious and
+murderous cadets into the best livings and the bastard bishoprics, before
+and during the Regency of Morton.&nbsp; Their example did not affect
+the genuine ministers, frugal God-fearing men.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XIV: KNOX AND QUEEN MARY, 1561</h2>
+<p>In discussing the Book of Discipline, that great constructive effort
+towards the remaking of Scotland, we left Knox at the time of the death
+of his first wife.&nbsp; On December 20, 1560, he was one of some six
+ministers who, with more numerous lay representatives of districts,
+sat in the first General Assembly.&nbsp; They selected some new preachers,
+and decided that the church of Restalrig should be destroyed as a monument
+of idolatry.&nbsp; A fragment of it is standing yet, enclosing tombs
+of the wild Logans of Restalrig.</p>
+<p>The Assembly passed an Act against lawless love, and invited the
+Estates and Privy Council to &ldquo;use sharp punishment&rdquo; against
+some &ldquo;idolaters,&rdquo; including Eglintoun, Cassilis, and Quentin
+Kennedy, Abbot of Crosraguel, who disputed later against Knox, the Laird
+of Gala (a Scott) and others.</p>
+<p>In January 1561 a Convention of nobles and lairds at Edinburgh perused
+the Book of Discipline, and some signed it, platonically, while there
+was a dispute between the preachers and certain Catholics, including
+Lesley, later Bishop of Ross, an historian, but no better than a shifty
+and dangerous partisan of Mary Stuart.&nbsp; The Lord James was selected
+as an envoy to Mary, in France.&nbsp; He was bidden to refuse her even
+the private performance of the rites of her faith, but declined to go
+to that extremity; the question smouldered through five years.&nbsp;
+Randolph expected &ldquo;a mad world&rdquo; on Mary&rsquo;s return;
+he was not disappointed.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile the Catholic Earls of the North, of whom Huntly was the
+fickle leader, with Bothwell, &ldquo;come to work what mischief he can,&rdquo;
+are accused by Knox of a design to seize Edinburgh, before the Parliament
+in May 1561.&nbsp; Nothing was done, but there was a very violent Robin
+Hood riot; the magistrates were besieged and bullied, Knox declined
+to ask for the pardon of the brawlers, and, after excursions and alarms,
+&ldquo;the whole multitude was excommunicate&rdquo; until they appeased
+the Kirk.&nbsp; They may have borne the spiritual censure very unconcernedly.</p>
+<p>The Catholic Earls now sent Lesley to get Mary&rsquo;s ear before
+the Lord James could reach her.&nbsp; Lesley arrived on April 14, with
+the offer to raise 20,000 men, if Mary would land in Huntly&rsquo;s
+region.&nbsp; They would restore the Mass in their bounds, and Mary
+would be convoyed by Captain Cullen, a kinsman of Huntly, and already
+mentioned as the Captain of the Guards after Riccio&rsquo;s murder.</p>
+<p>It is said by Lesley that Mary had received, from the Regent, her
+mother, a description of the nobles of Scotland.&nbsp; If so, she knew
+Huntly for the ambitious traitor he was, a man peculiarly perfidious
+and self-seeking, with a son who might be thrust on her as a husband,
+if once she were in Huntly&rsquo;s hands.&nbsp; The Queen knew that
+he had forsaken her mother&rsquo;s cause; knew, perhaps, of his old
+attempt to betray Scotland to England, and she was aware that no northern
+Earl had raised his banner to defend the Church.&nbsp; She, therefore,
+came to no agreement with Lesley, but confided more in the Lord James,
+who arrived on the following day.&nbsp; Mary knew her brother&rsquo;s
+character fairly well, and, if Lesley says with truth that he now asked
+for, and was promised, the earldom of Moray, the omen was evil for Huntly,
+who practically held the lands. <a name="citation191a"></a><a href="#footnote191a">{191a}</a>&nbsp;
+A bargain, on this showing, was initiated.&nbsp; Lord James was to have
+the earldom, and he got it; Mary was to have his support.</p>
+<p>Much has been said about Lord James&rsquo;s betrayal to Throckmorton
+of Mary&rsquo;s intentions, as revealed by her to himself.&nbsp; But
+what Lord James said to Throckmorton amounts to very little.&nbsp; I
+am not certain that, both in Paris with Throckmorton, and in London
+with Elizabeth and Cecil, he did not moot his plan for friendship between
+Mary and Elizabeth, and Elizabeth&rsquo;s recognition of Mary&rsquo;s
+rights as her heir. <a name="citation191b"></a><a href="#footnote191b">{191b}</a>&nbsp;
+Lord James proposed all this to Elizabeth in a letter of August 6, 1561.
+<a name="citation191c"></a><a href="#footnote191c">{191c}</a>&nbsp;
+He had certainly discussed this admirable scheme with Lord Robert Dudley
+at Court, in May 1561, on his return from France. <a name="citation191d"></a><a href="#footnote191d">{191d}</a>&nbsp;
+Nothing could be more statesmanlike and less treacherous.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile (May 27, 1561) the brethren presented a supplication to
+the Parliament, with clauses, which, if conceded, would have secured
+the stipends of the preachers.&nbsp; The prayers were granted, in promise,
+and a great deal of church wrecking was conscientiously done; the Lord
+James, on his return, paid particular attention to idolatry in his hoped
+for earldom, but the preachers were not better paid.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile the Protestants looked forward to the Queen&rsquo;s arrival
+with great searchings of heart.&nbsp; She had not ratified the treaty
+of Leith, but already Cardinal Guise hoped that she and Elizabeth would
+live in concord, and heard that Mary ceded all claims to the English
+throne in return for Elizabeth&rsquo;s promise to declare her the heir,
+if she herself died childless (August 21). <a name="citation192"></a><a href="#footnote192">{192}</a></p>
+<p>Knox, who had not loved Mary of Guise, was not likely to think well
+of her daughter.&nbsp; Mary, again, knew Knox as the chief agitator
+in the tumults that embittered her mother&rsquo;s last year, and shortened
+her life.&nbsp; In France she had threatened to deal with him severely,
+ignorant of his power and her own weakness.&nbsp; She could not be aware
+that Knox had suggested to Cecil opposition to her succession to the
+throne on the ground of her sex.&nbsp; Knox uttered his forebodings
+of the Queen&rsquo;s future: they were as veracious as if he had really
+been a prophet.&nbsp; But he was, to an extent which can only be guessed,
+one of the causes of the fulfilment of his own predictions.&nbsp; To
+attack publicly, from the pulpit, the creed and conduct of a girl of
+spirit; to provoke cruel insults to her priests whom she could not defend;
+was apt to cause, at last, in great measure that wild revolt of temper
+which drove Mary to her doom.&nbsp; Her health suffered frequently from
+the attempt to bear with a smiling face such insults as no European
+princess, least of all Elizabeth, would have endured for an hour.&nbsp;
+There is a limit to patience, and before Mary passed that limit, Randolph
+and Lethington saw, and feebly deplored, the amenities of the preacher
+whom men permitted to &ldquo;rule the roast.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Ten
+thousand swords&rdquo; do not leap from their scabbards to protect either
+the girl Mary Stuart or the woman Marie Antoinette.</p>
+<p>Not that natural indignation was dead, but it ended in words.&nbsp;
+People said, &ldquo;The Queen&rsquo;s Mass and her priests will we maintain;
+this hand and this rapier will fight in their defence.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+So men bragged, as Knox reports, <a name="citation193a"></a><a href="#footnote193a">{193a}</a>
+but when after Mary&rsquo;s arrival priests were beaten or pilloried,
+not a hand stirred to defend them, not a rapier was drawn.&nbsp; The
+Queen might be as safely as she was deeply insulted through her faith.&nbsp;
+She was not at this time devoutly ardent in her creed, though she often
+professed her resolution to abide in it.&nbsp; Gentleness might conceivably
+have led her even to adopt the Anglican faith, or so it was deemed by
+some observers, but insolence and outrage had another effect on her
+temper.</p>
+<p>Mary landed at Leith in a thick fog on August 19, 1561.&nbsp; She
+was now in a country where she lay under sentence of death as an idolater.&nbsp;
+Her continued existence was illegal.&nbsp; With her came Mary Seton,
+Mary Beaton, Mary Livingstone, and Mary Fleming, the comrades of her
+childhood; and her uncles, the Duc d&rsquo;Aumale, Francis de Lorraine,
+and the noisy Marquis d&rsquo;Elboeuf.&nbsp; She was not very welcome.&nbsp;
+As late as August 9, Randolph reports that her brother, Lord James,
+Lethington, and Morton &ldquo;wish, as you do, she might be stayed yet
+for a space, and if it were not for their obedience sake, some of them
+care not though they never see her face.&rdquo; <a name="citation193b"></a><a href="#footnote193b">{193b}</a>&nbsp;
+None the less, on June 8 Lord James tells Mary that he had given orders
+for her palace to be prepared by the end of July.&nbsp; He informs her
+that &ldquo;many&rdquo; hope that she will never come home.&nbsp; Nothing
+is &ldquo;so necessary . . . as your Majesty&rsquo;s own presence&rdquo;;
+and he hopes she will arrive punctually.&nbsp; If she cannot come she
+should send her commission to some of her Protestant advisers, by no
+means including the Archbishop of St. Andrews (Hamilton), with whom
+he will never work.&nbsp; It is not easy to see why Lord James should
+have wished that Mary &ldquo;might be stayed,&rdquo; unless he merely
+dreaded her arrival while Elizabeth was in a bad temper.&nbsp; His letter
+to Elizabeth of August 6 is incompatible with treachery on his part.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Mr. Knox is determined to abide the uttermost, and others will
+not leave him till God have taken his life and theirs together.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Of what were these heroes afraid?&nbsp; A &ldquo;familiar,&rdquo; a
+witch, of Lady Huntly&rsquo;s predicted that the Queen would never arrive.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;If false, I would she were burned for a witch,&rdquo; adds honest
+Randolph.&nbsp; Lethington deemed his &ldquo;own danger not least.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Two galleys full of ladies are not so alarming; did these men, practically
+hinting that English ships should stop their Queen, think that the Catholics
+in Scotland were too strong for them?</p>
+<p>Not a noble was present to meet Mary when in the fog and filth of
+Leith she touched Scottish soil, except her natural brother, Lord Robert.
+<a name="citation194"></a><a href="#footnote194">{194}</a>&nbsp; The
+rest soon gathered with faces of welcome.&nbsp; She met some Robin Hood
+rioters who lay under the law, and pardoned these roisterers (with their
+excommunication could she interfere?), because, says Knox, she was instructed
+that they had acted &ldquo;in despite of the religion.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Their festival had been forbidden under the older religion, as it happens,
+in 1555, and was again forbidden later by Mary herself.</p>
+<p>All was mirth till Sunday, when the Queen&rsquo;s French priest celebrated
+Mass in her own chapel before herself, her three uncles, and Montrose.&nbsp;
+The godly called for the priest&rsquo;s blood, but Lord James kept the
+door, and his brothers protected the priest.&nbsp; Disappointed of blood,
+&ldquo;the godly departed with great grief of heart,&rdquo; collecting
+in crowds round Holyrood in the afternoon.&nbsp; Next day the Council
+proclaimed that, till the Estates assembled and deliberated, no innovation
+should be made in the religion &ldquo;publicly and universally standing.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+The Queen&rsquo;s servants and others from France must not be molested&mdash;on
+pain of death, the usual empty threat.&nbsp; They were assaulted, and
+nobody was punished for the offence.&nbsp; Arran alone made a protest,
+probably written by Knox.&nbsp; Who but Knox could have written that
+the Mass is &ldquo;much more abominable and odious in the sight of God&rdquo;
+than murder!&nbsp; Many an honest brother was conspicuously of the opinion
+which Arran&rsquo;s protest assigned to Omnipotence.&nbsp; Next Sunday
+Knox &ldquo;thundered,&rdquo; and later regretted that &ldquo;I did
+not that I might have done&rdquo; (caused an armed struggle?), . . .
+&ldquo;for God had given unto me credit with many, who would have put
+into execution God&rsquo;s judgments if I would only have consented
+thereto.&rdquo;&nbsp; Mary might have gone the way of Jezebel and Athaliah
+but for the mistaken lenity of Knox, who later &ldquo;asked God&rsquo;s
+mercy&rdquo; for not being more vehement.&nbsp; In fact, he rather worked
+&ldquo;to slokin that fervency.&rdquo; <a name="citation195"></a><a href="#footnote195">{195}</a>&nbsp;
+Let us hope that he is forgiven, especially as Randolph reports him
+extremely vehement in the pulpit.&nbsp; His repentance was publicly
+expressed shortly before the murder of Riccio.&nbsp; (In December 1565,
+probably, when the Kirk ordered the week&rsquo;s fast that, as it chanced,
+heralded Riccio&rsquo;s doom.)&nbsp; Privately to Cecil, on October
+7, 1561, he uttered his regret that he had been so deficient in zeal.&nbsp;
+Cecil had been recommending moderation. <a name="citation196"></a><a href="#footnote196">{196}</a></p>
+<p>On August 26, Randolph, after describing the intimidation of the
+priest, says &ldquo;John Knox thundereth out of the pulpit, so that
+I fear nothing so much as that one day he will mar all.&nbsp; He ruleth
+the roast, and of him all men stand in fear.&rdquo;&nbsp; In public
+at least he did not allay the wrath of the brethren.</p>
+<p>On August 26, or on September 2, Knox had an interview with the Queen,
+and made her weep.&nbsp; Randolph doubted whether this was from anger
+or from grief.&nbsp; Knox gives Mary&rsquo;s observations in the briefest
+summary; his own at great length, so that it is not easy to know how
+their reasoning really sped.&nbsp; Her charges were his authorship of
+the &ldquo;Monstrous Regiment of Women&rdquo;; that he caused great
+sedition and slaughter in England; and that he was accused of doing
+what he did by necromancy.&nbsp; The rest is summed up in &ldquo;&amp;c.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He stood to his guns about the &ldquo;Monstrous Regiment,&rdquo;
+and generally took the line that he merely preached against &ldquo;the
+vanity of the papistical religion&rdquo; and the deceit, pride, and
+tyranny of &ldquo;that Roman Antichrist.&rdquo;&nbsp; If one wishes
+to convert a young princess, bred in the Catholic faith, it is not judicious
+to begin by abusing the Pope.&nbsp; This too much resembles the arbitrary
+and violent method of Peter in <i>The Tale of a Tub</i> (by Dr. Jonathan
+Swift); such, however, was the method of Knox.</p>
+<p>Mary asking if he denied her &ldquo;just authority,&rdquo; Knox said
+that he was as well content to live under her as Paul under Nero.&nbsp;
+This, again, can hardly be called an agreeable historical parallel!&nbsp;
+Knox hoped that he would not hurt her or her authority &ldquo;so long
+as ye defile not your hands with the blood of the saints of God,&rdquo;
+as if Mary was panting to distinguish herself in that way.&nbsp; His
+hope was unfulfilled.&nbsp; No &ldquo;saints&rdquo; suffered, but he
+ceased not to trouble.</p>
+<p>Knox also said that if he had wanted &ldquo;to trouble your estate
+because you are a woman, I might have chosen a time more convenient
+for that purpose than I can do now, when your own presence is in the
+realm.&rdquo;&nbsp; He <i>had</i>, in fact, chosen the convenient time
+in his letter to Cecil, already quoted (July 19, 1559), but he had not
+succeeded in his plan.&nbsp; He said that nobody could <i>prove</i>
+that the question of discarding Mary, on the ground of her sex, &ldquo;was
+at any time moved in public or in secret.&rdquo;&nbsp; Nobody could
+<i>prove</i> it, for nobody could publish his letter to Cecil.&nbsp;
+Probably he had this in his mind.&nbsp; He did not say that the thing
+had not happened, only that &ldquo;he was assured that neither Protestant
+nor papist shall be able to prove that any such question was at any
+time moved, either in public or in secret.&rdquo; <a name="citation197"></a><a href="#footnote197">{197}</a></p>
+<p>He denied that he had caused sedition in England, nor do we know
+what Mary meant by this charge.&nbsp; His appeals, from abroad, to a
+Phinehas or Jehu had not been answered.&nbsp; As to magic, he always
+preached against the practice.</p>
+<p>Mary then said that Knox persuaded the people to use religion not
+allowed by their princes.&nbsp; He justified himself by biblical precedents,
+to which she replied that Daniel and Abraham did not resort to the sword.&nbsp;
+They had not the chance, he answered, adding that subjects might resist
+a prince who exceeded his bounds, as sons may confine a maniac father.</p>
+<p>The Queen was long silent, and then said, &ldquo;I perceive my subjects
+shall obey you and not me.&rdquo;&nbsp; Knox said that all should be
+subject unto God and His Church; and Mary frankly replied, &ldquo;I
+will defend the Church of Rome, for I think that it is the true Church
+of God.&rdquo;&nbsp; She could not defend it!&nbsp; Knox answered with
+his wonted urbanity, that the Church of Rome was a harlot, addicted
+to &ldquo;all kinds of fornication.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He was so accustomed to this sort of rhetoric that he did not deem
+it out of place on this occasion.&nbsp; His admirers, familiar with
+his style, forget its necessary effect on &ldquo;a young princess unpersuaded,&rdquo;
+as Lethington put it.&nbsp; Mary said that her conscience was otherwise
+minded, but Knox knew that all consciences of &ldquo;man or angel&rdquo;
+were wrong which did not agree with his own.&nbsp; The Queen had to
+confess that in argument as to the unscriptural character of the Mass,
+he was &ldquo;owre sair&rdquo; for her.&nbsp; He said that he wished
+she would &ldquo;hear the matter reasoned to the end.&rdquo;&nbsp; She
+may have desired that very thing: &ldquo;Ye may get that sooner than
+ye believe,&rdquo; she said; but Knox expressed his disbelief that he
+would ever get it.&nbsp; Papists would never argue except when &ldquo;they
+were both judge and party.&rdquo;&nbsp; Knox himself never answered
+Ninian Winzet, who, while printing his polemic, was sought for by the
+police of the period, and just managed to escape.</p>
+<p>There was, however, a champion who, on November 19, challenged Knox
+and the other preachers to a discussion, either orally or by interchange
+of letters.&nbsp; This was Mary&rsquo;s own chaplain, Ren&eacute; Benoit.&nbsp;
+Mary probably knew that he was about to offer to meet &ldquo;the most
+learned John Knox and other most erudite men, called ministers&rdquo;;
+it is thus that Ren&eacute; addresses them in his &ldquo;Epistle&rdquo;
+of November 19.</p>
+<p>He implores them not to be led into heresy by love of popularity
+or of wealth; neither of which advantages the preachers enjoyed, for
+they were detested by loose livers, and were nearly starved.&nbsp; Benoit&rsquo;s
+little challenge, or rather request for discussion, is a model of courtesy.&nbsp;
+Knox did not meet him in argument, as far as we are aware; but in 1562,
+Fergusson, minister of Dunfermline, replied in a tract full of scurrility.&nbsp;
+One quite unmentionable word occurs, and &ldquo;impudent lie,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;impudent and shameless shavelings,&rdquo; &ldquo;Baal&rsquo;s
+chaplains that eat at Jezebel&rsquo;s table,&rdquo; &ldquo;pestilent
+papistry,&rdquo; &ldquo;abominable mass,&rdquo; &ldquo;idol Bishops,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;we Christians and you Papists,&rdquo; and parallels between Benoit
+and &ldquo;an idolatrous priest of Bethel,&rdquo; between Mary and Jezebel
+are among the amenities of this meek servant of Christ in Dunfermline.</p>
+<p>Benoit presently returned to France, and later was confessor to Henri
+IV.&nbsp; The discussion which Mary anticipated never occurred, though
+her champion was ready.&nbsp; Knox does not refer to this affair in
+his &ldquo;History,&rdquo; as far as I am aware. <a name="citation199"></a><a href="#footnote199">{199}</a>&nbsp;
+Was Ren&eacute; the priest whom the brethren menaced and occasionally
+assaulted?</p>
+<p>Considering her chaplain&rsquo;s offer, it seems not unlikely that
+Mary was ready to listen to reasoning, but to call the Pope &ldquo;Antichrist,&rdquo;
+and the Church &ldquo;a harlot,&rdquo; is not argument.&nbsp; Knox ended
+his discourse by wishing the Queen as blessed in Scotland as Deborah
+was in Israel.&nbsp; The mere fact that Mary spoke with him &ldquo;makes
+the Papists doubt what shall come of the world,&rdquo; <a name="citation200a"></a><a href="#footnote200a">{200a}</a>
+says Randolph; and indeed nobody knows what possibly might have come,
+had Knox been sweetly reasonable.&nbsp; But he told his friends that,
+if he was not mistaken, she had &ldquo;a proud mind, a crafty wit, and
+an indurate heart against God and His truth.&rdquo;&nbsp; She showed
+none of these qualities in the conversation as described by himself;
+but her part in it is mainly that of a listener who returns not railing
+with railing.</p>
+<p>Knox was going about to destroy the scheme of <i>les politiques</i>,
+Randolph, Lethington, and the Lord James.&nbsp; They desired peace and
+amity with England, and the two Scots, at least, hoped to secure these
+as the Cardinal Guise did, by Mary&rsquo;s renouncing all present claim
+to the English throne, in return for recognition as heir, if Elizabeth
+died without issue.&nbsp; Elizabeth, as we know her, would never have
+granted these terms, but Mary&rsquo;s ministers, Lethington then in
+England, Lord James at home, tried to hope. <a name="citation200b"></a><a href="#footnote200b">{200b}</a>&nbsp;
+Lord James had heard Mary&rsquo;s outburst to Knox about defending her
+own insulted Church, but he was not nervously afraid that she would
+take to dipping her hands in the blood of the saints.&nbsp; Neither
+he nor Lethington could revert to the old faith; they had pecuniary
+reasons, as well as convictions, which made that impossible.</p>
+<p>Lethington, returned to Edinburgh (October 25), spoke his mind to
+Cecil.&nbsp; &ldquo;The Queen behaves herself . . . as reasonably as
+we can require: if anything be amiss the fault is rather in ourselves.&nbsp;
+You know the vehemency of Mr. Knox&rsquo;s spirit which cannot be bridled,
+and yet doth utter sometimes such sentences as cannot easily be digested
+by a weak stomach.&nbsp; I would wish he should deal with her more gently,
+being a young princess unpersuaded. . . .&nbsp; Surely in her comporting
+with him she declares a wisdom far exceeding her age.&rdquo; <a name="citation201a"></a><a href="#footnote201a">{201a}</a>&nbsp;
+Vituperation is not argument, and gentleness is not unchristian.&nbsp;
+St. Paul did not revile the gods of Felix and Festus.</p>
+<p>But, prior to these utterances of October, the brethren had been
+baiting Mary.&nbsp; On her public entry (which Knox misdates by a month)
+her idolatry was rebuked by a pageant of Korah, Dathan, and Abiram.&nbsp;
+Huntly managed to stop a burning in effigy of a priest at the Mass.&nbsp;
+They never could cease from insulting the Queen in the tenderest point.&nbsp;
+The magistrates next coupled &ldquo;mess-mongers&rdquo; with notorious
+drunkards and adulterers, &ldquo;and such filthy persons,&rdquo; in
+a proclamation, so the Provost and Bailies were &ldquo;warded&rdquo;
+(Knox says) in the Tolbooth.&nbsp; Knox blamed Lethington and Lord James,
+in a letter to Cecil; <a name="citation201b"></a><a href="#footnote201b">{201b}</a>
+in his &ldquo;History&rdquo; he says, &ldquo;God be merciful to some
+of our own.&rdquo; <a name="citation201c"></a><a href="#footnote201c">{201c}</a></p>
+<p>The Queen herself, as a Papist, was clearly insulted in the proclamation.&nbsp;
+Moray and Lethington, the latter touched by her &ldquo;readiness to
+hear,&rdquo; and her gentleness in the face of Protestant brutalities;
+the former, perhaps, lured by the hope of obtaining, as the price of
+his alliance, the earldom of Moray, were by the end of October still
+attempting to secure amity between her and Elizabeth, and to hope for
+the best, rather than drive the Queen wild by eternal taunts and menaces.&nbsp;
+The preachers denounced her rites at Hallowmass (All Saints), and a
+servant of her brother, Lord Robert, beat a priest; but men actually
+doubted whether subjects might interfere between the Queen and her religion.&nbsp;
+There was a discussion on this point between the preachers and the nobles,
+and the Church in Geneva (Calvin) was to be consulted.&nbsp; Knox offered
+to write, but Lethington said that he would write, as much stood on
+the &ldquo;information&rdquo;; that is, on the manner of stating the
+question.&nbsp; Lethington did not know, and Knox does not tell us in
+his &ldquo;History&rdquo; that he had himself, a week earlier, put the
+matter before Calvin in his own way.&nbsp; Even Lord James, he says
+to Calvin, though the Abdiel of godliness, &ldquo;is afraid to overthrow
+that idol by violence&rdquo;&mdash;<i>idolum illud missalicum</i>. <a name="citation202"></a><a href="#footnote202">{202}</a></p>
+<p>Knox&rsquo;s letter to Calvin represents the Queen as alleging that
+he has already answered the question, declaring that Knox&rsquo;s party
+has no right to interfere with the Royal mass.&nbsp; This rumour Knox
+disbelieves.&nbsp; He adds that Arran would have written, but was absent.</p>
+<p>Apparently Arran did write to Calvin, anonymously, and dating from
+London, November 18, 1561.&nbsp; The letter, really from Scotland, is
+in French.&nbsp; The writer acknowledges the receipt, about August 20,
+of an encouraging epistle from Calvin.&nbsp; He repeats Knox&rsquo;s
+statements, in the main, and presses for a speedy reply.&nbsp; He says
+that he goes seldom to Court, both on account of &ldquo;that idol,&rdquo;
+and because &ldquo;sobriety and virtue&rdquo; have been exiled. <a name="citation203a"></a><a href="#footnote203a">{203a}</a>&nbsp;
+As Arran himself &ldquo;is known to have had company of a good handsome
+wench, a merchant&rsquo;s daughter,&rdquo; which led to a riot with
+Bothwell, described by Randolph (December 27, 1561), his own &ldquo;virtue
+and sobriety&rdquo; are not conspicuous. <a name="citation203b"></a><a href="#footnote203b">{203b}</a>&nbsp;
+He was in Edinburgh on November 15-19, and the London date of his anonymous
+letter is a blind. <a name="citation203c"></a><a href="#footnote203c">{203c}</a></p>
+<p>It does not appear that Calvin replied to Knox, and to the anonymous
+correspondent, in whom I venture to detect Arran; or, if he answered,
+his letter was probably unfavourable to Knox, as we shall argue when
+the subject later presents itself.</p>
+<p>Finally&mdash;&ldquo;the votes of the Lords prevailed against the
+ministers&rdquo;; the Queen was allowed her Mass, but Lethington, a
+minister of the Queen, did not consult a foreigner as to the rights
+of her subjects against her creed.</p>
+<p>The lenity of Lord James was of sudden growth.&nbsp; At Stirling
+he and Argyll had gallantly caused the priests to leave the choir &ldquo;with
+broken heads and bloody ears,&rdquo; the Queen weeping.&nbsp; So Randolph
+reported to Cecil (September 24).</p>
+<p>Why her brother, foremost to insult Mary and her faith, unless Randolph
+errs, in September, took her part in a few weeks, we do not know.&nbsp;
+At Perth, Mary was again offended, and suffered in health by reason
+of the pageants; &ldquo;they did too plainly condemn the errors of the
+world. . . .&nbsp; I hear she is troubled with such sudden passions
+after any great unkindness or grief of mind,&rdquo; says Randolph.&nbsp;
+She was seldom free from such godly chastisements.&nbsp; At Perth, however,
+some one gave her a cross of five diamonds with pendant pearls.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile the statesmen did not obey the Ministers as men ought to
+obey God: a claim not easily granted by carnal politicians.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XV: KNOX AND QUEEN MARY (continued), 1561-1564</h2>
+<p>Had Mary been a mere high-tempered and high-spirited girl, easily
+harmed in health by insults to herself and her creed, she might now
+have turned for support to Huntly, Cassilis, Montrose, and the other
+Earls who were Catholic or &ldquo;unpersuaded.&rdquo;&nbsp; Her great-grandson,
+Charles II., when as young as she now was, did make the &ldquo;Start&rdquo;&mdash;the
+schoolboy attempt to run away from the Presbyterians to the loyalists
+of the North.&nbsp; But Mary had more self-control.</p>
+<p>The artful Randolph found himself as hardly put to it now, in diplomacy,
+as the Cardinal&rsquo;s murderers had done, in war, when they met the
+scientific soldier, Strozzi.&nbsp; &ldquo;The trade is now clean cut
+off from me,&rdquo; wrote Randolph (October 27); &ldquo;I have to traffic
+now with other merchants than before.&nbsp; They know the value of their
+wares, and in all places how the market goeth. . . .&nbsp; Whatsoever
+policy is in all the chief and best practised heads of France; whatsoever
+craft, falsehood, or deceit is in all the subtle brains of Scotland,&rdquo;
+said the unscrupulous agent, &ldquo;is either fresh in this woman&rsquo;s
+memory, or she can bring it out with a wet finger.&rdquo; <a name="citation205"></a><a href="#footnote205">{205}</a></p>
+<p>Mary, in fact, was in the hands of Lethington (a pensioner of Elizabeth)
+and of Lord James: &ldquo;subtle brains&rdquo; enough.&nbsp; <i>She</i>
+was the &ldquo;merchandise,&rdquo; and Lethington and Lord James wished
+to make Elizabeth acknowledge the Scottish Queen as her successor, the
+alternative being to seek her price as a wife for an European prince.&nbsp;
+An &ldquo;union of hearts&rdquo; with England might conceivably mean
+Mary&rsquo;s acceptance of the Anglican faith.&nbsp; It is not a kind
+thing to say about Mary, but I suspect that, if assured of the English
+succession, she might have gone over to the Prayer Book.&nbsp; In the
+first months of her English captivity (July 1568) Mary again dallied
+with the idea of conversion, for the sake of freedom.&nbsp; She told
+the Spanish Ambassador that &ldquo;she would sooner be murdered,&rdquo;
+but if she could have struck her bargain with Elizabeth, I doubt that
+she would have chosen the Prayer Book rather than the dagger or the
+bowl. <a name="citation206a"></a><a href="#footnote206a">{206a}</a>&nbsp;
+Her conversion would have been bitterness as of wormwood to Knox.&nbsp;
+In his eyes Anglicanism was &ldquo;a bastard religion,&rdquo; &ldquo;a
+mingle-mangle now commanded in your kirks.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Peculiar
+services appointed for Saints&rsquo; days, diverse Collects as they
+falsely call them in remembrance of this or that Saint . . . are in
+my conscience no small portion of papistical superstition.&rdquo; <a name="citation206b"></a><a href="#footnote206b">{206b}</a>&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Crossing in Baptism is a diabolical invention; kneeling at the
+Lord&rsquo;s table, mummelling,&rdquo; (uttering the responses, apparently),
+&ldquo;or singing of the Litany.&rdquo;&nbsp; All these practices are
+&ldquo;diabolical inventions,&rdquo; in Knox&rsquo;s candid opinion,
+&ldquo;with Mr. Parson&rsquo;s pattering of his constrained prayers,
+and with the mass-munging of Mr. Vicar, and of his wicked companions
+. . .&rdquo;&nbsp; (A blank in the MS.)&nbsp; &ldquo;Your Ministers,
+before for the most part, were none of Christ&rsquo;s ministers, but
+mass-mumming priests.&rdquo;&nbsp; He appears to speak of the Anglican
+Church as it was under Edward VI.&nbsp; (To Mrs. Locke, Dieppe, April
+6, 1559.) <a name="citation207a"></a><a href="#footnote207a">{207a}</a>&nbsp;
+As Elizabeth brought in &ldquo;cross and candle,&rdquo; her Church must
+have been odious to our Reformer.&nbsp; Calvin had regarded the &ldquo;silly
+things&rdquo; in our Prayer Book as &ldquo;endurable,&rdquo; not so
+Knox.&nbsp; Before he came back to Scotland, the Reformers were content
+with the English Prayer Book.&nbsp; By rejecting it, Knox and his allies
+disunited Scotland and England.</p>
+<p>Knox&rsquo;s friend Arran was threatening to stir up the Congregation
+for the purpose of securing him in the revenues of three abbeys, including
+St. Andrews, of which Lord James was Prior.&nbsp; The extremists raised
+the question, &ldquo;whether the Queen, being an idolater, may be obeyed
+in all civil and political actions.&rdquo; <a name="citation207b"></a><a href="#footnote207b">{207b}</a></p>
+<p>Knox later made Chatelherault promise this obedience; what his views
+were in November 1561 we know not.&nbsp; Lord James was already distrusted
+by his old godly friends; it was thought he would receive what he had
+long desired, the Earldom of Moray (November 11, 1561), and the precise
+professors meditated a fresh revolution.&nbsp; &ldquo;It must yet come
+to a new day,&rdquo; they said. <a name="citation207c"></a><a href="#footnote207c">{207c}</a>&nbsp;
+Those about Arran were discontented, and nobody was more in his confidence
+than Knox, but at this time Arran was absent from Edinburgh; was at
+St. Andrews.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile, at Court, &ldquo;the ladies are merry, dancing, lusty,
+and fair,&rdquo; wrote Randolph, who flirted with Mary Beaton (November
+18); and long afterwards, in 1578, when she was Lady Boyne, spoke of
+her as &ldquo;a very dear friend.&rdquo;&nbsp; Knox complains that the
+girls danced when they &ldquo;got the house alone&rdquo;; not a public
+offence!&nbsp; He had his intelligencers in the palace.</p>
+<p>There was, on November 16, a panic in the unguarded palace: <a name="citation208a"></a><a href="#footnote208a">{208a}</a>
+&ldquo;the poor damsels were left alone,&rdquo; while men hid in fear
+of nobody knew what, except a rumour that Arran was coming, with his
+congregational friends, &ldquo;to take away the Queen.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+The story was perhaps a fable, but Arran had been uttering threats.&nbsp;
+Mary, however, expected to be secured by an alliance with Elizabeth.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;The accord between the two Queens will quite overthrow them&rdquo;
+(the Bishops), &ldquo;and they say plainly that she cannot return a
+true Christian woman,&rdquo; writes Randolph. <a name="citation208b"></a><a href="#footnote208b">{208b}</a></p>
+<p>Lethington and Randolph both suspected that if Mary abandoned idolatry,
+it would be after conference with Elizabeth, and rather as being converted
+by that fair theologian than as compelled by her subjects.&nbsp; Unhappily
+Elizabeth never would meet Mary, who, for all that we know, might at
+this hour have adopted the Anglican <i>via media</i>, despite her protests
+to Knox and to the Pope of her fidelity to Rome.&nbsp; Like Henri IV.,
+she may at this time have been capable of preferring a crown&mdash;that
+of England&mdash;to a dogma.&nbsp; Her Mass, Randolph wrote, &ldquo;is
+rather for despite than devotion, for those that use it care not a straw
+for it, and jest sometimes against it.&rdquo; <a name="citation208c"></a><a href="#footnote208c">{208c}</a></p>
+<p>Randolph, at this juncture, reminded Mary that advisers of the Catholic
+party had prevented James V. from meeting Henry VIII.&nbsp; She answered,
+&ldquo;Something is reserved for us that was not then,&rdquo; possibly
+hinting at her conversion.&nbsp; Lord James shared the hopes of Lethington
+and Randolph.&nbsp; &ldquo;The Papists storm, thinking the meeting of
+the queens will overthrow Mass and all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Ministers of Mary, <i>les politiques</i>, indulged in dreams
+equally distasteful to the Catholics and to the more precise of the
+godly; dreams that came through the Ivory Gate; with pictures of the
+island united, and free from the despotism of Giant Pope and Giant Presbyter.
+<a name="citation209"></a><a href="#footnote209">{209}</a>&nbsp; A schism
+between the brethren and their old leaders and advisers, Lord James
+and Lethington, was the result.&nbsp; At the General Assembly of December
+1561, the split was manifest.&nbsp; The parties exchanged recriminations,
+and there was even question of the legality of such conventions as the
+General Assembly.&nbsp; Lethington asked whether the Queen &ldquo;allowed&rdquo;
+the gathering.&nbsp; Knox (apparently) replied, &ldquo;Take from us
+the freedom of Assemblies, and take from us the Evangel . . .&rdquo;&nbsp;
+He defended them as necessary for order among the preachers; but the
+objection, of course, was to their political interferences.&nbsp; The
+question was to be settled for Cromwell in his usual way, with a handful
+of hussars.&nbsp; It was now determined that the Queen might send Commissioners
+to the Assembly to represent her interests.</p>
+<p>The plea of the godly that Mary should ratify the Book of Discipline
+was countered by the scoffs of Lethington.&nbsp; He and his brothers
+ever tormented Knox by <i>persiflage</i>.&nbsp; Still the preachers
+must be supported, and to that end, by a singular compromise, the Crown
+assumed dominion over the property of the old Church, a proceeding which
+Mary, if a good Catholic, could not have sanctioned.&nbsp; The higher
+clergy retained two-thirds of their benefices, and the other third was
+to be divided between the preachers and the Queen.&nbsp; Vested rights,
+those of the prelates, and the interests of the nobles to whom, in the
+troubles, they had feued parts of their property, were thus secured;
+while the preachers were put off with a humble portion.&nbsp; Among
+the abbeys, that of St. Andrews, held by the good Lord James, was one
+of the richest.&nbsp; He appears to have retained all the wealth, for,
+as Bishop Keith says, &ldquo;the grand gulf that swallowed up the whole
+extent of the thirds were pensions given gratis by the Queen to those
+about the Court . . . of which last the Earl of Moray was always sure
+to obtain the thirds of his priories of St. Andrews and Pittenweem.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+In all, the whole reformed clergy received annually (but not in 1565-66)
+&pound;24,231, 17s. 7d. Scots, while Knox and four superintendents got
+a few chalders of wheat and &ldquo;bear.&rdquo;&nbsp; In 1568, when
+Mary had fallen, a gift of &pound;333, 6s. 8d. was made to Knox from
+the fund, about a seventh of the money revenue of the Abbey of St. Andrews.
+<a name="citation210"></a><a href="#footnote210">{210}</a>&nbsp; Nobody
+can accuse Knox of enriching himself by the Revolution.&nbsp; &ldquo;In
+the stool of Edinburgh,&rdquo; he declared that two parts were being
+given to the devil, &ldquo;and the third must be divided between God
+and the devil,&rdquo; between the preachers and the Queen, and the Earl
+of Moray, among others.&nbsp; The eminently godly Laird of Pitarro had
+the office of paying the preachers, in which he was so niggardly that
+the proverb ran, &ldquo;The good Laird of Pitarro was an earnest professor
+of Christ, but the great devil receive the Comptroller.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was argued that &ldquo;many Lords have not so much to spend&rdquo;
+as the preachers; and this was not denied (if the preachers were paid),
+but it was said the Lords had other industries whereby they might eke
+out their revenues.&nbsp; Many preachers, then or later, were driven
+also to other industries, such as keeping public-houses. <a name="citation211a"></a><a href="#footnote211a">{211a}</a>&nbsp;
+Knox, at this period, gracefully writes of Mary, &ldquo;we call her
+not a hoore.&rdquo;&nbsp; When she scattered his party after Riccio&rsquo;s
+murder, he went the full length of the expression, in his &ldquo;History.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Simplicity,&rdquo; says Thucydides, &ldquo;is no small part
+of a noble nature,&rdquo; and Knox was now to show simplicity in conduct,
+and in his narrative of a very curious adventure.</p>
+<p>The Hamiltons had taken little but loss by joining the Congregation.&nbsp;
+Arran could not recover his claims, on whatever they were founded, over
+the wealth of St. Andrews and Dunfermline.&nbsp; Chatelherault feared
+that Mary would deprive him of his place of refuge, the castle of Dumbarton,
+to which he confessed that his right was &ldquo;none,&rdquo; beyond
+a verbal promise of a nineteen years &ldquo;farm&rdquo; (when given
+we know not), from Mary of Guise. <a name="citation211b"></a><a href="#footnote211b">{211b}</a>&nbsp;
+Randolph began to believe that Arran really had contemplated a raid
+on Mary at Holyrood, where she had no guards. <a name="citation211c"></a><a href="#footnote211c">{211c}</a>&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Why,&rdquo; asked Arran, &ldquo;was it not as easy to take her
+out of the Abbey, as once it had been intended to do with her mother?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Here were elements of trouble, and Knox adds that, according to the
+servants of Chatelherault, Huntly and the Hamiltons devised to slay
+Lord James, who in January received the Earldom of Moray, but bore the
+title of Earl of Mar, which earldom he held for a brief space. <a name="citation212a"></a><a href="#footnote212a">{212a}</a>&nbsp;
+Huntly had claims on Moray, and hence hated Lord James.&nbsp; Arran
+was openly sending messengers to France; &ldquo;his councils are too
+patent.&rdquo;&nbsp; Randolph at the same time found Knox and the preachers
+&ldquo;as wilfull as learned, which heartily I lament&rdquo; (January
+30).&nbsp; The rumour that Mary had been persuaded by the Cardinal to
+turn Anglican &ldquo;makes them run almost wild&rdquo; (February 12).
+<a name="citation212b"></a><a href="#footnote212b">{212b}</a>&nbsp;
+If the Queen were an Anglican the new Kirk would be in an ill way.&nbsp;
+Arran still sent retainers to France, and was reported to speak ill
+of Mary (February 21), but the Duke tried to win Randolph to a marriage
+between Arran and the Queen.&nbsp; The intended bridegroom lay abed
+for a week, &ldquo;tormented by imaginations,&rdquo; but was contented,
+not to be reconciled with Bothwell, but to pass his misdeeds in &ldquo;oblivion,&rdquo;
+<a name="citation212c"></a><a href="#footnote212c">{212c}</a> as he
+declared to the Privy Council (February 20).</p>
+<p>In these threatening circumstances Bothwell made Knox&rsquo;s friend,
+Barron, a rich burgess who &ldquo;financed&rdquo; the Earl, introduce
+him to our Reformer.&nbsp; The Earl explained that his feud with Arran
+was very expensive; he had for his safety to keep &ldquo;a number of
+wicked and unprofitable men about him&rdquo;&mdash;his &ldquo;Lambs,&rdquo;
+the Ormistouns, <a name="citation213"></a><a href="#footnote213">{213}</a>
+young Hay of Tala, probably, and the rest.&nbsp; He therefore repented,
+and wished to be reconciled to Arran.&nbsp; Knox, pleased at being a
+reconciler where nobler men had failed, and moved, after long refusal,
+by the entreaties of the godly, as he tells Mrs. Locke, advised Bothwell
+first to be reconciled to God.&nbsp; So Bothwell presently was, going
+to sermon for that very purpose.&nbsp; Knox promised to approach Arran,
+and Bothwell, with his usual impudence, chose that moment to seize an
+old pupil of Knox&rsquo;s, the young Laird of Ormiston (Cockburn).&nbsp;
+The young laird, to be sure, had fired a pistol at his enemy.&nbsp;
+However, Bothwell repented of this lapse, and at the Hamilton&rsquo;s
+great house of Kirk-of-Field, Knox made him and Arran friends.&nbsp;
+Next day they went to sermon together; on the following day they visited
+Chatelherault at Kinneil, some twelve miles from Edinburgh.&nbsp; But
+on the ensuing day (March 26) came the wild end of the reconciliation.</p>
+<p>Knox had delivered his daily sermon, and was engaged with his vast
+correspondence, when Arran was announced, with an advocate and the town
+clerk.&nbsp; Arran began a conference with tears, said that he was betrayed,
+and told his tale.&nbsp; Bothwell had informed him that he would seize
+the Queen, put her in Dumbarton, kill her misguiders, the &ldquo;Earl
+of Moray&rdquo; (Mar, Lord James), Lethington, and others, &ldquo;and
+so shall he and I rule all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But Arran believed Bothwell really intended to accuse him of treason,
+or knowledge of treason, so he meant to write to Mary and Mar.&nbsp;
+Knox asked whether he had assented to the plot, and advised him to be
+silent.&nbsp; Probably he saw that Arran was distraught, and did not
+credit his story.&nbsp; But Arran said that Bothwell (as he had once
+done before, in 1559) would challenge him to a judicial combat&mdash;such
+challenges were still common, but never led to a fight.&nbsp; He then
+walked off with his legal advisers, and wrote to Mary at Falkland. <a name="citation214a"></a><a href="#footnote214a">{214a}</a>&nbsp;
+If Arran went mad, he went mad &ldquo;with advice of counsel.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+There had come the chance of &ldquo;a new day,&rdquo; which the extremists
+desired, but its dawn was inauspicious.</p>
+<p>Arran rode to his father&rsquo;s house of Kinneil, where, either
+because he was insane, or because there really was a Bothwell-Hamilton
+plot, he was locked up in a room high above the ground.&nbsp; He let
+himself down from the window, reached Halyards (a place of Kirkcaldy
+of Grange), and was thence taken by Mar (whom Knox appears to have warned)
+to the Queen at Falkland.&nbsp; Bothwell and Gawain Hamilton were also
+put in ward there.&nbsp; Randolph gives (March 31) a similar account,
+but believed that there really was a plot, which Arran denied even before
+he arrived at Falkland.&nbsp; Bothwell came to purge himself, but &ldquo;was
+found guilty on his own confession on some points.&rdquo; <a name="citation214b"></a><a href="#footnote214b">{214b}</a></p>
+<p>The Queen now went to St. Andrews, where the suspects were placed
+in the Castle.&nbsp; Arran wavered, accusing Mar&rsquo;s mother of witchcraft.&nbsp;
+Mary was &ldquo;not a little offended with Bothwell to whom she has
+been so good.&rdquo;&nbsp; Randolph (April 7) continued to think that
+Arran should be decapitated.&nbsp; He and Bothwell were kept in ward,
+and his father, the Duke, was advised to give up Dumbarton to the Crown,
+which he did. <a name="citation215a"></a><a href="#footnote215a">{215a}</a>&nbsp;
+This was about April 23.&nbsp; Knox makes a grievance of the surrender;
+the Castle, he says, was by treaty to be in the Duke&rsquo;s hands till
+the Queen had lawful issue. <a name="citation215b"></a><a href="#footnote215b">{215b}</a>&nbsp;
+Chatelherault himself, as we said, told Randolph that he had no right
+in the place, beyond a verbal and undated promise of the late Regent.</p>
+<p>Knox now again illustrates his own historical methods.&nbsp; Mary,
+riding between Falkland and Lochleven, fell, was hurt, and when Randolph
+wrote from Edinburgh on May 11, was not expected there for two or three
+days.&nbsp; But Knox reports that, on her return from Fife to Edinburgh,
+she danced excessively till after midnight, because she had received
+letters &ldquo;that persecution was begun again in France,&rdquo; by
+the Guises. <a name="citation215c"></a><a href="#footnote215c">{215c}</a>&nbsp;
+Now as, according to Knox elsewhere, &ldquo;Satan stirreth his terrible
+tail,&rdquo; so did one of Mary&rsquo;s uncles, the Duc de Guise, &ldquo;stir
+his tail&rdquo; against one of the towns appointed to pay Mary&rsquo;s
+jointure, namely Vassy, in Champagne.&nbsp; Here, on March 1, 1562,
+a massacre of Huguenots, by the Guise&rsquo;s retainers, began the war
+of religion afresh. <a name="citation215d"></a><a href="#footnote215d">{215d}</a></p>
+<p>Now, in the first place, this could not be joyful news to set Mary
+dancing; as it was apt to prevent what she had most at heart, her personal
+interview with Elizabeth.&nbsp; She understood this perfectly well,
+and, in conversation with Randolph, after her return to Edinburgh, lamented
+the deeds of her uncles, as calculated &ldquo;to bring them in hate
+and disdain of many princes,&rdquo; and also to chill Elizabeth&rsquo;s
+amity for herself&mdash;on which her whole policy now depended (May
+29). <a name="citation216a"></a><a href="#footnote216a">{216a}</a>&nbsp;
+She wept when Randolph said that, in the state of France, Elizabeth
+was not likely to move far from London for their interview.&nbsp; In
+this mood how could Mary give a dance to celebrate an event which threatened
+ruin to her hopes?</p>
+<p>Moreover, if Knox, when he speaks of &ldquo;persecution begun again,&rdquo;
+refers to the slaughter of Huguenots by Guise&rsquo;s retinue, at Vassy,
+that untoward event occurred on March 1, and Mary cannot have been celebrating
+it by a ball at Holyrood as late as May 14, at earliest. <a name="citation216b"></a><a href="#footnote216b">{216b}</a>&nbsp;
+Knox, however, preached against her dancing, if she danced &ldquo;for
+pleasure at the displeasure of God&rsquo;s people&rdquo;; so he states
+the case.&nbsp; Her reward, in that case, would he &ldquo;drink in hell.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+In his &ldquo;History&rdquo; he declares that Mary did dance for the
+evil reason attributed to her, a reason which must have been mere matter
+of inference on his part, and that inference wrong, judging by dates,
+if the reference is to the affair of Vassy.&nbsp; In April both French
+parties were committing brutalities, but these were all contrary to
+Mary&rsquo;s policy and hopes.</p>
+<p>If Knox heard a rumour against any one, his business, according to
+the &ldquo;Book of Discipline,&rdquo; was not to go and preach against
+that person, even by way of insinuation. <a name="citation216c"></a><a href="#footnote216c">{216c}</a>&nbsp;
+Mary&rsquo;s offence, if any existed, was not &ldquo;public,&rdquo;
+and was based on mere suspicion, or on tattle.&nbsp; Dr. M&lsquo;Crie,
+indeed, says that on hearing of the affair of Vassy, the Queen &ldquo;immediately
+after gave a splendid ball to her foreign servants.&rdquo;&nbsp; Ten
+weeks after the Vassy affair is not &ldquo;immediately&rdquo;; and Knox
+mentions neither foreign servants nor Vassy. <a name="citation216d"></a><a href="#footnote216d">{216d}</a></p>
+<p>The Queen sent for Knox, and made &ldquo;a long harangue,&rdquo;
+of which he does not report one word.&nbsp; He gives his own oration.&nbsp;
+Mary then said that she could not expect him to like her uncles, as
+they differed in religion.&nbsp; But if he heard anything of herself
+that he disapproved of, &ldquo;come to myself and tell me, and I shall
+hear you.&rdquo;&nbsp; He answered that he was not bound to come &ldquo;to
+every man in particular,&rdquo; but she <i>could</i> come to his sermons!&nbsp;
+If she would name a day and hour, he would give her a doctrinal lecture.&nbsp;
+At this very moment he &ldquo;was absent from his book&rdquo;; his studies
+were interrupted.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You will not always be at your book,&rdquo; she said, and
+turned her back.&nbsp; To some papists in the antechamber he remarked,
+&ldquo;Why should the pleasing face of a gentlewoman affray me?&nbsp;
+I have looked in the faces of many angry men, and yet have not been
+afraid above measure.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He was later to flee before that pleasing face.</p>
+<p>Mary can hardly be said to have had the worse, as far as manners
+and logic went, of this encounter, at which Morton, Mar, and Lethington
+were present, and seem to have been silent. <a name="citation217a"></a><a href="#footnote217a">{217a}</a></p>
+<p>Meanwhile, Randolph dates this affair, the dancing, the sermon, the
+interview, not in May, but about December 13-15, 1562, <a name="citation217b"></a><a href="#footnote217b">{217b}</a>
+and connects the dancing with no event in France, <a name="citation217c"></a><a href="#footnote217c">{217c}</a>
+nor can I find any such event in late November which might make Mary
+glad at heart.&nbsp; Knox, Randolph writes, mistrusts all that the Queen
+does or says, &ldquo;as if he were of God&rsquo;s Privy Council, that
+knew how he had determined of her in the beginning, or that he knew
+the secrets of her heart so well that she neither did nor could have
+one good thought of God or of his true religion.&rdquo;&nbsp; His doings
+could not increase her respect for his religion.</p>
+<p>The affair of Arran had been a sensible sorrow to Knox.&nbsp; &ldquo;God
+hath further humbled me since that day which men call Good Friday,&rdquo;
+he wrote to Mrs. Locke (May 6), &ldquo;than ever I have been in my life.
+. . .&rdquo;&nbsp; He had rejoiced in his task of peace-making, in which
+the Privy Council had practically failed, and had shown great <i>na&iuml;vet&eacute;</i>
+in trusting Bothwell.&nbsp; The best he could say to Mrs. Locke was
+that he felt no certainty about the fact that Bothwell had tempted Arran
+to conspire. <a name="citation218"></a><a href="#footnote218">{218}</a></p>
+<p>The probability is that the reckless and impoverished Bothwell did
+intend to bring in the desirable &ldquo;new day,&rdquo; and to make
+the Hamiltons his tools.&nbsp; Meanwhile he was kept out of mischief
+and behind stone walls for a season.&nbsp; Knox had another source of
+annoyance which was put down with a high hand.</p>
+<p>The dominie of the school at Linlithgow, Ninian Winzet by name, had
+lost his place for being an idolater.&nbsp; In February he had brought
+to the notice of our Reformer and of the Queen the question, &ldquo;Is
+John Knox a lawful minister?&rdquo;&nbsp; If he was called by God, where
+were his miracles?&nbsp; If by men, by what manner of men?&nbsp; On
+March 3, Winzet asked Knox for &ldquo;your answer in writing.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+He kept launching letters at Knox in March; on March 24 he addressed
+the general public; and, on March 31, issued an appeal to the magistrates,
+who appear to have been molesting people who kept Easter.&nbsp; The
+practice was forbidden in a proclamation by the Queen on May 31. <a name="citation219a"></a><a href="#footnote219a">{219a}</a>&nbsp;
+&ldquo;The pain is death,&rdquo; writes Randolph. <a name="citation219b"></a><a href="#footnote219b">{219b}</a>&nbsp;
+If Mary was ready to die for her faith, as she informed a nuncio who
+now secretly visited her, she seems to have been equally resolved that
+her subjects should not live in it.</p>
+<p>Receiving no satisfactory <i>written</i> answer from Knox, Winzet
+began to print his tract, and then he got his reply from &ldquo;soldiers
+and the magistrates,&rdquo; for the book was seized, and he himself
+narrowly escaped to the Continent. <a name="citation219c"></a><a href="#footnote219c">{219c}</a>&nbsp;
+Knox was not to be brought to a written reply, save so far as he likened
+his calling to that of Amos and John the Baptist.&nbsp; In September
+he referred to his &ldquo;Answer to Winzet&rsquo;s Questions&rdquo;
+as forthcoming, but it never appeared. <a name="citation219d"></a><a href="#footnote219d">{219d}</a>&nbsp;
+Winzet was Mary&rsquo;s chaplain in her Sheffield prison in 1570-72;
+she had him made Abbot of Ratisbon, and he is said, by Lethington&rsquo;s
+son, to have helped Lesley in writing his &ldquo;History.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>On June 29 the General Assembly, through Knox probably, drew up the
+address to the Queen, threatening her and the country with the wrath
+of God on her Mass, which, she is assured, is peculiarly distasteful
+to the Deity.&nbsp; The brethren are deeply disappointed that she does
+not attend their sermons, and ventures to prefer &ldquo;your ain preconceived
+vain opinion.&rdquo;&nbsp; They insist that adulterers must be punished
+with death, and they return to their demands for the poor and the preachers.&nbsp;
+A new rising is threatened if wicked men trouble the ministers and disobey
+the Superintendents.</p>
+<p>Lethington and Knox had one of their usual disputes over this manifesto;
+the Secretary drew up another.&nbsp; &ldquo;Here be many fair words,&rdquo;
+said the Queen on reading it; &ldquo;I cannot tell what the hearts are.&rdquo;
+<a name="citation220a"></a><a href="#footnote220a">{220a}</a>&nbsp;
+She later found out the nature of Lethington&rsquo;s heart, a pretty
+black one.&nbsp; The excesses of the Guises in France were now the excuse
+or cause of the postponement of Elizabeth&rsquo;s meeting with Mary.&nbsp;
+The Queen therefore now undertook a northern progress, which had been
+arranged for in January, about the time when Lord James was made Earl
+of Moray. <a name="citation220b"></a><a href="#footnote220b">{220b}</a></p>
+<p>He could not &ldquo;brook&rdquo; the Earldom of Moray before the
+Earl of Huntly was put down, Huntly being a kind of petty king in the
+east and north.&nbsp; There is every reason to suppose that Mary understood
+and utterly distrusted Huntly, who, though the chief Catholic in the
+country, had been a traitor whenever occasion served for many a year.&nbsp;
+One of his sons, John, in July, wounded an Ogilvy in Edinburgh in a
+quarrel over property.&nbsp; This affair was so managed as to drive
+Huntly into open rebellion, neither Mary nor her brother being sorry
+to take the opportunity.</p>
+<p>The business of the ruin of Huntly has seemed more of a mystery to
+historians than it was, though an attack by a Catholic princess on her
+most powerful Catholic subject does need explanation.&nbsp; But Randolph
+was with Mary during the whole expedition, and his despatches are better
+evidence than the fables of Buchanan and the surmises of Knox and Mr.
+Froude.&nbsp; Huntly had been out of favour ever since Lord James obtained
+the coveted Earldom of Moray in January, and he was thought to be opposed
+to Mary&rsquo;s visit to Elizabeth.&nbsp; Since January, the Queen had
+been bent on a northern progress.&nbsp; Probably the Archbishop of St.
+Andrews, as reported by Knox, rightly guessed the motives.&nbsp; At
+table he said, &ldquo;The Queen has gone into the north, belike to seek
+disobedience; she may perhaps find the thing that she seeks.&rdquo;
+<a name="citation221a"></a><a href="#footnote221a">{221a}</a>&nbsp;
+She wanted a quarrel with Huntly, and a quarrel she found.&nbsp; Her
+northward expedition, says Randolph, &ldquo;is rather devised by herself
+than greatly approved by her Council.&rdquo;&nbsp; She would not visit
+Huntly at Strathbogie, contrary to the advice of her Council; his son,
+who wounded Ogilvy, had broken prison, and refused to enter himself
+at Stirling Castle.&nbsp; Huntly then supported his sons in rebellion,
+while Bothwell broke prison and fortified himself in Hermitage Castle.&nbsp;
+Lord James&rsquo;s Earldom of Moray was now publicly announced (September
+18), and Huntly was accused of a desire to murder him and Lethington,
+while his son John was to seize the Queen. <a name="citation221b"></a><a href="#footnote221b">{221b}</a>&nbsp;
+Mary was &ldquo;utterly determined to bring him to utter confusion.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Huntly was put to the horn on October 18; his sons took up arms.&nbsp;
+Huntly, old and corpulent, died during a defeat at Corrichie without
+stroke of sword; his mischievous son John was taken and executed, Mary
+being pleased with her success, and declaring that Huntly thought &ldquo;to
+have married her where he would,&rdquo; <a name="citation221c"></a><a href="#footnote221c">{221c}</a>
+and to have slain her brother.&nbsp; John Gordon confessed to the murder
+plot. <a name="citation221d"></a><a href="#footnote221d">{221d}</a>&nbsp;
+His eldest brother, Lord Gordon, who had tried to enlist Bothwell and
+the Hamiltons, lay long in prison (his sister married Bothwell just
+before Riccio&rsquo;s murder).&nbsp; The Queen had punished the disobedience
+which she &ldquo;went to seek,&rdquo; and Moray was safe in his rich
+earldom, while a heavy blow was dealt at the Catholicism which Huntly
+had protected. <a name="citation222a"></a><a href="#footnote222a">{222a}</a>&nbsp;
+Cardinal Guise reports her success to de Rennes, in Austria, with triumph,
+and refers to an autograph letter of hers, of which Lethington&rsquo;s
+draft has lately perished by fire, unread by historians.&nbsp; As the
+Cardinal reports that she says she is trying to win her subjects back
+to the Church, &ldquo;in which she wishes to live and die&rdquo; (January
+30, 1562-63), Lethington cannot be the author of that part of her lost
+letter. <a name="citation222b"></a><a href="#footnote222b">{222b}</a></p>
+<p>Knox meanwhile, much puzzled by the news from the north, was in the
+western counties.&nbsp; He induced the lairds of Ayrshire to sign a
+Protestant band, and he had a controversy with the Abbot of Crosraguel.&nbsp;
+In misapplication of texts the abbot was even more eccentric than Knox,
+though he only followed St. Jerome.&nbsp; In his &ldquo;History&rdquo;
+Knox &ldquo;cannot certainly say whether there was any secret paction
+and confederacy between the Queen herself and Huntly.&rdquo; <a name="citation222c"></a><a href="#footnote222c">{222c}</a>&nbsp;
+Knox decides that though Mary executed John Gordon and other rebels,
+yet &ldquo;it was the destruction of others that she sought,&rdquo;
+namely, of her brother, whom she hated &ldquo;for his godliness and
+upright plainness.&rdquo; <a name="citation222d"></a><a href="#footnote222d">{222d}</a>&nbsp;
+His upright simplicity had won him an earldom and the destruction of
+his rival!&nbsp; He and Lethington may have exaggerated Huntly&rsquo;s
+iniquities in council with Mary, but the rumours reported against her
+by Knox could only be inspired by the credulity of extreme ill-will.&nbsp;
+He flattered himself that he kept the Hamiltons quiet, and, at a supper
+with Randolph in November, made Chatelherault promise to be a good subject
+in civil matters, and a good Protestant in religion.</p>
+<p>Knox says that preaching was done with even unusual vehemence in
+winter, when his sermon against the Queen&rsquo;s dancing for joy over
+some unknown Protestant misfortune was actually delivered, and the good
+seed fell on ground not wholly barren.&nbsp; The Queen&rsquo;s French
+and Scots musicians would not play or sing at the Queen&rsquo;s Christmas-day
+Mass, whether pricked in heart by conscience, or afraid for their lives.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Her poor soul is so troubled for the preservation of her silly
+Mass that she knoweth not where to turn for defence of it,&rdquo; says
+Randolph. <a name="citation223a"></a><a href="#footnote223a">{223a}</a>&nbsp;
+These persecutions may have gone far to embitter the character of the
+victim.</p>
+<p>Mr. Froude is certainly not an advocate of Mary Stuart, rather he
+is conspicuously the reverse.&nbsp; But he remarks that when she determined
+to marry Darnley, &ldquo;divide Scotland,&rdquo; and trust to her Catholic
+party, she did so because she was &ldquo;weary of the mask which she
+had so long worn, and unable to endure any longer these wild insults
+to her creed and herself.&rdquo; <a name="citation223b"></a><a href="#footnote223b">{223b}</a>&nbsp;
+She had, in fact, given the policy of submission to &ldquo;wild insults&rdquo;
+rather more than a fair chance; she had, for a spirited girl, been almost
+incredibly long-suffering, when &ldquo;barbarously baited,&rdquo; as
+Charles I. described his own treatment by the preachers and the Covenanters.</p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVI: KNOX AND QUEEN MARY (continued): 1563-1564</h2>
+<p>The new year, 1563, found Knox purging the Kirk from that fallen
+brother, Paul Methuen.&nbsp; This preacher had borne the burden and
+heat of the day in 1557-58, erecting, as we have seen, the first &ldquo;reformed&rdquo;
+Kirk, that of the Holy Virgin, in Dundee, and suffering some inconvenience,
+if no great danger, from the clergy of the religion whose sacred things
+he overthrew.&nbsp; He does not appear to have been one of the more
+furious of the new apostles.&nbsp; Contrasted with John Brabner, &ldquo;a
+vehement man inculcating the law and pain thereof,&rdquo; Paul is described
+as &ldquo;a milder man, preaching the evangel of grace and remission
+of sins in the blood of Christ.&rdquo; <a name="citation224a"></a><a href="#footnote224a">{224a}</a></p>
+<p>Paul was at this time minister of Jedburgh.&nbsp; He had &ldquo;an
+ancient matron&rdquo; to wife, recommended, perhaps, by her property,
+and she left him for two months with a servant maid.&nbsp; Paul fell,
+but behaved not ill to the mother of his child, sending her &ldquo;money
+and clothes at various times.&rdquo;&nbsp; Knox tried the case at Jedburgh;
+Paul was excommunicated, and fled the realm, sinking so low, it seems,
+as to take orders in the Church of England.&nbsp; Later he returned&mdash;probably
+he was now penniless&mdash;&ldquo;and prostrated himself before the
+whole brethren with weeping and howling.&rdquo;&nbsp; He was put to
+such shameful and continued acts of public penance up and down the country
+that any spirit which he had left awoke in him, and the Kirk knew him
+no more.&nbsp; Thus &ldquo;the world might see what difference there
+is between darkness and light.&rdquo; <a name="citation225a"></a><a href="#footnote225a">{225a}</a></p>
+<p>Knox presently had to record a scandal in a higher place, the capture
+and execution of the French minor poet, Chastelard, who, armed with
+sword and dagger, hid under the Queen&rsquo;s bed in Holyrood; and invaded
+her room with great insolence at Burntisland as she was on her way to
+St. Andrews.&nbsp; There he was tried, condemned, and executed in the
+market-place.&nbsp; It seems fairly certain that Chastelard, who had
+joined the Queen with despatches during the expedition against Huntly,
+was a Huguenot.&nbsp; The Catholic version, and Lethington&rsquo;s version,
+of his adventure was that some intriguing Huguenot lady had set him
+on to sully Queen Mary&rsquo;s character; other tales ran that he was
+to assassinate her, as part of a great Protestant conspiracy. <a name="citation225b"></a><a href="#footnote225b">{225b}</a></p>
+<p>Randolph, who knew as much as any one, thought the Queen far too
+familiar with the poet, but did not deem that her virtue was in fault.
+<a name="citation225c"></a><a href="#footnote225c">{225c}</a>&nbsp;
+Knox dilates on Mary&rsquo;s familiarities, kisses given in a vulgar
+dance, dear to the French society of the period, and concludes that
+the fatuous poet &ldquo;lacked his head, that his tongue should not
+utter the secrets of our Queen.&rdquo; <a name="citation225d"></a><a href="#footnote225d">{225d}</a></p>
+<p>There had been a bad harvest, and a dearth, because the Queen&rsquo;s
+luxury &ldquo;provoked God&rdquo; (who is represented as very irritable)
+&ldquo;to strike the staff of bread,&rdquo; and to &ldquo;give His malediction
+upon the fruits of the earth.&nbsp; But oh, alas, who looked, or yet
+looks, to the very cause of all our calamities!&rdquo; <a name="citation226a"></a><a href="#footnote226a">{226a}</a></p>
+<p>Some savage peoples are said to sacrifice their kings when the weather
+is unpropitious.&nbsp; Knox&rsquo;s theology was of the same kind.&nbsp;
+The preachers, says Randolph (February 28), &ldquo;pray daily . . .
+that God will either turn the Queen&rsquo;s heart or grant her short
+life.&nbsp; Of what charity or spirit this proceeds, I leave to be discussed
+by great divines.&rdquo; <a name="citation226b"></a><a href="#footnote226b">{226b}</a>&nbsp;
+The prayers sound like encouragement to Jehus.</p>
+<p>At this date Ruthven was placed, &ldquo;by Lethington&rsquo;s means
+only,&rdquo; on the Privy Council.&nbsp; Moray especially hated Ruthven
+&ldquo;for his sorcery&rdquo;; the superstitious Moray affected the
+Queen with this ill opinion of one of the elect&mdash;in the affair
+of Riccio&rsquo;s murder so useful to the cause of Knox.&nbsp; &ldquo;There
+is not an unworthier in Scotland&rdquo; than Ruthven, writes Randolph.
+<a name="citation226c"></a><a href="#footnote226c">{226c}</a>&nbsp;
+Meanwhile Lethington was in England to negotiate for peace in France;
+if he could, to keep an eye on Mary&rsquo;s chances for the succession,
+and (says Knox) to obtain leave for Lennox, the chief of the Stuarts
+and the deadly foe of the Hamiltons, to visit Scotland, whence, in the
+time of Henry VIII., he had been driven as a traitor.&nbsp; But Lethington
+was at that time confuting Lennox&rsquo;s argument that the Hamilton
+chief, Chatelherault, was illegitimate.&nbsp; Knox is not positive,
+he only reports rumours. <a name="citation226d"></a><a href="#footnote226d">{226d}</a>&nbsp;
+Lethington&rsquo;s serious business was to negotiate a marriage for
+the Queen.</p>
+<p>Despite the recent threats of death against priests who celebrated
+Mass, the Archbishop Hamilton and Knox&rsquo;s opponent, the Abbot of
+Crossraguel, with many others, did so at Easter.&nbsp; The Ayrshire
+brethren &ldquo;determined to put to their own hands,&rdquo; captured
+some priests, and threatened others with &ldquo;the punishment that
+God has appointed to idolaters by His law.&rdquo; <a name="citation227a"></a><a href="#footnote227a">{227a}</a>&nbsp;
+The Queen commanded Knox to meet her at Lochleven in mid-April&mdash;Lochleven,
+where she was later to be a prisoner.&nbsp; In that state lay the priests
+of her religion, who had been ministering to the people, &ldquo;some
+in secret houses, some in barns, some in woods and hills,&rdquo; writes
+Randolph, &ldquo;all are in prison.&rdquo; <a name="citation227b"></a><a href="#footnote227b">{227b}</a></p>
+<p>Mary, for two hours before supper, implored Knox to mediate with
+the western fanatics.&nbsp; He replied, that if princes would not use
+the sword against idolaters, there was the leading case of Samuel&rsquo;s
+slaughter of Agag; and he adduced another biblical instance, of a nature
+not usually cited before young ladies.&nbsp; He was on safer ground
+in quoting the Scots law as it stood.&nbsp; Judges within their bounds
+were to seek out and punish &ldquo;mass-mongers&rdquo;&mdash;that was
+his courteous term.</p>
+<p>The Queen, rather hurt, went off to supper, but next morning did
+her best to make friends with Knox over other matters.&nbsp; She complained
+of Ruthven, who had given her a ring for some magical purpose, later
+explained by Ruthven, who seems to have despised the superstition of
+his age.&nbsp; The Queen, says Ruthven, was afraid of poison; he gave
+her the ring, saying that it acted as an antidote.&nbsp; Moray was at
+Lochleven with the Queen, and Moray believed, or pretended to believe,
+in Ruthven&rsquo;s &ldquo;sossery,&rdquo; as Randolph spells &ldquo;sorcery.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+She, rather putting herself at our Reformer&rsquo;s mercy, complained
+that Lethington alone placed Ruthven in the Privy Council.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That man is absent,&rdquo; said Knox, &ldquo;and therefore
+I will speak nothing on that behalf.&rdquo;&nbsp; Mary then warned him
+against &ldquo;the man who was at time most familiar with the said John,
+in his house and at table,&rdquo; the despicable Bishop of Galloway,
+and Knox later found out that the warning was wise.&nbsp; Lastly, she
+asked him to reconcile the Earl and Countess of Argyll&mdash;&ldquo;do
+this much for my sake&rdquo;; and she promised to summon the offending
+priests who had done their duty. <a name="citation228a"></a><a href="#footnote228a">{228a}</a></p>
+<p>Knox, with his usual tact, wrote to Argyll thus: &ldquo;Your behaviour
+toward your wife is very offensive unto many godly.&rdquo;&nbsp; He
+added that, if all that was said of Argyll was true, and if he did not
+look out, he would be damned.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This bill was not well accepted of the said Earl,&rdquo; but,
+like the rest of them, he went on truckling to Knox, &ldquo;most familiar
+with the said John.&rdquo; <a name="citation228b"></a><a href="#footnote228b">{228b}</a></p>
+<p>Nearly fifty priests were tried, but no one was hanged.&nbsp; They
+were put in ward; &ldquo;the like of this was never heard within the
+realm,&rdquo; said pleased Protestants, not &ldquo;smelling the craft.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Neither the Queen nor her Council had the slightest desire to put priests
+to death.&nbsp; Six other priests &ldquo;as wicked as&rdquo; the Archbishop
+were imprisoned, and the Abbot of Crossraguel was put to the horn in
+his absence, just as the preachers had been.&nbsp; The Catholic clergy
+&ldquo;know not where to hide their heads,&rdquo; says Randolph.&nbsp;
+Many fled to the more tender mercies of England; &ldquo;it will be the
+common refuge of papists that cannot live here . . .&rdquo; <a name="citation228c"></a><a href="#footnote228c">{228c}</a>&nbsp;
+The tassels on the trains of the ladies, it was declared by the preachers,
+&ldquo;would provoke God&rsquo;s vengeance . . . against the whole realm
+. . &rdquo; <a name="citation229a"></a><a href="#footnote229a">{229a}</a></p>
+<p>The state of things led to a breach between Knox and Moray, which
+lasted till the Earl found him likely to be useful, some eighteen months
+later.</p>
+<p>The Reformer relieved his mind in the pulpit at the end of May or
+early in June, rebuking backsliders, and denouncing the Queen&rsquo;s
+rumoured marriage with any infidel, &ldquo;and all Papists are infidels.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Papists and Protestants were both offended.&nbsp; There was a scene
+with Mary, in which she wept profusely, an infirmity of hers; we constantly
+hear of her weeping in public.&nbsp; She wished the Lords of the Articles
+to see whether Knox&rsquo;s &ldquo;manner of speaking&rdquo; was not
+punishable, but nothing could be done.&nbsp; Elizabeth would have found
+out a way. <a name="citation229b"></a><a href="#footnote229b">{229b}</a></p>
+<p>The fact that while Knox was conducting himself thus, nobody ventured
+to put a dirk or a bullet into him&mdash;despite the obvious strength
+of the temptation in many quarters&mdash;proves that he was by far the
+most potent human being in Scotland.&nbsp; Darnley, Moray, Lennox were
+all assassinated, when their day came, though the feeblest of the three,
+Darnley, had a powerful clan to take up his feud.&nbsp; We cannot suppose
+that any moral considerations prevented the many people whom Knox had
+offended from doing unto him as the Elect did to Riccio.&nbsp; Manifestly,
+nobody had the courage.&nbsp; No clan was so strong as the warlike brethren
+who would have avenged the Reformer, and who probably would have been
+backed by Elizabeth.</p>
+<p>Again, though he was estranged from Moray, that leader was also,
+in some degree, estranged from Lethington, who did not allow him to
+know the details of his intrigues, in France and England, for the Queen&rsquo;s
+marriage.&nbsp; The marriage question was certain to reunite Moray and
+Knox.&nbsp; When Knox told Mary that, as &ldquo;a subject of this realm,&rdquo;
+he had a right to oppose her marriage with any infidel, he spoke the
+modern constitutional truth.&nbsp; For Mary to wed a Royal Catholic
+would certainly have meant peril for Protestantism, war with England,
+and a tragic end.&nbsp; But what Protestant could she marry?&nbsp; If
+a Scot, he would not long have escaped the daggers of the Hamiltons;
+indeed, all the nobles would have borne the fiercest jealousy against
+such an one as, say, Glencairn, who, we learn, could say anything to
+Mary without offence.&nbsp; She admired a strong brave man, and Glencairn,
+though an opponent, was gallant and resolute.&nbsp; England chose only
+to offer the infamous and treacherous Leicester, whose character was
+ruined by the mysterious death of his wife (Amy Robsart), and who had
+offered to sell England and himself to idolatrous Spain.&nbsp; Mary&rsquo;s
+only faint chance of safety lay in perpetual widowhood, or in marrying
+Knox, by far the most powerful of her subjects, and the best able to
+protect her and himself.</p>
+<p>This idea does not seem to have been entertained by the subtle brain
+of Lethington.&nbsp; Between February and May 1563, the Cardinal of
+Lorraine had reopened an old negotiation for wedding the Queen to the
+Archduke, and Mary had given an evasive reply; she must consult Parliament.&nbsp;
+In March, with the Spanish Ambassador in London, Lethington had proposed
+for Don Carlos.&nbsp; Philip II., as usual, wavered, consented (in August),
+considered, and reconsidered.&nbsp; Lethington, in France, had told
+the Queen-Mother that the Spanish plan was only intended to wring concessions
+from Elizabeth; and, on his return to England, had persuaded the Spanish
+Ambassador that Charles IX. was anxious to succeed to his brother&rsquo;s
+widow.&nbsp; This moved Philip to be favourable to the Don Carlos marriage,
+but he waited; there was no sign from France, and Philip withdrew, wavering
+so much that both the Austrian and Spanish matches became impossible.&nbsp;
+On October 6, Knox, who suspected more than he knew, told Cecil that
+out of twelve Privy Councillors, nine would consent to a Catholic marriage.&nbsp;
+The only hope was in Moray, and Knox &ldquo;daily thirsted&rdquo; for
+death. <a name="citation231a"></a><a href="#footnote231a">{231a}</a>&nbsp;
+He appealed to Leicester (about whose relations with Elizabeth he was,
+of course, informed) as to a man who &ldquo;may greatly advance the
+purity of religion.&rdquo; <a name="citation231b"></a><a href="#footnote231b">{231b}</a></p>
+<p>These letters to Cecil and Leicester are deeply pious in tone, and
+reveal a cruel anxiety.&nbsp; On June 20, three weeks after Knox&rsquo;s
+famous sermon, Lethington told de Quadra, the Spanish Ambassador, that
+Elizabeth threatened to be Mary&rsquo;s enemy if she married Don Carlos
+or any of the house of Austria. <a name="citation231c"></a><a href="#footnote231c">{231c}</a>&nbsp;
+On August 26, 1563, Randolph received instructions from Elizabeth, in
+which the tone of menace was unconcealed.&nbsp; Elizabeth would offer
+an English noble: &ldquo;we and our country cannot think any mighty
+prince a meet husband for her.&rdquo; <a name="citation231d"></a><a href="#footnote231d">{231d}</a></p>
+<p>Knox was now engaged in a contest wherein he was triumphant; an affair
+which, in later years, was to have sequels of high importance.&nbsp;
+During the summer vacation of 1563, while Mary was moving about the
+country, Catholics in Edinburgh habitually attended at Mass in her chapel.&nbsp;
+This was contrary to the arrangement which permitted no Mass in the
+whole realm, except that of the Queen, when her priests were not terrorised.&nbsp;
+The godly brawled in the Chapel Royal, and two of them were arrested,
+two very dear brethren, named Cranstoun and Armstrong; they were to
+be tried on October 24.&nbsp; Knox had a kind of Dictator&rsquo;s commission
+from the Congregation, &ldquo;to see that the Kirk took no harm,&rdquo;
+and to the Congregation he appealed by letter.&nbsp; The accused brethren
+had only &ldquo;noted what persons repaired to the Mass,&rdquo; but
+they were charged with divers crimes, especially invading her Majesty&rsquo;s
+palace.&nbsp; Knox therefore convoked the Congregation to meet in Edinburgh
+on the day of trial, in the good old way of overawing justice. <a name="citation232a"></a><a href="#footnote232a">{232a}</a>&nbsp;
+Of course we do not know to what lengths the dear brethren went in their
+pious indignation.&nbsp; The legal record mentions that they were armed
+with pistols, in the town and Court suburb; and it was no very unusual
+thing, later, for people to practise pistol shooting at each other even
+in their own Kirk of St. Giles&rsquo;s. <a name="citation232b"></a><a href="#footnote232b">{232b}</a></p>
+<p>Still, pistols, if worn in the palace chapel have not a pacific air.&nbsp;
+The brethren are also charged with assaulting some of the Queen&rsquo;s
+domestic servants. <a name="citation232c"></a><a href="#footnote232c">{232c}</a></p>
+<p>Archbishop Spottiswoode, son of one of the Knoxian Superintendents,
+says that the brethren &ldquo;forced the gates, and that some of the
+worshippers were taken and carried to prison. . . . &rdquo; <a name="citation232d"></a><a href="#footnote232d">{232d}</a>&nbsp;
+Knox admits in his &ldquo;History&rdquo; that &ldquo;some of the brethren
+<i>burst in</i>&rdquo; to the chapel.&nbsp; In his letter to stir up
+the godly, he says that the brethren &ldquo;passed&rdquo; (in), &ldquo;and
+that <i>in most quiet manner</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>On receiving Knox&rsquo;s summons the Congregation prepared its levies
+in every town and province. <a name="citation233a"></a><a href="#footnote233a">{233a}</a>&nbsp;
+The Privy Council received a copy of Knox&rsquo;s circular, and concluded
+that it &ldquo;imported treason.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>To ourselves it does seem that for a preacher to call levies out
+of every town and province, to meet in the capital on a day when a trial
+was to be held, is a thing that no Government can tolerate.&nbsp; The
+administration of justice is impossible in the circumstances.&nbsp;
+But it was the usual course in Scotland, and any member of the Privy
+Council might, at any time, find it desirable to call a similar convocation
+of his allies.&nbsp; Mary herself, fretted by the perfidies of Elizabeth,
+had just been consoled by that symbolic jewel, a diamond shaped like
+a rock, and by promises in which she fondly trusted when she at last
+sought an asylum in England, and found a prison.&nbsp; For two months
+she had often been in deep melancholy, weeping for no known cause, and
+she was afflicted by the &ldquo;pain in her side&rdquo; which ever haunted
+her (December 13-21). <a name="citation233b"></a><a href="#footnote233b">{233b}</a></p>
+<p>Accused by the Master of Maxwell of unbecoming conduct, Knox said
+that such things had been done before, and he had the warrant &ldquo;of
+God, speaking plainly in his Word.&rdquo;&nbsp; The Master (later Lord
+Herries), not taking this view of the case, was never friendly with
+Knox again; the Reformer added this comment as late as December 1571.
+<a name="citation233c"></a><a href="#footnote233c">{233c}</a></p>
+<p>Lethington and Moray, like Maxwell, remonstrated vainly with our
+Reformer.&nbsp; Randolph (December 21) reports that the Lords assembled
+&ldquo;to take order with Knox and his faction, who intended by a mutinous
+assembly made by his letter before, to have rescued two of their brethren
+from course of law. . . . &rdquo; <a name="citation234a"></a><a href="#footnote234a">{234a}</a>&nbsp;
+Knox was accompanied to Holyrood by a force of brethren who crowded
+&ldquo;the inner close and all the stairs, even to the chamber door
+where the Queen and Council sat.&rdquo; <a name="citation234b"></a><a href="#footnote234b">{234b}</a>&nbsp;
+Probably these &ldquo;slashing communicants&rdquo; had their effect
+on the minds of the councillors.&nbsp; Not till after Riccio&rsquo;s
+murder was Mary permitted to have a strong guard.</p>
+<p>According to Knox, Mary laughed a horse laugh when he entered, saying,
+&ldquo;Yon man gart me greit, and grat never tear himself.&nbsp; I will
+see gif I can gar him greit.&rdquo;&nbsp; Her Scots, textually reported,
+was certainly idiomatic.</p>
+<p>Knox acknowledged his letter to the Congregation, and Lethington
+suggested that he might apologise.&nbsp; Ruthven said that Knox made
+convocation of people daily to hear him preach; what harm was there
+in his letter merely calling people to convocation.&nbsp; This was characteristic
+pettifogging.&nbsp; Knox said that he convened the people to meet on
+the day of trial according to the order &ldquo;that the brethren has
+appointed . . . at the commandment of the general Kirk of the Realm.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Mary seems, strangely enough, to have thought that this was a valid
+reply.&nbsp; Perhaps it was, and the Kirk&rsquo;s action in that sense,
+directed against the State, finally enabled Cromwell to conquer the
+Kirk-ridden country.&nbsp; Mary appears to have admitted the Kirk&rsquo;s
+<i>imperium in imperio</i>, for she diverted the discussion from the
+momentous point really at issue&mdash;the right of the Kirk to call
+up an armed multitude to thwart justice.&nbsp; She now fell on Knox&rsquo;s
+employment of the word &ldquo;cruelty.&rdquo;&nbsp; He instantly started
+on a harangue about &ldquo;pestilent Papists,&rdquo; when the Queen
+once more introduced a personal question; he had caused her to weep,
+and he recounted all their interview after he attacked her marriage
+from the pulpit.</p>
+<p>He was allowed to go home&mdash;it might not have been safe to arrest
+him, and the Lords, unanimously, voted that he had done no offence.&nbsp;
+They repeated their votes in the Queen&rsquo;s presence, and thus a
+precedent for &ldquo;mutinous convocation&rdquo; by Kirkmen was established,
+till James VI. took order in 1596.&nbsp; We have no full narrative of
+this affair except that of Knox.&nbsp; It is to be guessed that the
+nobles wished to maintain the old habit of mutinous convocation which,
+probably, saved the life of Lethington, and helped to secure Bothwell&rsquo;s
+acquittal from the guilt of Darnley&rsquo;s murder.&nbsp; Perhaps, too,
+the brethren who filled the whole inner Court and overflowed up the
+stairs of the palace, may have had their influence.</p>
+<p>This was a notable triumph of our Reformer, and of the Kirk; to which,
+on his showing, the Queen contributed, by feebly wandering from the
+real point at issue.&nbsp; She was no dialectician.&nbsp; Knox&rsquo;s
+conduct was, of course, approved of and sanctioned by the General Assembly.
+<a name="citation235"></a><a href="#footnote235">{235}</a>&nbsp; He
+had, in his circular, averred that Cranstoun and Armstrong were summoned
+&ldquo;that a door may be opened to execute cruelty upon a greater multitude.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+To put it mildly, the General Assembly sanctioned contempt of Court.&nbsp;
+Unluckily for Scotland contempt of Court was, and long remained, universal,
+the country being desperately lawless, and reeking with blood shed in
+public and private quarrels.&nbsp; When a Prophet followed the secular
+example of summoning crowds to overawe justice, the secular sinners
+had warrant for thwarting the course of law.</p>
+<p>As to the brethren and the idolaters who caused these troubles, we
+know not what befell them.&nbsp; The penalty, both for the attendants
+at Mass and for the disturbers thereof, should have been death!&nbsp;
+The dear brethren, if they attacked the Queen&rsquo;s servants, came
+under the Proclamation of October 1561; so did the Catholics, for <i>they</i>
+&ldquo;openly made alteration and innovation of the state of religion.
+. . . &rdquo;&nbsp; They ought &ldquo;to be punished to the death with
+all rigour.&rdquo;&nbsp; Three were outlawed, and their sureties &ldquo;unlawed.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Twenty-one others were probably not hanged; the records are lost.&nbsp;
+For the same reason we know not what became of the brethren Armstrong,
+Cranstoun, and George Rynd, summoned with the other malefactors for
+November 13. <a name="citation236"></a><a href="#footnote236">{236}</a></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVII: KNOX AND QUEEN MARY (continued), 1564-1567</h2>
+<p>During the session of the General Assembly in December 1563, Knox
+was compelled to chronicle domestic enormities.&nbsp; The Lord Treasurer,
+Richardson, having, like Captain Booth, &ldquo;offended the law of Dian,&rdquo;
+had to do penance before the whole congregation, and the sermon (unfortunately
+it is lost, probably it never was written out) was preached by Knox.&nbsp;
+A French apothecary of the Queen&rsquo;s, and his mistress, were hanged
+on a charge of murdering their child. <a name="citation237a"></a><a href="#footnote237a">{237a}</a>&nbsp;
+On January 9, 1564-65, Randolph noted that one of the Queen&rsquo;s
+Maries, Mary Livingstone, is to marry John Sempill, son of Robert, third
+Lord Sempill, by an English wife.&nbsp; Knox assures us that &ldquo;it
+is well known that shame hastened marriage between John Sempill, called
+&lsquo;the Dancer,&rsquo; and Mary Livingstone, surnamed &lsquo;the
+Lusty.&rsquo;&rdquo;&nbsp; The young people appear, however, to have
+been in no pressing hurry, as Randolph, on January 9, did not expect
+their marriage till the very end of February; they wished the Earl of
+Bedford, who was coming on a diplomatic mission, to be present. <a name="citation237b"></a><a href="#footnote237b">{237b}</a>&nbsp;
+Mary, on March 9, 1565, made them a grant of lands, since &ldquo;it
+has pleased God to move their hearts to join together in the state of
+matrimony.&rdquo; <a name="citation237c"></a><a href="#footnote237c">{237c}</a>&nbsp;
+She had ever since January been making the bride presents of feminine
+finery.</p>
+<p>These proceedings indicating no precipitate haste, we may think that
+Mary Livingstone, like Mary of Guise, is only a victim of the Reformer&rsquo;s
+taste for &ldquo;society journalism.&rdquo;&nbsp; Randolph, though an
+egregious gossip, says of the Four Maries, &ldquo;they are all good,&rdquo;
+but Knox writes that &ldquo;the ballads of that age&rdquo; did witness
+to the &ldquo;bruit&rdquo; or reputation of these maidens.&nbsp; As
+is well known the old ballad of &ldquo;Mary Hamilton,&rdquo; which exists
+in more than a dozen very diverse variants, in some specimens confuses
+one of the Maries, an imaginary &ldquo;Mary Hamilton,&rdquo; with the
+French maid who was hanged at the end of 1563.&nbsp; The balladist is
+thus responsible for a scandal against the fair sisterhood; there was
+no &ldquo;Mary Hamilton,&rdquo; and no &ldquo;Mary Carmichael,&rdquo;
+in their number&mdash;Beaton, Seton, Fleming, and Livingstone.</p>
+<p>An offended Deity now sent frost in January 1564, and an aurora borealis
+in February, Knox tells us, and &ldquo;the threatenings of the preachers
+were fearful,&rdquo; in face of these unusual meteorological phenomena.
+<a name="citation238"></a><a href="#footnote238">{238}</a></p>
+<p>Vice rose to such a pitch that men doubted if the Mass really was
+idolatry!&nbsp; Knox said, from the pulpit, that if the sceptics were
+right, <i>he</i> was &ldquo;miserably deceived.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Believe
+me, brethren, in the bowels of Christ, it is possible that you may be
+mistaken,&rdquo; Cromwell was to tell the Commissioners of the General
+Assembly, on a day that still was in the womb of the future; the dawn
+of common sense rose in the south.</p>
+<p>On March 20, much to the indignation of the Queen, the banns were
+read twice between Knox and a lady of the Royal blood and name, Margaret
+Stewart, daughter of Lord Ochiltree, a girl not above sixteen, in January
+1563, when Randolph first speaks of the wooing. <a name="citation239"></a><a href="#footnote239">{239}</a>&nbsp;
+The good Dr. M&lsquo;Crie does not mention the age of the bride!&nbsp;
+The lady was a very near kinswoman of Chatelherault.&nbsp; She had plenty
+of time for reflection, and as nobody says that she was coerced into
+the marriage, while Nicol Burne attributes her passion to sorcery, we
+may suppose that she was in love with our Reformer.&nbsp; She bore him
+several daughters, and it is to be presumed that the marriage, though
+in every way <i>bizarre</i>, was happy.&nbsp; Burne says that Knox wished
+to marry a Lady Fleming, akin to Chatelherault, but was declined; if
+so, he soon consoled himself.</p>
+<p>At this time Riccio&mdash;a <i>valet de chambre</i> of the Queen
+in 1561-62&mdash;&ldquo;began to grow great in Court,&rdquo; becoming
+French Secretary at the end of the year.&nbsp; By June 3, 1565, Randolph
+is found styling Riccio &ldquo;only governor&rdquo; to Darnley.&nbsp;
+His career might have rivalled that of the equally low-born Cardinal
+Alberoni, but for the daggers of Moray&rsquo;s party.</p>
+<p>In the General Assembly of June 1564, Moray, Morton, Glencairn, Pitarro,
+Lethington, and other Lords of the Congregation held aloof from the
+brethren, but met the Superintendents and others to discuss the recent
+conduct of our Reformer, who was present.&nbsp; He was invited, by Lethington,
+to &ldquo;moderate himself&rdquo; in his references to the Queen, as
+others might imitate him, &ldquo;albeit not with the same modesty and
+foresight,&rdquo; for Lethington could not help bantering Knox.&nbsp;
+Knox, of course, rushed to his doctrine of &ldquo;idolatry&rdquo; as
+provocative of the wrath of God&mdash;we have heard of the bad harvest,
+and the frost in January.&nbsp; It is not worth while to pursue in detail
+the discourses, in which Knox said that the Queen rebelled against God
+&ldquo;in all the actions of her life.&rdquo;&nbsp; Ahab and Jezebel
+were again brought on the scene.&nbsp; It profited not Lethington to
+say that all these old biblical &ldquo;vengeances&rdquo; were &ldquo;singular
+motions of the Spirit of God, and appertain nothing to our age.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+If Knox could have understood <i>that</i>, he would not have been Knox.&nbsp;
+The point was intelligible; Lethington perceived it, but Knox never
+chose to do so.&nbsp; He went on with his isolated texts, Lethington
+vainly replying &ldquo;the cases are nothing alike.&rdquo;&nbsp; Knox
+came to his old stand, &ldquo;the idolater must die the death,&rdquo;
+and the executioners must be &ldquo;the people of God.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Lethington quoted many opinions against Knox&rsquo;s, to no purpose,
+opinions of Luther, Melanchthon, Bucer, Musculus, and Calvin, but our
+Reformer brought out the case of &ldquo;Amasiath, King of Judah,&rdquo;
+and &ldquo;The Apology of Magdeburg.&rdquo;&nbsp; As to the opinion
+of Calvin and the rest he drew a distinction.&nbsp; They had only spoken
+of the godly who were suffering under oppression, not of the godly triumphant
+in a commonwealth.&nbsp; He forgot, or did not choose to remember, a
+previous decision of his own, as we shall see.</p>
+<p>When the rest of the party were discussing the question, Makgill,
+Clerk Register, reminded them of their previous debate in November 1561,
+when <a name="citation240"></a><a href="#footnote240">{240}</a> Knox,
+after secretly writing to Calvin, had proposed to write to him for his
+opinion about the Queen&rsquo;s Mass, and Lethington had promised to
+do so himself.&nbsp; But Lethington now said that, on later reflection,
+as Secretary of the Queen, he had scrupled, without her consent, to
+ask a foreigner whether her subjects might prevent her from enjoying
+the rites of her own religion&mdash;for that was what the &ldquo;controversies&rdquo;
+between her Highness and her subjects really and confessedly meant.
+<a name="citation241a"></a><a href="#footnote241a">{241a}</a></p>
+<p>Knox was now requested to consult Calvin, &ldquo;and the learned
+in other Kirks, to know their judgment in that question.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+The question, judging from Makgill&rsquo;s interpellation, was &ldquo;whether
+subjects might lawfully take her Mass from the Queen.&rdquo; <a name="citation241b"></a><a href="#footnote241b">{241b}</a>&nbsp;
+As we know, Knox had already put the question to Calvin by a letter
+of October 24, 1561, and so had the anonymous writer of November 18,
+1561, whom I identify with Arran.&nbsp; Knox now refused to write to
+&ldquo;Mr. Calvin, and the learned of other Kirks,&rdquo; saying (I
+must quote him textually, or be accused of misrepresentation), &ldquo;I
+myself am not only fully resolved in conscience, but also I have heard
+the judgments in this, and all other things that I have affirmed in
+this Realm, of the most godly and most learned that be known in Europe.&nbsp;
+I come not to this Realm without their resolution; and for my assurance
+I have the handwritings of many; and therefore if I should move the
+same question again, what else should I do but either show my own ignorance
+and forgetfulness, or else inconstancy?&rdquo; <a name="citation241c"></a><a href="#footnote241c">{241c}</a>&nbsp;
+He therefore said that his opponents might themselves &ldquo;write and
+complain upon him,&rdquo; and so learn &ldquo;the plain minds&rdquo;
+of the learned&mdash;but nobody took the trouble.&nbsp; Knox&rsquo;s
+defence was worded with the skill of a notary.&nbsp; He said that he
+had &ldquo;heard the judgments&rdquo; of &ldquo;the learned and godly&rdquo;;
+he did not say what these judgments were.&nbsp; Calvin, Morel, Bullinger,
+and such men, we know, entirely differed from his extreme ideas.&nbsp;
+He &ldquo;came not without their resolution,&rdquo; or approval, to
+Scotland, but that was not the question at issue.</p>
+<p>If Knox had received from Calvin favourable replies to his own letter,
+and Arran&rsquo;s, of October 24, November 18, 1561, can any one doubt
+that he would now have produced them, unless he did not wish the brethren
+to find out that he himself had written without their knowledge?&nbsp;
+We know what manner of answers he received, in 1554, orally from Calvin,
+in writing from Bullinger, to his questions about resistance to the
+civil power. <a name="citation242a"></a><a href="#footnote242a">{242a}</a>&nbsp;
+I am sceptical enough to suppose that, if Knox had now possessed letters
+from Calvin, justifying the propositions which he was maintaining, such
+as that &ldquo;the people, yea, <i>or ane pairt of the people</i>, may
+execute God&rsquo;s jugementis against their King, being ane offender,&rdquo;
+<a name="citation242b"></a><a href="#footnote242b">{242b}</a> he would
+have exhibited them.&nbsp; I do not believe that he had any such letters
+from such men as Bullinger and Calvin.&nbsp; Indeed, we may ask whether
+the question of the Queen&rsquo;s Mass had arisen in any realm of Europe
+except Scotland.&nbsp; Where was there a Catholic prince ruling over
+a Calvinistic state?&nbsp; If nowhere, then the question would not be
+raised, except by Knox in his letter to Calvin of October 24, 1561.&nbsp;
+And where was Calvin&rsquo;s answer, and to what effect?</p>
+<p>Knox may have forgotten, and Lethington did not know, that, about
+1558-59, in a tract, already noticed (pp. 101-103 <i>supra</i>), of
+450 pages against the Anabaptists, Knox had expressed the reverse of
+his present opinion about religious Regicide.&nbsp; He is addressing
+the persecuting Catholic princes of Europe: &ldquo; . . . Ye shall perish,
+both temporally and for ever.&nbsp; And by whom doth it most appear
+that temporally ye shall be punished?&nbsp; By <i>us</i>, whom ye banish,
+whom ye spoil and rob, whom cruelly ye persecute, and whose blood ye
+daily shed? <a name="citation243a"></a><a href="#footnote243a">{243a}</a>&nbsp;
+There is no doubt, but as the victory which overcometh the world is
+our faith, so it behoveth us to possess our souls in our patience.&nbsp;
+We neither privily nor openly deny the power of the Civil Magistrate.
+. . . &rdquo;</p>
+<p>The chosen saints and people of God, even when under oppression,
+lift not the hand, but possess their souls in patience, says Knox, in
+1558-59.&nbsp; But the idolatrous shall be temporally punished&mdash;by
+other hands.&nbsp; &ldquo;And what instruments can God find in this
+life more apt to punish you than those&rdquo; (the Anabaptists), &ldquo;that
+hate and detest all lawful powers? . . .&nbsp; God will not use his
+saints and chosen people to punish you.&nbsp; <i>For with them there
+is always mercy</i>, yea, even although God have pronounced a curse
+and malediction, as in the history of Joshua is plain.&rdquo; <a name="citation243b"></a><a href="#footnote243b">{243b}</a></p>
+<p>In this passage Knox is speaking for the English exiles in Geneva.&nbsp;
+He asserts that we &ldquo;neither publicly nor privately deny the power
+of the Civil Magistrate,&rdquo; in face of his own published tracts
+of appeal to a Jehu or a Phinehas, and of his own claim that the Prophet
+may preach treason, and that his instruments may commit treason.&nbsp;
+To be sure all the English in Geneva were not necessarily of Knox&rsquo;s
+mind.</p>
+<p>It is altogether a curious passage.&nbsp; God&rsquo;s people are
+more merciful than God!&nbsp; Israel was bidden to exterminate all idolaters
+in the Promised Land, but, as the Book of Joshua shows, they did not
+always do it: &ldquo;for with them is always mercy&rdquo;; despite the
+massacres, such as that of Agag, which Knox was wont to cite as examples
+to the backward brethren!&nbsp; Yet, relying on another set of texts,
+not in <i>Joshua</i>, Knox now informed Lethington that the executors
+of death on idolatrous princes were &ldquo;the people of God&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;the
+people, or a part of the people.&rdquo; <a name="citation244a"></a><a href="#footnote244a">{244a}</a></p>
+<p>Mercy!&nbsp; Happily the policy of carnal men never allowed Knox&rsquo;s
+&ldquo;people of God&rdquo; to show whether, given a chance to destroy
+idolaters, they would display the mercy on which he insists in his reply
+to the Anabaptist.</p>
+<p>It was always useless to argue with Knox; for whatever opinion happened
+to suit him at the moment (and at different moments contradictory opinions
+happened to suit him), he had ever a Bible text to back him.&nbsp; On
+this occasion, if Lethington had been able to quote Knox&rsquo;s own
+statement, that with the people of God &ldquo;there is always mercy&rdquo;
+(as in the case of Cardinal Beaton), he could hardly have escaped by
+saying that there was always mercy, <i>when the people of God had not
+the upper hand in the State</i>, <a name="citation244b"></a><a href="#footnote244b">{244b}</a>
+when unto them God has <i>not</i> &ldquo;given sufficient force.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+For in the chosen people of God &ldquo;there is <i>always</i> mercy,
+yea even although God have pronounced a curse and malediction.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In writing against Anabaptists (1558-59), Knox wanted to make <i>them</i>,
+not merciful Calvinists, the objects of the fear and revenge of Catholic
+rulers.&nbsp; He even hazarded one of his unfulfilled prophecies: Anabaptists,
+wicked men, will execute those divine judgments for which Protestants
+of his species are too tender-hearted; though, somehow, they make exceptions
+in the cases of Beaton and Riccio, and ought to do so in the case of
+Mary Stuart!</p>
+<p>Lethington did not use this passage of our Reformer&rsquo;s works
+against him, though it was published in 1560.&nbsp; Probably the secretary
+had not worked his way through the long essay on Predestination.&nbsp;
+But we have, in the book against the Anabaptists and in the controversy
+with Lethington, an example of Knox&rsquo;s fatal intellectual faults.&nbsp;
+As an individual man, he would not have hurt a fly.&nbsp; As a prophet,
+he deliberately tried to restore, by a pestilent anachronism, in a Christian
+age and country, the ferocities attributed to ancient Israel.&nbsp;
+This he did not even do consistently, and when he is inconsistent with
+his prevailing mood, his biographers applaud his &ldquo;moderation&rdquo;!&nbsp;
+If he saw a chance against an Anabaptist, or if he wanted to conciliate
+Mary of Guise, he took up a Christian line, backing it by texts appropriate
+to the occasion.</p>
+<p>His influence lasted, and the massacre of Dunavertie (1647), and
+the slaying of women in cold blood, months after the battle of Philiphaugh,
+and the &ldquo;rouping&rdquo; of covenanted &ldquo;ravens&rdquo; for
+the blood of cavaliers taken under quarter, are the direct result of
+Knox&rsquo;s intellectual error, of his appeals to Jehu, Phinehas, and
+so forth.</p>
+<p>At this point the Fourth Book of Knox&rsquo;s &ldquo;History&rdquo;
+ends with a remark on the total estrangement between himself and Moray.&nbsp;
+The Reformer continued to revise and interpolate his work, up to 1571,
+the year before his death, and made collections of materials, and notes
+for the continuation.&nbsp; An uncertain hand has put these together
+in Book V.&nbsp; But we now miss the frequent references to &ldquo;John
+Knox,&rdquo; and his doings, which must have been vigorous during the
+troubles of 1565, after the arrival in Scotland of Darnley (February
+1565), and his courtship and marriage of the Queen.&nbsp; These events
+brought together Moray, Chatelherault, and many of the Lords in the
+armed party of the Congregation.&nbsp; They rebelled; they were driven
+by Mary into England, by October 1565, and Bothwell came at her call
+from France.&nbsp; The Queen had new advisers&mdash;Riccio, Balfour,
+Bothwell, the eldest son of the late Huntly, and Lennox, till the wretched
+Darnley in a few weeks proved his incapacity.&nbsp; Lethington, rather
+neglected, hung about the Court, as he remained with Mary of Guise long
+after he had intended to desert her.</p>
+<p>Mary, whose only chance lay in outstaying Elizabeth in the policy
+of celibacy, had been driven, or led, by her rival Queen into a marriage
+which would have been the best possible, had Darnley been a man of character
+and a Protestant.&nbsp; He was the typical &ldquo;young fool,&rdquo;
+indolent, incapable, fierce, cowardly, and profligate.&nbsp; His religion
+was dubious.&nbsp; After his arrival (on February 26, 1565) he went
+with Moray to hear Knox preach, but he had been bred by a Catholic mother,
+and, on occasion, posed as an ardent Catholic. <a name="citation246"></a><a href="#footnote246">{246}</a>&nbsp;
+It is unfortunate that Randolph is silent about Knox during all the
+period of the broils which preceded and followed Mary&rsquo;s marriage.</p>
+<p>On August 19, 1565, Darnley, now Mary&rsquo;s husband, went to hear
+Knox preach in St. Giles&rsquo;s, on the text, &ldquo;O Lord our God,
+other lords than Thou have ruled over us.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;God,&rdquo;
+he said, &ldquo;sets in that room (for the offences and ingratitude
+of the people) boys and women.&rdquo;&nbsp; Ahab also appeared, as usual.&nbsp;
+Ahab &ldquo;had not taken order with that harlot, Jezebel.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+So Book V. says, and &ldquo;harlot&rdquo; would be a hit at Mary&rsquo;s
+alleged misconduct with Riccio.&nbsp; A hint in a letter of Randolph&rsquo;s
+of August 24, may point to nascent scandal about the pair.&nbsp; But
+the printed sermon, from Knox&rsquo;s written copy, reads, not &ldquo;harlot&rdquo;
+but &ldquo;idolatrous wife.&rdquo;&nbsp; At all events, Darnley was
+so moved by this sermon that he would not dine. <a name="citation247a"></a><a href="#footnote247a">{247a}</a>&nbsp;
+Knox was called &ldquo;from his bed&rdquo; to the Council chamber, where
+were Atholl, Ruthven, Lethington, the Justice Clerk, and the Queen&rsquo;s
+Advocate.&nbsp; He was attended by a great crowd of notable citizens,
+but Lethington forbade him to preach for a fortnight or three weeks.&nbsp;
+He said that, &ldquo;If the Church would command him to preach or abstain
+he would obey, so far as the Word of God would permit him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It seems that he would only obey even the Church as far as he chose.</p>
+<p>The Town Council protested against the deprivation, and we do not
+know how long Knox desisted from preaching.&nbsp; Laing thinks that,
+till Mary fell, he preached only &ldquo;at occasional intervals.&rdquo;
+<a name="citation247b"></a><a href="#footnote247b">{247b}</a>&nbsp;
+But we shall see that he did presently go on preaching, with Lethington
+for a listener.&nbsp; He published his sermon, without name of place
+or printer.&nbsp; The preacher informs his audience that &ldquo;in the
+Hebrew there is no conjunction copulative&rdquo; in a certain sentence;
+probably he knew more Hebrew than most of our pastors.</p>
+<p>The sermon is very long, and, wanting the voice and gesture of the
+preacher, is no great proof of eloquence; in fact, is tedious.&nbsp;
+Probably Darnley was mainly vexed by the length, though he may have
+had intelligence enough to see that he and Mary were subjects of allusions.&nbsp;
+Knox wrote the piece from memory, on the last of August, in &ldquo;the
+terrible roaring of guns, and the noise of armour.&rdquo;&nbsp; The
+banded Lords, Moray and the rest, had entered Edinburgh, looking for
+supporters, and finding none.&nbsp; Erskine, commanding the Castle,
+fired six or seven shots as a protest, and the noise of these disturbed
+the prophet at his task.&nbsp; As a marginal note says, &ldquo;The Castle
+of Edinburgh was shooting against the exiled for Christ Jesus&rsquo;
+sake&rdquo; <a name="citation248a"></a><a href="#footnote248a">{248a}</a>&mdash;namely,
+at Moray and his company.&nbsp; Knox prayed for them in public, and
+was accused of so doing, but Lethington testified that he had heard
+&ldquo;the sermons,&rdquo; and found in them no ground of offence. <a name="citation248b"></a><a href="#footnote248b">{248b}</a></p>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/knox5b.jpg">
+<img alt="Mary Stuart. From the portrait in the collection of the Earl of Morton" src="images/knox5s.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p>Moray, Ochiltree, Pitarro, and many others being now exiles in England,
+whose Queen had subsidised and repudiated them and their revolution,
+things went hard with the preachers.&nbsp; For a whole year at least
+(December 1565-66) their stipends were not paid, the treasury being
+exhausted by military and other expenses, and Pitarro being absent.&nbsp;
+At the end of December, Knox and his colleague, Craig, were ordered
+by the General Assembly to draw up and print a service for a general
+Fast, to endure from the last Sunday in February to the first in March,
+1566.&nbsp; One cause alleged is that the Queen&rsquo;s conversion had
+been hoped for, but now she said that she would &ldquo;maintain and
+defend&rdquo; <a name="citation248c"></a><a href="#footnote248c">{248c}</a>
+her own faith.&nbsp; She had said no less to Knox at their first interview,
+but now she had really written, when invited to abolish her Mass, that
+her subjects may worship as they will, but that she will not desert
+her religion. <a name="citation249a"></a><a href="#footnote249a">{249a}</a>&nbsp;
+It was also alleged that the godly were to be destroyed all over Europe,
+in accordance with decrees of the Council of Trent.&nbsp; Moreover,
+vice, manslaughter, and oppression of the poor continued, prices of
+commodities rose, and work was scamped.&nbsp; The date of the Fast was
+fixed, not to coincide with Lent, but because it preceded an intended
+meeting of Parliament, <a name="citation249b"></a><a href="#footnote249b">{249b}</a>
+a Parliament interrupted by the murder of Riccio, and the capture of
+the Queen.&nbsp; No games were to be played during the two Sundays of
+the Fast, which looks as if they were still permitted on other Sundays.&nbsp;
+The appointed lessons were from Judges, Esther, Chronicles, Isaiah,
+and Esdras; the New Testament, apparently, supplied nothing appropriate.&nbsp;
+It seldom did.&nbsp; The lay attendants of the Assembly of Christmas
+Day which decreed the Fast, were Morton, Mar, Lindsay, Lethington, with
+some lairds.</p>
+<p>The Protestants must have been alarmed, in February 1566, by a report,
+to which Randolph gave circulation, that Mary had joined a Catholic
+League, with the Pope, the Emperor, the King of Spain, the Duke of Savoy,
+and others.&nbsp; Lethington may have believed this; at all events he
+saw no hope of pardon for Moray and his abettors&mdash;&ldquo;no certain
+way, unless we chop at the very root, you know where it lieth&rdquo;
+(February 9). <a name="citation249c"></a><a href="#footnote249c">{249c}</a>&nbsp;
+Probably he means the murder of Riccio, not of the Queen.&nbsp; Bedford
+said that Mary had not yet signed the League. <a name="citation249d"></a><a href="#footnote249d">{249d}</a>&nbsp;
+We are aware of no proof that there was any League to sign, and though
+Mary was begging money both from Spain and the Pope, she probably did
+not expect to procure more than tolerance for her own religion. <a name="citation250a"></a><a href="#footnote250a">{250a}</a>&nbsp;
+The rumours, however, must have had their effect in causing apprehension.&nbsp;
+Moreover, Darnley, from personal jealousy; Morton, from fear of losing
+the Seals; the Douglases, kinsmen of Morton and Darnley; and the friends
+of the exiled nobles, seeing that they were likely to be forfeited,
+conspired with Moray in England to be Darnley&rsquo;s men, to slay Riccio,
+and to make the Queen subordinate to Darnley, and &ldquo;to fortify
+and maintain&rdquo; the Protestant faith.&nbsp; Mary, indeed, had meant
+to reintroduce the Spiritual Estate into Parliament, as a means of assisting
+her Church; so she writes to Archbishop Beaton in Paris. <a name="citation250b"></a><a href="#footnote250b">{250b}</a></p>
+<p>Twelve wooden altars, to be erected in St. Giles&rsquo;s, are said
+by Knox&rsquo;s continuator to have been found in Holyrood. <a name="citation250c"></a><a href="#footnote250c">{250c}</a></p>
+<p>Mary&rsquo;s schemes, whatever they extended to, were broken by the
+murder of Riccio in the evening of March 9.&nbsp; He was seized in her
+presence, and dirked by fifty daggers outside of her room.&nbsp; Ruthven,
+who in June 1564 had come into Mary&rsquo;s good graces, and Morton
+were, with Darnley, the leaders of the Douglas feud, and of the brethren.</p>
+<p>The nobles might easily have taken, tried, and hanged Riccio, but
+they yielded to Darnley and to their own excited passions, when once
+they had torn him from the Queen.&nbsp; The personal pleasure of dirking
+the wretch could not be resisted, and the danger of causing the Queen&rsquo;s
+miscarriage and death may have entered into the plans of Darnley.&nbsp;
+Knox does not tell the story himself; his &ldquo;History&rdquo; ends
+in June 1564.&nbsp; But &ldquo;in plain terms&rdquo; he &ldquo;lets
+the world understand what we mean,&rdquo; namely, that Riccio &ldquo;was
+justly punished,&rdquo; and that &ldquo;the act&rdquo; (of the murderers)
+was &ldquo;most just and most worthy of <i>all</i> praise.&rdquo; <a name="citation251a"></a><a href="#footnote251a">{251a}</a>&nbsp;
+This Knox wrote just after the event, while the murderers were still
+in exile in England, where Ruthven died&mdash;seeing a vision of angels!&nbsp;
+Knox makes no drawback to the entirely and absolutely laudable character
+of the deed.&nbsp; He goes out of his way to tell us &ldquo;in plain
+terms what we mean,&rdquo; in a digression from his account of affairs
+sixteen years earlier.&nbsp; Thus one fails to understand the remark,
+that &ldquo;of the manner in which the deed was done we may be certain
+that Knox would disapprove as vehemently as any of his contemporaries.&rdquo;
+<a name="citation251b"></a><a href="#footnote251b">{251b}</a>&nbsp;
+The words may be ironical, for vehement disapproval was not conspicuous
+among Protestant contemporaries.&nbsp; Knox himself, after Mary scattered
+the party of the murderers and recovered power, prayed that heaven would
+&ldquo;put it into the heart of a multitude&rdquo; to treat Mary like
+Athaliah.</p>
+<p>Mary made her escape from Holyrood to Dunbar, to safety, in the night
+of March 11.&nbsp; March 12 found Knox on his knees; the game was up,
+the blood had been shed in vain.&nbsp; The Queen had not died, but was
+well, and surrounded by friends; and the country was rather for her
+than against her.&nbsp; The Reformer composed a prayer, repenting that
+&ldquo;in quiet I am negligent, in trouble impatient, tending to desperation,&rdquo;
+which shows insight.&nbsp; He speaks of his pride and ambition, also
+of his covetousness and malice.&nbsp; That he was really covetous we
+cannot believe, nor does he show malice except against idolaters.&nbsp;
+He &ldquo;does not doubt himself to be elected to eternal salvation,&rdquo;
+of which he has &ldquo;assured signs.&rdquo;&nbsp; He has &ldquo;knowledge
+above the common sort of my brethren&rdquo; (pride has crept in again!),
+and has been compelled to &ldquo;forespeak,&rdquo; or prophesy.&nbsp;
+He implores mercy for his &ldquo;desolate bedfellow,&rdquo; for her
+children, and for his sons by his first wife.&nbsp; &ldquo;Now, Lord,
+put end to my misery!&rdquo; (Edinburgh, March 12, 1566).&nbsp; Knox
+fled from Edinburgh, &ldquo;with a great mourning of the godly of religion,&rdquo;
+says a Diarist, on the same day as the chief murderers took flight,
+March 17; his place of refuge was Kyle in Ayrshire (March 21, 1566).
+<a name="citation252a"></a><a href="#footnote252a">{252a}</a></p>
+<p>In Randolph&rsquo;s letter, recording the flight of these nobles,
+he mentions eight of their accomplices, and another list is pinned to
+the letter, giving names of men &ldquo;all at the death of Davy and
+privy thereunto.&rdquo;&nbsp; This applies to about a dozen men, being
+a marginal note opposite their names.&nbsp; A line lower is added, &ldquo;John
+Knox, John Craig, preachers.&rdquo; <a name="citation252b"></a><a href="#footnote252b">{252b}</a>&nbsp;
+There is no other evidence that Knox, who fled, or Craig, who stood
+to his pulpit, were made privy to the plot.&nbsp; When idolaters thought
+it best not to let the Pope into a scheme for slaying Elizabeth, it
+is hardly probable that Protestants would apprise their leading preachers.&nbsp;
+On the other hand, Calvin was consulted by the would-be assassins of
+the Duc de Guise, in 1559-60, and he prevented the deed, as he assures
+the Duchesse de Ferrare, the mother-in-law of the Duc, after that noble
+was murdered in good earnest. <a name="citation252c"></a><a href="#footnote252c">{252c}</a>&nbsp;
+Calvin, we have shown, knew beforehand of the conspiracy of Amboise,
+which aimed at the death of &ldquo;Antonius,&rdquo; obviously Guise.&nbsp;
+He disapproved of but did not reveal the plot.&nbsp; Knox, whether privy
+to the murder or not, did not, when he ran away, take the best means
+of disarming suspicion.&nbsp; Neither his name nor that of Craig occurs
+in two lists containing those of between seventy and eighty persons
+&ldquo;delated,&rdquo; and it is to be presumed that he fled because
+he did not feel sure of protection against Mary&rsquo;s frequently expressed
+dislike.</p>
+<p>In earlier days, with a strong backing, he had not feared &ldquo;the
+pleasing face of a gentlewoman,&rdquo; as he said, but now he did fear
+it.&nbsp; Kyle suited him well, because the Earl of Cassilis, who had
+been an idolater, was converted by a faithful bride, in August.&nbsp;
+Dr. M&lsquo;Crie <a name="citation253a"></a><a href="#footnote253a">{253a}</a>
+says that Mary &ldquo;wrote to a nobleman in the west country with whom
+Knox resided, to banish him from his house.&rdquo;&nbsp; The evidence
+for this is a letter of Parkhurst to Bullinger, in December 1567.&nbsp;
+Parkhurst tells Bullinger, among other novelties, that Riccio was a
+necromancer, who happened to be dirked; by whom he does not say.&nbsp;
+He adds that Mary commanded &ldquo;a certain pious earl&rdquo; not to
+keep Knox in his house. <a name="citation253b"></a><a href="#footnote253b">{253b}</a></p>
+<p>In Kyle Knox worked at his &ldquo;History.&rdquo;&nbsp; On September
+4 he signed a letter sent from the General Assembly at St. Andrews to
+Beza, approving of a Swiss confession of faith, except so far as the
+keeping of Christmas, Easter, and other Christian festivals is concerned.&nbsp;
+Knox himself wrote to Beza, about this time, an account of the condition
+of Scotland.&nbsp; It would be invaluable, as the career of Mary was
+rushing to the falls, but it is lost. <a name="citation253c"></a><a href="#footnote253c">{253c}</a></p>
+<p>On December 24, Mary pardoned all the murderers of Riccio; and Knox
+appears to have been present, though it is not certain, at the Christmas
+General Assembly in Edinburgh.&nbsp; He received permission to visit
+his sons in England, and he wrote two letters: one to the Protestant
+nobles on Mary&rsquo;s attempt to revive the consistorial jurisdiction
+of the Primate; the other to the brethren.&nbsp; To England he carried
+a remonstrance from the Kirk against the treatment of Puritans who had
+conscientious objections to the apparel&mdash;&ldquo;Romish rags&rdquo;&mdash;of
+the Church Anglican.&nbsp; Men ought to oppose themselves boldly to
+Authority; that is, to Queen Elizabeth, if urged further than their
+consciences can bear. <a name="citation254a"></a><a href="#footnote254a">{254a}</a></p>
+<p>Being in England, Knox, of course, did not witness the events associated
+with the Catholic baptism of the baby prince (James VI.); the murder
+of Darnley, in February 1567; the abduction of Mary by Bothwell, and
+her disgraceful marriage to her husband&rsquo;s murderer, in May 1567.&nbsp;
+If Knox excommunicated the Queen, it was probably about this date.&nbsp;
+Long afterwards, on April 25, 1584, Mary was discussing the various
+churches with Waad, an envoy of Cecil.&nbsp; Waad said that the Pope
+stirred up peoples not to obey their sovereigns.&nbsp; &ldquo;Yet,&rdquo;
+said the Queen, &ldquo;a Pope shall excommunicate <i>you</i>, but <i>I</i>
+was excommunicated by a pore minister, Knokes.&nbsp; In fayth I feare
+nothinge else but that they will use my sonne as they have done the
+mother.&rdquo; <a name="citation254b"></a><a href="#footnote254b">{254b}</a></p>
+<h2>CHAPTER XVIII: THE LAST YEARS OF KNOX: 1567-1572</h2>
+<p>The Royal quarry, so long in the toils of Fate, was dragged down
+at last, and the doom forespoken by the prophet was fulfilled.&nbsp;
+A multitude had their opportunity with this fair Athaliah; and Mary
+had ridden from Carberry Hill, a draggled prisoner, into her own town,
+among the yells of &ldquo;burn the harlot.&rdquo;&nbsp; But one out
+of all her friends was faithful to her.&nbsp; Mary Seton, to her immortal
+honour, rode close by the side of her fallen mistress and friend.</p>
+<p>For six years insulted and thwarted; her smiles and her tears alike
+wasted on greedy, faithless courtiers and iron fanatics; perplexed and
+driven desperate by the wiles of Cecil and Elizabeth; in bodily pain
+and constant sorrow&mdash;the sorrow wrought by the miscreant whom she
+had married; without one honest friend; Mary had wildly turned to the
+man who, it is to be supposed, she thought could protect her, and her
+passion had dragged her into unplumbed deeps of crime and shame.</p>
+<p>The fall of Mary, the triumph of Protestantism, appear to have, in
+some degree, rather diminished the prominence of Knox.&nbsp; He would
+never make Mary weep again.&nbsp; He had lost the protagonist against
+whom, for a while, he had stood almost alone, and soon we find him complaining
+of neglect.&nbsp; He appeared at the General Assembly of June 25, 1567&mdash;a
+scanty gathering.&nbsp; George Buchanan, a layman, was Moderator: the
+Assembly was adjourned to July 21, and the brethren met in arms; wherefore
+Argyll, who had signed the band for Darnley&rsquo;s murder, declined
+to come. <a name="citation256a"></a><a href="#footnote256a">{256a}</a>&nbsp;
+The few nobles, the barons, and others present, vowed to punish the
+murder of Darnley and to defend the child prince; and it was decided
+that henceforth all Scottish princes should swear to &ldquo;set forward
+the true religion of Jesus Christ, as at present professed and established
+in this realm&rdquo;&mdash;as they are bound to do&mdash;&ldquo;by Deuteronomy
+and the second chapter of the Book of Kings,&rdquo; which, in fact,
+do not speak of establishing Calvinism.</p>
+<p>Among those who sign are Morton, who had guilty foreknowledge of
+the murder; while his kinsman, Archibald Douglas, was present at the
+doing; Sir James Balfour, who was equally involved; Lethington, who
+signed the murder covenant; and Douglas of Whittingham, and Ker of Faldonside,
+two of Riccio&rsquo;s assassins.&nbsp; Most of the nobles stood aloof.</p>
+<p>Presently Throckmorton arrived, sent by Elizabeth with the pretence,
+at least, of desiring to save Mary&rsquo;s life, which, but for his
+exertions, he thought would have been taken.&nbsp; He &ldquo;feared
+Knox&rsquo;s austerity as much as any man&rsquo;s&rdquo; (July 14).
+<a name="citation256b"></a><a href="#footnote256b">{256b}</a></p>
+<p>On July 17 Knox arrived from the west, where he had been trying to
+unite the Protestants. <a name="citation256c"></a><a href="#footnote256c">{256c}</a>&nbsp;
+Throckmorton found Craig and Knox &ldquo;very austere,&rdquo; well provided
+with arguments from the Bible, history, the laws of Scotland, and the
+Coronation Oath. <a name="citation257a"></a><a href="#footnote257a">{257a}</a>&nbsp;
+Knox in his sermons &ldquo;threatened the great plague of God to this
+whole nation and country if the Queen be spared from her condign punishment.&rdquo;
+<a name="citation257b"></a><a href="#footnote257b">{257b}</a></p>
+<p>Murderers were in the habit of being lightly let off, in Scotland,
+and, as to Mary, she could easily have been burned for husband-murder,
+but not so easily convicted thereof with any show of justice.&nbsp;
+The only direct evidence of her complicity lay in the Casket Letters,
+and several of her lordly accusers were (if she were guilty) her accomplices.&nbsp;
+Her prayer to be heard in self-defence at the ensuing Parliament of
+December was refused, for excellent reasons; and her opponents had the
+same good reasons for not bringing her to trial.&nbsp; Knox was perfectly
+justified if he desired her to be tried, but several lay members of
+the General Assembly could not have faced that ordeal, and Randolph
+later accused Lethington, in a letter to him, of advising her assassination.
+<a name="citation257c"></a><a href="#footnote257c">{257c}</a></p>
+<p>On July 29 Knox preached at the Coronation of James VI. at Stirling,
+protesting against the rite of anointing.&nbsp; True, it was Jewish,
+but it had passed through the impure hands of Rome, as, by the way,
+had Baptism.&nbsp; Knox also preached at the opening of Parliament,
+on December 15.&nbsp; We know little of him at this time.&nbsp; He had
+sent his sons to Cambridge, into danger of acquiring Anglican opinions,
+which they did; but now he seems to have taken a less truculent view
+of Anglicanism than in 1559-60.&nbsp; He had been drawing a prophetic
+historical parallel between Chatelherault (more or less of the Queen&rsquo;s
+party) and Judas Iscariot, and was not loved by the Hamiltons.&nbsp;
+The Duke was returning from France, &ldquo;to restore Satan to his kingdom,&rdquo;
+with the assistance of the Guises.&nbsp; Knox mentions an attempt to
+assassinate Moray, now Regent, which is obscure.&nbsp; &ldquo;I live
+as a man already dead from all civil things.&rdquo;&nbsp; Thus he wrote
+to Wood, Moray&rsquo;s agent, then in England on the affair of the Casket
+Letters (September 10, 1568).</p>
+<p>He had already (February 14) declined to gratify Wood by publishing
+his &ldquo;History.&rdquo;&nbsp; He would not permit it to appear during
+his life, as &ldquo;it will rather hurt me than profit them&rdquo; (his
+readers).&nbsp; He was, very naturally, grieved that the conduct of
+men was not conformable to &ldquo;the truth of God, now of some years
+manifest.&rdquo;&nbsp; He was not concerned to revenge his own injuries
+&ldquo;by word or writ,&rdquo; and he foresaw schism in England over
+questions of dress and rites. <a name="citation258a"></a><a href="#footnote258a">{258a}</a></p>
+<p>He was neglected.&nbsp; &ldquo;Have not thine oldest and stoutest
+acquaintance&rdquo; (Moray, or Kirkcaldy of Grange?) &ldquo;buried thee
+in present oblivion, and art thou not in that estate, by age, <a name="citation258b"></a><a href="#footnote258b">{258b}</a>
+that nature itself calleth thee from the pleasure of things temporal?&rdquo;
+(August 19, 1569).</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>In trouble impatient</i>, <i>tending to desperation</i>,&rdquo;
+Knox had said of himself.&nbsp; He was still unhappy.&nbsp; &ldquo;Foolish
+Scotland&rdquo; had &ldquo;disobeyed God by sparing the Queen&rsquo;s
+life,&rdquo; and now the proposed Norfolk marriage of Mary and her intended
+restoration were needlessly dreaded.&nbsp; A month later, Lethington,
+thrown back on Mary by his own peril for his share in Darnley&rsquo;s
+murder, writes to the Queen that some ministers are reconcilable, &ldquo;but
+Nox I think be inflexible.&rdquo; <a name="citation259a"></a><a href="#footnote259a">{259a}</a></p>
+<p>A year before Knox wrote his melancholy letter, just cited, he had
+some curious dealings with the English Puritans.&nbsp; In 1566 many
+of them had been ejected from their livings, and, like the Scottish
+Catholics, they &ldquo;assembled in woods and private houses to worship
+God.&rdquo; <a name="citation259b"></a><a href="#footnote259b">{259b}</a>&nbsp;
+The edifying controversies between these precisians and Grindal, the
+Bishop of London, are recorded by Strype.&nbsp; The bishop was no zealot
+for surplices and the other momentous trifles which agitate the human
+conscience, but Elizabeth insisted on them; and &ldquo;Her Majesty&rsquo;s
+Government must be carried on.&rdquo;&nbsp; The precisians had deserted
+the English Liturgy for the Genevan Book of Common Order; both sides
+were appealing to Beza, in Geneva, and were wrangling about the interpretation
+of that Pontiff&rsquo;s words. <a name="citation259c"></a><a href="#footnote259c">{259c}</a></p>
+<p>Calvin had died in 1564, but the Genevan Church and Beza were still
+umpires, whose decision was eagerly sought, quibbled over, and disputed.&nbsp;
+The French Puritans, in fact, extremely detested the Anglican Book of
+Common Prayer.&nbsp; Thus, in 1562, De la Vigne, a preacher at St. L&ocirc;,
+consulted Calvin about the excesses of certain Flemish brethren, who
+adhered to &ldquo;a certain bobulary (<i>bobulaire</i>) of prayers,
+compiled, or brewed, in the days of Edward VI.&rdquo;&nbsp; The Calvinists
+of St. L&ocirc; decided that these Flemings must not approach their
+holy table, and called our communion service &ldquo;a disguised Mass.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+The Synod (Calvinistic) of Poictiers decided that our Liturgy contains
+&ldquo;impieties,&rdquo; and that Satan was the real author of the work!&nbsp;
+There are saints&rsquo; days, &ldquo;with epistles, lessons, or gospels,
+as under the papacy.&rdquo;&nbsp; They have heard that the Prayer Book
+has been condemned by Geneva. <a name="citation260a"></a><a href="#footnote260a">{260a}</a></p>
+<p>The English sufferers from our Satanic Prayer Book appealed to Geneva,
+and were answered by Beza (October 24, 1567).&nbsp; He observed, &ldquo;Who
+are we to give any judgment of these things, which, as it seems to us,
+can be healed only by prayers and patience.&rdquo;&nbsp; Geneva has
+not heard both sides, and does not pretend to judge.&nbsp; The English
+brethren complain that ministers are appointed &ldquo;without any lawful
+consent of the Presbytery,&rdquo; the English Church not being Presbyterian,
+and not intending to be.&nbsp; Beza hopes that it will become Presbyterian.&nbsp;
+He most dreads that any should &ldquo;execute their ministry contrary
+to the will of her Majesty and the Bishops,&rdquo; which is exactly
+what the seceders did.&nbsp; Beza then speaks out about the question
+of costume, which ought not to be forced on the ministers.&nbsp; But
+he does not think that the vestments justify schism.&nbsp; In other
+points the brethren should, in the long run, &ldquo;give way to manifest
+violence,&rdquo; and &ldquo;live as private men.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;Other
+defilements&rdquo; (kneeling, &amp;c.)&nbsp; Beza hopes that the Queen
+and Bishops will remove.&nbsp; Men must &ldquo;patiently bear with one
+another, and heartily obey the Queen&rsquo;s Majesty and all their Bishops.&rdquo;
+<a name="citation260b"></a><a href="#footnote260b">{260b}</a></p>
+<p>As far as this epistle goes, Beza and his colleagues certainly do
+not advise the Puritan seceders to secede.</p>
+<p>Bullinger and Gualterus in particular were outworn by the pertinacious
+English Puritans who visited them.&nbsp; One Sampson had, when in exile,
+made the life of Peter Martyr a burden to him by his &ldquo;clamours,&rdquo;
+doubts, and restless dissatisfaction.&nbsp; &ldquo;England,&rdquo; wrote
+Bullinger to Beza (March 15, 1567), &ldquo;has many characters of this
+sort, who cannot be at rest, who can never be satisfied, and who have
+always something or other to complain about.&rdquo;&nbsp; Bullinger
+and Gualterus &ldquo;were unwilling to contend with these men like fencing-masters,&rdquo;
+tired of their argufying; unable to &ldquo;withdraw our entire confidence
+from the Bishops.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;If any others think of coming
+hither, let them know that they will come to no purpose.&rdquo; <a name="citation261a"></a><a href="#footnote261a">{261a}</a></p>
+<p>Knox may have been less unsympathetic, but his advice agreed with
+the advice of the Genevans.&nbsp; Some of the seceders were imprisoned;
+Cecil and the Queen&rsquo;s commissioners encouraged others &ldquo;to
+go and preach the Gospel in Scotland,&rdquo; sending with them, as it
+seems, letters commendatory to the ruling men there.&nbsp; They went,
+but they were not long away.&nbsp; &ldquo;They liked not that northern
+climate, but in May returned again,&rdquo; and fell to their old practices.&nbsp;
+One of them reported that, at Dunbar, &ldquo;he saw men going to the
+church, on Good Friday, barefooted and bare-kneed, and creeping to the
+cross!&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;If this be so,&rdquo; said Grindal, &ldquo;the
+Church of Scotland will not be pure enough for our men.&rdquo; <a name="citation261b"></a><a href="#footnote261b">{261b}</a></p>
+<p>These English brethren, when in Scotland, consulted Knox on the dispute
+which they made a ground of schism.&nbsp; One brother, who was uncertain
+in his mind, visited Knox in Scotland at this time.&nbsp; The result
+appears in a letter to Knox from a seceder, written just after Queen
+Mary escaped from Lochleven in May 1568.&nbsp; The dubiously seceding
+brother &ldquo;told the Bishop&rdquo; (Grindal) &ldquo;that you are
+flat against and condemn all our doings . . . whereupon the Church&rdquo;
+(the seceders) &ldquo;did excommunicate him&rdquo;!&nbsp; He had reviled
+&ldquo;the Church,&rdquo; and they at once caught &ldquo;the excommunicatory
+fever.&rdquo;&nbsp; Meanwhile the earnestly seceding brother thought
+that he had won Knox to <i>his</i> side.&nbsp; But a letter from our
+Reformer proved his error, and the letter, as the brother writes, &ldquo;is
+not in all points liked.&rdquo;&nbsp; They would not &ldquo;go back
+again to the wafer-cake and kneelings&rdquo; (the Knoxian Black Rubric
+had been deleted from Elizabeth&rsquo;s prayer book), &ldquo;and to
+other knackles of Popery.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In fact they obeyed Knox&rsquo;s epistle to England of January 1559.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Mingle-mangle ministry, Popish order, and Popish apparel,&rdquo;
+they will not bear.&nbsp; Knox&rsquo;s arguments in favour of their
+conforming, for the time at all events, are quoted and refuted: &ldquo;And
+also concerning Paul his purifying at Jerusalem.&rdquo;&nbsp; The analogy
+of Paul&rsquo;s conformity had been rejected by Knox, at the supper
+party with Lethington in 1556.&nbsp; He had &ldquo;doubted whether either
+James&rsquo;s commandment or Paul&rsquo;s obedience proceeded from the
+Holy Ghost.&rdquo; <a name="citation262a"></a><a href="#footnote262a">{262a}</a>&nbsp;
+Yet now Knox had used the very same argument from Paul&rsquo;s conformity
+which, in 1556, he had scouted!&nbsp; The Mass was not in question in
+1568; still, if Paul was wrong (and he did get into peril from a mob!),
+how could Knox now bid the English brethren follow his example? <a name="citation262b"></a><a href="#footnote262b">{262b}</a>&nbsp;
+(See pp. 65-67 <i>supra</i>.)</p>
+<p>To be sure Mary was probably at large, when Knox wrote, with 4000
+spears at her back.&nbsp; The Reformer may have rightly thought it an
+ill moment to irritate Elizabeth, or he may have grown milder than he
+was in 1559, and come into harmony with Bullinger.&nbsp; In February
+of the year of this correspondence he had written, &ldquo;God comfort
+that dispersed little flock,&rdquo; apparently the Puritans of his old
+Genevan congregation, now in England, and in trouble, &ldquo;amongst
+whom I would be content to end my days. . . . &rdquo; <a name="citation263a"></a><a href="#footnote263a">{263a}</a></p>
+<p>In January 1570, Knox, &ldquo;with his one foot in the grave,&rdquo;
+as he says, did not despair of seeing his desire upon his enemy.&nbsp;
+Moray was asking Elizabeth to hand over to him Queen Mary, giving hostages
+for the safety of her life.&nbsp; Moray sent his messenger to Cecil,
+on January 2, 1570, and Knox added a brief note.&nbsp; &ldquo;If ye
+strike not at the root,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;the branches that appear
+to be broken will bud again. . . .&nbsp; More days than one would not
+suffice to express what I think.&rdquo; <a name="citation263b"></a><a href="#footnote263b">{263b}</a>&nbsp;
+What he thought is obvious; &ldquo;stone dead hath no fellow.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+But Mary&rsquo;s day of doom had not yet come; Moray was not to receive
+her as a prisoner, for the Regent was shot dead, in Linlithgow, on January
+23, by Hamilton of Bothwellhaugh, to the unconcealed delight of his
+sister, for whom his death was opportune.</p>
+<p>The assassin, Bothwellhaugh, in May 1568, had been pardoned for his
+partisanship of Mary, at Knox&rsquo;s intercession.&nbsp; &ldquo;Thy
+image, O Lord, did so clearly shine on that personage&rdquo; (Moray)&mdash;he
+said in his public prayer at the Regent&rsquo;s funeral <a name="citation263c"></a><a href="#footnote263c">{263c}</a>&mdash;&ldquo;that
+the devil, and the people to whom he is Prince, could not abide it.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+We know too much of Moray to acquiesce, without reserve, in this eulogium.</p>
+<p>Knox was sorely disturbed, at this time, by the publication of a
+<i>jeu d&rsquo;esprit</i>, in which the author professed to have been
+hidden in a bed, in the cabinet of a room, while the late Regent held
+a council of his friends. <a name="citation264a"></a><a href="#footnote264a">{264a}</a>&nbsp;
+The tone and manner of Lindsay, Wood, Knox and others were admirably
+imitated; in their various ways, and with appropriate arguments, some
+of them urged Moray to take the crown for his life.&nbsp; By no people
+but the Scots, perhaps, could this jape have been taken seriously, but,
+with a gravity that would have delighted Charles Lamb, Knox denounced
+the skit from the pulpit as a fabrication by the Father of Lies.&nbsp;
+The author, the human penman, he said (according to Calderwood), was
+fated to die friendless in a strange land.&nbsp; The galling shaft came
+out of the Lethington quiver; it may have been composed by several of
+the family, but Thomas Maitland, who later died in Italy, was regarded
+as the author, <a name="citation264b"></a><a href="#footnote264b">{264b}</a>
+perhaps because he did die alone in a strange country.</p>
+<p>At this time the Castle of Edinburgh was held in the Queen&rsquo;s
+interest by Kirkcaldy of Grange, who seems to have been won over by
+the guile of Lethington.&nbsp; That politician needed a shelter from
+the danger of the Lennox feud, and the charge of having been guilty
+of Darnley&rsquo;s murder.&nbsp; To take the place was beyond the power
+of the Protestant party, and it did not fall under the guns of their
+English allies during the life of the Reformer.</p>
+<p>He had a tedious quarrel with Kirkcaldy in December 1570-January
+1571.&nbsp; A retainer of Kirkcaldy&rsquo;s had helped to kill a man
+whom his master only wanted to be beaten.&nbsp; The retainer was put
+into the Tolbooth; Kirkcaldy set him free, and Knox preached against
+Kirkcaldy.&nbsp; Hearing that Knox had styled him a murderer, Kirkcaldy
+bade Craig read from the pulpit a note in which he denied the charge.&nbsp;
+He prayed God to decide whether he or Knox &ldquo;has been most desirous
+of innocent blood.&rdquo;&nbsp; Craig would not read the note: Kirkcaldy
+appealed in a letter to the kirk-session.&nbsp; He explained the origin
+of the trouble: the slain man had beaten his brother; he bade his agents
+beat the insulter, who drew his sword, and got a stab.&nbsp; On this
+Knox preached against him, he was told, as a cut-throat.</p>
+<p>Next Sunday Knox reminded his hearers that he had not called Kirkcaldy
+a murderer (though in the case of the Cardinal, he was), but had said
+that the lawless proceedings shocked him more than if they had been
+done by common cut-throats.&nbsp; Knox then wrote a letter to the kirk-session,
+saying that Kirkcaldy&rsquo;s defence proved him &ldquo;to be a murderer
+at heart,&rdquo; for St. John says that &ldquo;whoso loveth not his
+brother is a man-slayer&rdquo;; and Kirkcaldy did not love the man who
+was killed.&nbsp; All this was apart from the question: had Knox called
+Kirkcaldy a common cut-throat?&nbsp; Kirkcaldy then asked that Knox&rsquo;s
+explanation of what he said in the pulpit might be given in writing,
+as his words had been misreported, and Knox, &ldquo;creeping upon his
+club,&rdquo; went personally to the kirk-session, and requested the
+Superintendent to admonish Kirkcaldy of his offences.&nbsp; Next Sunday
+he preached about his eternal Ahab, and Kirkcaldy was offended by the
+historical parallel.&nbsp; When he next was in church Knox went at him
+again; it was believed that Kirkcaldy would avenge himself, but the
+western brethren wrote to remind him of their &ldquo;great care&rdquo;
+for Knox&rsquo;s person.&nbsp; So the quarrel, which made sermons lively,
+died out. <a name="citation266"></a><a href="#footnote266">{266}</a></p>
+<p>There was little goodwill to Knox in the Queen&rsquo;s party, and
+as the conflict was plainly to be decided by the sword, Robert Melville,
+from the Castle, advised that the prophet should leave the town, in
+May 1571.&nbsp; The &ldquo;Castilian&rdquo; chiefs wished him no harm,
+they would even shelter him in their hold, but they could not be responsible
+for his &ldquo;safety from the multitude and rascal,&rdquo; in the town,
+for the craftsmen preferred the party of Kirkcaldy.&nbsp; Knox had a
+curious interview in the Castle with Lethington, now stricken by a mortal
+malady.&nbsp; The two old foes met courteously, and parted even in merriment;
+Lethington did not mock, and Knox did not threaten.&nbsp; They were
+never again to see each other&rsquo;s faces, though the dying Knox was
+still to threaten, and the dying Lethington was still to mock.</p>
+<p>July found Knox and his family at St. Andrews, in the New Hospice,
+a pre-Reformation ecclesiastical building, west of the Cathedral, and
+adjoining the gardens of St. Leonard&rsquo;s College.&nbsp; At this
+time James Melville, brother of the more celebrated scholar and divine,
+Andrew Melville, was a golf-playing young student of St. Leonard&rsquo;s
+College.&nbsp; He tells us how Knox would walk about the College gardens,
+exhorting the St. Leonard&rsquo;s lads to be staunch Protestants; for
+St. Salvator&rsquo;s and St. Mary&rsquo;s were not devoted to the Reformer
+and his party.&nbsp; The smitten preacher (he had suffered a touch of
+apoplexy) walked slowly, a fur tippet round his neck in summer, leaning
+on his staff, and on the shoulder of his secretary, Bannatyne.&nbsp;
+He returned, at St. Andrews, in his sermons, to the Book of Daniel with
+which, nearly a quarter of a century ago, he began his pulpit career.&nbsp;
+In preaching he was moderate&mdash;for half-an-hour; and then, warming
+to his work, he made young Melville shudder and tremble, till he could
+not hold his pen to write.&nbsp; No doubt the prophet was denouncing
+&ldquo;that last Beast,&rdquo; the Pope, and his allies in Scotland,
+as he had done these many years ago.&nbsp; Ere he had finished his sermon
+&ldquo;he was like to ding the pulpit to blads and fly out of it.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+He attended a play, written by Davidson, later a famous preacher, on
+the siege and fall of the Castle, exhibiting the hanging of his old
+ally, Kirkcaldy, &ldquo;according to Mr. Knox&rsquo;s doctrine,&rdquo;
+says Melville.&nbsp; This cheerful entertainment was presented at the
+marriage of John Colville, destined to be a traitor, a double spy, and
+a renegade from the Kirk to &ldquo;the Synagogue of Satan.&rdquo; <a name="citation267a"></a><a href="#footnote267a">{267a}</a></p>
+<p>Knox now collected historical materials from Alexander Hay, Clerk
+of the Privy Council, and heard of the publication of Buchanan&rsquo;s
+scurrilous &ldquo;Detection&rdquo; of Queen Mary, in December 1571.
+<a name="citation267b"></a><a href="#footnote267b">{267b}</a></p>
+<p>Knox had denounced the Hamiltons as murderers, so one of that name
+accused our Reformer of having signed a band for the murder of Darnley&mdash;not
+the murder at Kirk o&rsquo; Field, but a sketch for an attempt at Perth!&nbsp;
+He had an interview with Knox, not of the most satisfactory, and there
+was a quarrel with another Hamilton, who later became a Catholic and
+published scurrilous falsehoods about Knox, in Latin.&nbsp; In fact
+our Reformer had quarrels enough on his hands at St. Andrews, and to
+one adversary he writes about what he would do, if he had his old strength
+of body.</p>
+<p>Not in the Regency, but mainly under the influence of Morton, bishops
+were reintroduced, at a meeting of the Kirk held at Leith, in January
+1572.&nbsp; The idea was that each bishop should hand over most of his
+revenues to Morton, or some other person in power.&nbsp; Knox, of course,
+objected; he preached at St. Andrews before Morton inducted a primate
+of his clan, but he refused to &ldquo;inaugurate&rdquo; the new prelate.&nbsp;
+The Superintendent of Fife did what was to be done, and a bishop (he
+of Caithness) was among the men who imposed their hands on the head
+of the new Archbishop of St. Andrews.&nbsp; Thus the imposition of hands,
+which Knox had abolished in the Book of Discipline, crept back again,
+and remains in Presbyterian usage. <a name="citation268a"></a><a href="#footnote268a">{268a}</a></p>
+<p>Had Knox been in vigour he might have summoned the brethren in arms
+to resist; but he was weak of body, and Morton was an ill man to deal
+with.&nbsp; Knox did draw up articles intended to minimise the mischief
+of these bastard and simoniacal bishoprics and abused patronages (August
+1572). <a name="citation268b"></a><a href="#footnote268b">{268b}</a>&nbsp;
+On May 26, 1572, he describes himself as &ldquo;lying in St. Andrews,
+half dead.&rdquo; <a name="citation268c"></a><a href="#footnote268c">{268c}</a>&nbsp;
+He was able, however, to preach at a witch, who was probably none the
+better for his distinguished attentions.</p>
+<p>On August 17, during a truce between the hostile parties, Knox left
+St. Andrews for Edinburgh, &ldquo;not without dolour and displeasure
+of the few godly that were in the town, but to the great joy and pleasure
+of the rest;&rdquo; for, &ldquo;half dead&rdquo; as he was, Knox had
+preached a political sermon every Sunday, and he was in the pulpit at
+St. Giles&rsquo;s on the last Sunday of August. <a name="citation269a"></a><a href="#footnote269a">{269a}</a>&nbsp;
+As his colleague, Craig, had disgusted the brethren by his moderation
+and pacific temper, a minister named Lawson was appointed as Knox&rsquo;s
+coadjutor.</p>
+<p>Late in August came the news of the St. Bartholomew massacre (August
+24).&nbsp; Knox rose to the occasion, and, preaching in the presence
+of du Croc, the French ambassador, bade him tell his King that he was
+a murderer, and that God&rsquo;s vengeance should never depart from
+him or his house. <a name="citation269b"></a><a href="#footnote269b">{269b}</a>&nbsp;
+The prophecy was amply fulfilled.&nbsp; Du Croc remonstrated, &ldquo;but
+the Lords answered they could not stop the mouths of ministers to speak
+against themselves.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was a convention of Protestants in Edinburgh on October 20,
+but lords did not attend, and few lairds were present.&nbsp; The preachers
+and other brethren in the Assembly proposed that all Catholics in the
+realm should be compelled to recant publicly, to lose their whole property
+and be banished if they were recalcitrant, and, if they remained in
+the country, that all subjects should be permitted, lawfully, to put
+them to death.&nbsp; (&ldquo;To invade them, and every one of them,
+to the death.&rdquo;) <a name="citation269c"></a><a href="#footnote269c">{269c}</a>&nbsp;
+This was the ideal, embodied in law, of the brethren in 1560.&nbsp;
+Happily they were not permitted to disgrace Scotland by a Bartholomew
+massacre of her own.</p>
+<p>Mr. Hume Brown thinks that these detestable proposals &ldquo;if not
+actually penned by Knox, must have been directly inspired by him.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+He does not, however, mention the demand for massacre, except as &ldquo;pains
+and penalties for those who <i>preached</i> the old religion.&rdquo;
+<a name="citation269d"></a><a href="#footnote269d">{269d}</a>&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Without exception of persons, great or small,&rdquo; <i>all</i>
+were to be obliged to recant, or to be ruined and exiled, or to be massacred.&nbsp;
+Dr. M&lsquo;Crie does not hint at the existence of these articles, &ldquo;to
+be given to the Regent and Council.&rdquo;&nbsp; They included a very
+proper demand for the reformation of vice at home.&nbsp; Certainly Knox
+did not pen or dictate the Articles, for none of his favourite adjectives
+occurs in the document.</p>
+<p>At this time Elizabeth, Leicester, and Cecil desired to hand over
+Queen Mary to Mar, the Regent, &ldquo;to proceed with her by way of
+justice,&rdquo; a performance not to be deferred, &ldquo;either for
+Parliament or a great Session.&rdquo;&nbsp; Very Petty Sessions indeed,
+if any, were to suffice for the trial of the Queen. <a name="citation270"></a><a href="#footnote270">{270}</a>&nbsp;
+There are to be no &ldquo;temporising solemnities,&rdquo; all are to
+be &ldquo;stout and resolute <i>in execution</i>,&rdquo; Leicester thus
+writes to an unknown correspondent on October 10.&nbsp; Killigrew, who
+was to arrange the business with Mar, was in Scotland by September 19.&nbsp;
+On October 6, Killigrew writes that Knox is very feeble but still preaching,
+and that he says, if he is not a bishop, it is by no fault of Cecil&rsquo;s.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I trust to satisfy Morton,&rdquo; says Killigrew, &ldquo;and
+as for John Knox, that thing, as you may see by my letter to Mr. Secretary,
+is done and doing daily; the people in general well bent to England,
+abhorring the fact in France, and fearing their tyranny.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That thing&rdquo; is <i>not</i> the plan for murdering Mary
+without trial; if Killigrew meant that he had obtained Knox&rsquo;s
+assent to <i>that</i>, he would not write &ldquo;that thing is doing
+daily.&rdquo;&nbsp; Even Morton, more scrupulous than Elizabeth and
+Cecil, said that &ldquo;there must be some kind of process&rdquo; (trial,
+<i>proc&egrave;s</i>), attended secretly by the nobles and the ministers.&nbsp;
+The trial would be in Mary&rsquo;s absence, or would be brief indeed,
+for the prisoner was not to live three hours after crossing the Border!&nbsp;
+Others, unnamed, insisted on a trial; the Queen had never been found
+guilty.&nbsp; Killigrew speaks of &ldquo;two ministers&rdquo; as eager
+for the action, but nothing proves that Knox was one of them.&nbsp;
+While Morton and Mar were haggling for the price of Mary&rsquo;s blood,
+Mar died, on October 28, and the whole plot fell through. <a name="citation271"></a><a href="#footnote271">{271}</a>&nbsp;
+Anxious as Knox had declared himself to be to &ldquo;strike at the root,&rdquo;
+he could not, surely, be less scrupulous about a trial than Morton,
+though the decision of the Court was foredoomed.&nbsp; Sandys, the Bishop
+of London, advised that Mary&rsquo;s head should be chopped off!</p>
+<p>On November 9, 1572, Knox inducted Mr. Lawson into his place as minister
+at St. Giles&rsquo;s.&nbsp; On the 13th he could not read the Bible
+aloud, he paid his servants, and gave his man a present, the last, in
+addition to his wages.&nbsp; On the 15th two friends came to see Knox
+at noon, dinner time.&nbsp; He made an effort, and for the last time
+sat at meat with them, ordering a fresh hogshead of wine to be drawn.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;He willed Archibald Stewart to send for the wine so long as it
+lasted, for he would never tarry until it were drunken.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+On the 16th the Kirk came to him, by his desire; and he protested that
+he had never hated any man personally, but only their errors, nor had
+he made merchandise of the Word.&nbsp; He sent a message to Kirkcaldy
+bidding him repent, or the threatenings should fall on him and the Castle.&nbsp;
+His exertions increased his illness.&nbsp; There had been a final quarrel
+with the dying Lethington, who complained that Knox, in sermons and
+otherwise, charged him with saying there is &ldquo;neither heaven nor
+hell,&rdquo; an atheistic position of which (see his eloquent prayer
+before Corrichie fight, wherein Huntly died <a name="citation272a"></a><a href="#footnote272a">{272a}</a>)
+he was incapable.&nbsp; On the 16th he told &ldquo;the Kirk&rdquo; that
+Lethington&rsquo;s conduct proved that he really did disbelieve in God,
+and a future of rewards and punishments.&nbsp; That was not the question.&nbsp;
+The question was&mdash;Did Knox, publicly and privately, as Lethington
+complained, attribute to him words which he denied having spoken, asking
+that the witnesses should be produced.&nbsp; We wish that Knox had either
+produced good evidences, or explained why he could not produce them,
+or had apologised, or had denied that he spoke in the terms reported
+to Lethington.</p>
+<p>James Melville says that the Rev. Mr. Lindsay, of Leith, told him
+that Knox bade him carry a message to Kirkcaldy in the Castle.&nbsp;
+After compliments, it ran: &ldquo;He shall be disgracefully dragged
+from his nest to punishment, and hung on a gallows before the face of
+the sun, unless he speedily amend his life, and flee to the mercy of
+God.&rdquo;&nbsp; Knox added: &ldquo;That man&rsquo;s soul is dear to
+me, and I would not have it perish, if I could save it.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Kirkcaldy consulted Maitland, and returned with a reply which contained
+Lethington&rsquo;s last scoff at the prophet.&nbsp; However, Morton,
+when he had the chance, did hang Kirkcaldy, as in the play acted before
+Knox at St. Andrews, &ldquo;according to Mr. Knox&rsquo;s doctrine.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+&ldquo;The preachers clamoured for blood to cleanse blood.&rdquo; <a name="citation272b"></a><a href="#footnote272b">{272b}</a></p>
+<p>As to a secret conference with Morton on the 17th, the Earl, before
+his execution, confessed that the dying man asked him, &ldquo;if he
+knew anything of the King&rsquo;s (Darnley&rsquo;s) murder?&rdquo;&nbsp;
+&ldquo;I answered, indeed, I knew nothing of it&rdquo;&mdash;perhaps
+a pardonable falsehood in the circumstances.&nbsp; Morton said that
+the people who had suffered from Kirkcaldy and the preachers daily demanded
+the soldier&rsquo;s death.</p>
+<p>Other sayings of the Reformer are reported.&nbsp; He repressed a
+lady who, he thought, wished to flatter him: &ldquo;Lady, lady, the
+black ox has never trodden yet upon your foot!&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;I
+have been in heaven and have possession, and I have tasted of these
+heavenly joys where presently I am,&rdquo; he said, after long meditation,
+beholding, as in Bunyan&rsquo;s allegory, the hills of Beulah.&nbsp;
+He said the Creed, which soon vanished from Scottish services; and in
+saying &ldquo;Our Father,&rdquo; broke off to murmur, &ldquo;Who can
+pronounce so holy words?&rdquo;&nbsp; On November 24 he rose and dressed,
+but soon returned to bed.&nbsp; His wife read to him the text, &ldquo;where
+I cast my first anchor,&rdquo; St. John&rsquo;s Gospel, chapter xvii.&nbsp;
+About half-past ten he said, &ldquo;Now it is come!&rdquo; and being
+asked for a sign of his steadfast faith, he lifted up one hand, &ldquo;and
+so slept away without any pain.&rdquo; <a name="citation273"></a><a href="#footnote273">{273}</a></p>
+<p>Knox was buried on November 26 in the churchyard south of St. Giles.&nbsp;
+A flat stone, inscribed J. K., beside the equestrian statue of Charles
+II., is reported to mark his earthly resting-place.&nbsp; He died as
+he had lived, a poor man; a little money was owed to him; all his debts
+were paid.&nbsp; His widow, two years later, married Andrew Ker of Faldonside,
+so notorious for levelling a pistol at the Queen on the occasion of
+Riccio&rsquo;s murder.&nbsp; Ker appears to have been intimate with
+the Reformer.&nbsp; Bannatyne speaks of a story of Lady Atholl&rsquo;s
+witchcraft, told by a Mr. Lundie to Knox, at dinner, &ldquo;at Falsyde.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+This was a way of spelling Faldonside, <a name="citation274"></a><a href="#footnote274">{274}</a>
+the name of Ker&rsquo;s place, hard by the Tweed, within a mile of Abbotsford.&nbsp;
+Probably Ker and his wife sleep in the family burying-ground, the disused
+kirkyard of Lindean, near a little burn that murmurs under the broad
+burdock leaves on its way to join the Ettrick.</p>
+<h2>APPENDIX A: ALLEGED PERFIDY OF MARY OF GUISE</h2>
+<p>The Regent has usually been accused of precipitating, or causing
+the Revolution of 1559, by breaking a pledge given to the Protestants
+assembled at Perth (May 10-11, 1559).&nbsp; Knox&rsquo;s &ldquo;History&rdquo;
+and a letter of his are the sources of this charge, and it is difficult
+to determine the amount of truth which it may contain.</p>
+<p>Our earliest evidence on the matter is found in a letter to the English
+Privy Council, from Sir James Croft, commanding at Berwick.&nbsp; The
+letter, of May 19, is eight days later than the riots at Perth.&nbsp;
+It is not always accurately informed; Croft corrects one or two statements
+in later despatches, but the points corrected are not those with which
+we are here concerned. <a name="citation275a"></a><a href="#footnote275a">{275a}</a>&nbsp;
+Neither in this nor in other English advices do I note any charge of
+ill faith brought against the Regent on this occasion.&nbsp; Croft says
+that, on Knox&rsquo;s arrival, many nobles and a multitude of others
+repaired to Dundee to hear him and others preach.&nbsp; The Regent then
+summoned these preachers before her to Stirling, <a name="citation275b"></a><a href="#footnote275b">{275b}</a>
+but as they had a &ldquo;train&rdquo; of 5000 or 6000, she &ldquo;dismissed
+the appearance,&rdquo; putting the preachers to the horn, and commanding
+the nobility to appear before her in Edinburgh.&nbsp; The &ldquo;companies&rdquo;
+then retired and wrecked monasteries at Perth.&nbsp; The Lords and they
+had <i>previously</i> sent Erskine of Dun to the Regent, offering to
+appear before her with only their household servants, to hear the preachers
+dispute with the clergy, if she would permit.&nbsp; The Regent, &ldquo;taking
+displeasure with&rdquo; Erskine of Dun, bade him begone out of her sight.&nbsp;
+He rode off (to Perth), and she had him put to the horn (as a fact,
+he was only fined in his recognisances as bail for one of the preachers).&nbsp;
+The riots followed his arrival in Perth.</p>
+<p>Such is our earliest account; there is no mention of a promise broken
+by the Regent.</p>
+<p>Knox himself wrote two separate and not always reconcilable accounts
+of the first revolutionary explosion; one in a letter of June 23 to
+Mrs. Locke, the other in a part of Book II. of his &ldquo;History,&rdquo;
+composed at some date before October 23, 1559.&nbsp; That portion of
+his &ldquo;History&rdquo; is an <i>apologia</i> for the proceedings
+of his party, and was apparently intended for contemporary publication.
+<a name="citation276a"></a><a href="#footnote276a">{276a}</a></p>
+<p>This part of the &ldquo;History,&rdquo; therefore, as the work of
+an advocate, needs to be checked, when possible, by other authorities.&nbsp;
+We first examine Knox&rsquo;s letter of June 23, 1559, to Mrs. Locke.&nbsp;
+He says that he arrived in Edinburgh on May 2, and, after resting for
+a day, went (on May 4) to the brethren assembled at Dundee.&nbsp; They
+all marched to Perth, meaning thence to accompany the preachers to their
+day of law at Stirling, May 10.&nbsp; But, lest the proceeding should
+seem rebellious, they sent a baron (Erskine of Dun, in fact) to the
+Regent, &ldquo;with declaration of our minds.&rdquo;&nbsp; The Regent
+<i>and Council</i> in reply, bade the multitude &ldquo;stay, and not
+come to Stirling . . . and so should no extremity be used, but the summons
+should be continued&rdquo; (deferred) &ldquo;till further advisement.&nbsp;
+Which, being gladly granted of us, some of the brethren returned to
+their dwelling-places.&nbsp; But the Queen <i>and her Council</i>, nothing
+mindful of her and their promise, incontinent did call&rdquo; (summon)
+&ldquo;the preachers, and for lack of their appearance, did exile and
+put them and their assistants to the horn. . . . &rdquo; <a name="citation276b"></a><a href="#footnote276b">{276b}</a></p>
+<p>It would be interesting to know who the Regent&rsquo;s Council were
+on this occasion.&nbsp; The Reformer errs when he tells Mrs. Locke that
+the Regent outlawed &ldquo;the assisters&rdquo; of the preachers.&nbsp;
+Dr. M&lsquo;Crie publishes an extract from the &ldquo;Justiciary Records&rdquo;
+of May 10, in which Methuen, Christison, Harlaw, and Willock, and no
+others, are put to the horn, or outlawed, in absence, for breach of
+the Regent&rsquo;s proclamations, and for causing &ldquo;tumults and
+seditions.&rdquo;&nbsp; No one else is put to the horn, but the sureties
+for the preachers&rsquo; appearance are fined. <a name="citation276c"></a><a href="#footnote276c">{276c}</a></p>
+<p>In his &ldquo;History,&rdquo; Knox says that the Regent, when Erskine
+of Dun arrived at Stirling as an emissary of the brethren, &ldquo;began
+to craft with him, soliciting him to stay the multitude, and the preachers
+also, with promise that she would take some better order.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Erskine wrote to the brethren, &ldquo;to stay and not to come forward,
+showing what promise and <i>hope</i> he had of the Queen&rsquo;s Grace&rsquo;s
+favours.&rdquo;&nbsp; Some urged that they should go forward till the
+summons was actually &ldquo;discharged,&rdquo; otherwise the preachers
+and their companions would be put to the horn.&nbsp; Others said that
+the Regent&rsquo;s promises were &ldquo;not to be suspected . . . and
+so did the whole multitude with their preachers stay. . . .&nbsp; The
+Queen, perceiving that the preachers did not appear, began to utter
+her malice, and notwithstanding any request made on the contrary, gave
+command to put them to the horn. . . .&rdquo;&nbsp; Erskine then prudently
+withdrew, rode to Perth, and &ldquo;did conceal nothing of the Queen&rsquo;s
+craft and falsehood.&rdquo; <a name="citation277a"></a><a href="#footnote277a">{277a}</a></p>
+<p>In this version the Regent bears all the blame, nothing is said of
+the Council.&nbsp; &ldquo;The whole multitude stay&rdquo;&mdash;at Perth,
+or it may perhaps be meant that they do not come forward towards Stirling.&nbsp;
+The Regent&rsquo;s promise is merely that she would &ldquo;take some
+better order.&rdquo;&nbsp; She does not here promise to <i>postpone</i>
+the summons, and refuses &ldquo;any request made&rdquo; to abstain from
+putting them to the horn.&nbsp; The account, therefore, is somewhat
+more vague than that in the letter to Mrs. Locke.&nbsp; Prof. Hume Brown
+puts it that the Regent &ldquo;in her understanding with Erskine of
+Dun <i>had publicly cancelled</i> the summons of the preachers for the
+10th of May,&rdquo; which rather overstates the case perhaps.&nbsp;
+That she should &ldquo;publicly cancel&rdquo; or &ldquo;discharge&rdquo;
+the summons was what a part of the brethren desired, and did not get.
+<a name="citation277b"></a><a href="#footnote277b">{277b}</a></p>
+<p>We now turn to a fragmentary and anonymous &ldquo;Historie of the
+Estate of Scotland,&rdquo; concerning which Prof. Hume Brown says, &ldquo;Whoever
+the author may have been, he writes as a contemporary, or from information
+supplied by a contemporary . . . what inspires confidence in him is
+that certain of his facts not recorded by other contemporary Scottish
+historians are corroborated by the despatches of d&rsquo;Oysel and others
+in Teulet.&rdquo; <a name="citation277c"></a><a href="#footnote277c">{277c}</a></p>
+<p>I elsewhere <a name="citation277d"></a><a href="#footnote277d">{277d}</a>
+give reasons for thinking that this &ldquo;Historie&rdquo; is perhaps
+the chronicle of Bruce of Earl&rsquo;s Hall, a contemporary gentleman
+of Fife.&nbsp; I also try to show that he writes, on one occasion, as
+an eye-witness.</p>
+<p>This author, who is a strong partisan of the Reformers, says nothing
+of the broken promise of the Regent and Council.&nbsp; He mentions the
+intention to march to Stirling, and then writes: &ldquo;And although
+the Queen Regent was most earnestly requested and persuaded to continue&rdquo;&mdash;that
+is to defer the summons&mdash;&ldquo;nevertheless she remained wilful
+and obstinate, so that the counsel of God must needs take effect.&nbsp;
+Shortly, the day being come, because they appeared not, their sureties
+were outlawed, and the preachers ordered to be put to the horn.&nbsp;
+The Laird of Dun, who was sent from Perth by the brethren, perceiving
+her obstinacy, they&rdquo; (who?) &ldquo;turned from Stirling, and coming
+to Perth, declared to the brethren the obstinacy they found in the Queen.
+. . . &rdquo;</p>
+<p>This sturdy Protestant&rsquo;s version, which does not accuse the
+Regent of breaking troth, is corroborated by a Catholic contemporary,
+Lesley, Bishop of Ross.&nbsp; He says that Erskine of Dun was sent to
+beg the Regent not to impose a penalty on the preachers in their absence.&nbsp;
+But as soon as Dun returned and Knox learned from him that the Regent
+would not grant their request, he preached the sermon which provoked
+the devastation of the monasteries. <a name="citation278a"></a><a href="#footnote278a">{278a}</a>&nbsp;
+Buchanan and Spottiswoode follow Knox, but they both use Knox&rsquo;s
+book, and are not independent witnesses.</p>
+<p>The biographers of Knox do not quote &ldquo;The Historie of the Estate
+of Scotland,&rdquo; where it touches on the beginning of the Revolution,
+without disparaging the Regent&rsquo;s honour.&nbsp; We have another
+dubious witness, Sir James Melville, who arrived on a mission from France
+to the Regent on June 13; he left Paris about June 1.&nbsp; This is
+the date of a letter <a name="citation278b"></a><a href="#footnote278b">{278b}</a>
+in which Henri II. offers the Regent every assistance in the warmest
+terms.&nbsp; Melville writes, however, that in his verbal orders, delivered
+by the Constable in the royal presence, the Constable said, &ldquo;I
+have intelligence that the Queen Regent has not kept all things promised
+to them.&rdquo;&nbsp; But Melville goes on to say that the Constable
+quoted d&rsquo;Elboeuf&rsquo;s failure to reach Scotland with his fleet,
+as a reason for not sending the troops which were promised by Henri.&nbsp;
+As d&rsquo;Elboeuf&rsquo;s failure occurred long after the date of the
+alleged conversation, the evidence of Melville is here incorrect.&nbsp;
+He wrote his &ldquo;Memoirs&rdquo; much later, in old age, but Henri
+may have written to the Regent in one sense, and given Melville orders
+in another. <a name="citation279a"></a><a href="#footnote279a">{279a}</a></p>
+<p>We find that Knox&rsquo;s charge against the Regent is not made in
+our earliest information, Croft&rsquo;s letter of May 19: is not made
+by the Protestant (and, we think, contemporary) author of the &ldquo;Historie,&rdquo;
+and, of course, is not hinted at by Lesley, a Catholic.&nbsp; We have
+seen throughout that Knox vilifies Mary of Guise in cases where she
+is blameless.&nbsp; On the other hand, Knox is our only witness who
+was at Perth at the time of the events, and it cannot be doubted that
+what he told Mrs. Locke was what he believed, whether correctly or erroneously.&nbsp;
+He could believe anything against Mary of Guise.&nbsp; Archbishop Spottiswoode
+says, &ldquo;The author of the story&rdquo; (&ldquo;History&rdquo;)
+&ldquo;ascribed to John Knox in his whole discourse showeth a bitter
+and hateful spite against the Regent, forging dishonest things which
+were never so much as suspected by any, setting down his own conjectures
+as certain truths, yea, the least syllable that did escape her in passion,
+he maketh it an argument of her cruel and inhuman disposition . . .
+&rdquo; <a name="citation279b"></a><a href="#footnote279b">{279b}</a>&nbsp;
+In the MS. used by Bishop Keith, <a name="citation279c"></a><a href="#footnote279c">{279c}</a>
+Spottiswoode added, after praising the Regent, &ldquo;these things I
+have heard my father often affirm&rdquo;; he had the like testimony
+&ldquo;from an honourable and religious lady, who had the honour to
+wait near her person.&rdquo;&nbsp; Spottiswoode was, therefore, persuaded
+that the &ldquo;History&rdquo; &ldquo;was none of Mr. Knox his writings.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+In spite of this opinion, Spottiswoode, writing about 1620-35, accepts
+most of the hard things that Knox says of the Regent&rsquo;s conduct
+in 1559, and indeed exaggerates one or two of them; that is, as relates
+to her political behaviour, for example, in the affair of the broken
+promise of May 10.&nbsp; It may be urged that here Spottiswoode had
+the support of the reminiscences of his father, a Superintendent in
+the Knoxian church.</p>
+<h2>APPENDIX B: FORGERY PROCURED BY MARY OF GUISE</h2>
+<p>In the writer&rsquo;s opinion several of Knox&rsquo;s accusations
+of perfidy against the Regent, in 1559, are not proved, and the attempts
+to prove them are of a nature which need not be qualified.&nbsp; But
+it is necessary to state the following facts as tending to show that
+the Regent was capable of procuring a forgery against the Duke of Chatelherault.&nbsp;
+A letter attributed to him exists in the French Archives, <a name="citation280a"></a><a href="#footnote280a">{280a}</a>
+dated Glasgow, January 25, 1560, in which the Duke curries favour with
+Francis II., and encloses his blank bond, <i>un blanc scell&eacute;</i>,
+offering to send his children to France. <a name="citation280b"></a><a href="#footnote280b">{280b}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>On January</i> 28, the Regent writes from Scotland to de Noailles,
+then the French Ambassador to England, bidding him to mention this submission
+to Elizabeth, and even show the Duke&rsquo;s letter and blank bond,
+that Elizabeth may see how little he is to be trusted.&nbsp; Now how
+could the Regent, on January 28, have a letter sent by the Duke to France
+on January 25?&nbsp; She must have intercepted it in Scotland. <a name="citation280c"></a><a href="#footnote280c">{280c}</a>&nbsp;
+Next, on March 15, 1560, the Duke, writing to Norfolk, denies the letter
+attributed to him by the French. <a name="citation280d"></a><a href="#footnote280d">{280d}</a>&nbsp;
+He said that any one of a hundred Hamiltons would fight M. de Seurre
+(the French Ambassador who, in February, succeeded de Noailles) on this
+quarrel. <a name="citation280e"></a><a href="#footnote280e">{280e}</a></p>
+<p>There exists a document, in the cipher of Throckmorton, English Ambassador
+in France, purporting to be a copy of a letter from the Regent to the
+Duc and Cardinal de Guise, dated Edinburgh, March 27, 1560. <a name="citation280f"></a><a href="#footnote280f">{280f}</a>&nbsp;
+The Regent, at that date, was in Leith, not in Edinburgh Castle, where
+she went on April 1.&nbsp; In that letter she is made to say that de
+Seurre has &ldquo;very evil misunderstood&rdquo; the affair of the letter
+attributed to Chatelherault.&nbsp; She had procured &ldquo;blanks&rdquo;
+of his &ldquo;by one of her servants here&rdquo; (at Leith) &ldquo;to
+the late Bishop of Ross&rdquo;; the Duke&rsquo;s alleged letter and
+submission of January 25 had been &ldquo;filled up&rdquo; on a &ldquo;blank,&rdquo;
+the Duke knowing nothing of the matter.</p>
+<p>This letter of the Regent, then, must also, if authentic, have been
+somehow intercepted or procured by Throckmorton, in France.&nbsp; It
+is certain that Throckmorton sometimes, by bribery, did obtain copies
+of secret French papers, but I have not found him reporting to Cecil
+or Queen Elizabeth this letter of the Regent&rsquo;s.&nbsp; The reader
+must estimate for himself the value of that document.&nbsp; I have stated
+the case as fairly as I can, and though the evidence against the Regent,
+as it stands, would scarcely satisfy a jury, I believe that, corrupted
+by the evil example of the Congregation, the Regent, in January 1560,
+did procure a forgery intended to bring suspicion on Chatelherault.&nbsp;
+But how could she be surprised that de Seurre did not understand the
+real state of the case?&nbsp; The Regent may have explained the true
+nature of the affair to de Noailles, but it may have been unknown to
+de Seurre, who succeeded that ambassador.&nbsp; Yet, how could she ask
+any ambassador to produce a confessed forgery as genuine?</p>
+<h2>Footnotes</h2>
+<p><a name="footnote0a"></a><a href="#citation0a">{0a}</a>&nbsp; Inventories
+of Mary, Queen of Scots, p. cxxii., note 7.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote0b"></a><a href="#citation0b">{0b}</a>&nbsp; Hume
+Brown, <i>John Knox</i>, ii. 320-324.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote2a"></a><a href="#citation2a">{2a}</a>&nbsp; Probably
+Mrs. Knox died in her son&rsquo;s youth, and his father married again.&nbsp;
+Catholic writers of the period are unanimous in declaring that Knox
+had a stepmother.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote2b"></a><a href="#citation2b">{2b}</a>&nbsp; <i>Knox</i>,
+Laing&rsquo;s edition, iv. 78.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote4"></a><a href="#citation4">{4}</a>&nbsp; See Young&rsquo;s
+letter, first published by Professor Hume Brown, <i>John Knox</i>, vol.
+ii.&nbsp; Appendix, 320-324.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote5"></a><a href="#citation5">{5}</a>&nbsp; Laing,
+in his <i>Knox</i>, vi. xxi. xxii.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote6"></a><a href="#citation6">{6}</a>&nbsp; <i>Knox</i>,
+i. 36-40.&nbsp; The facts are pointed out by Professor Cowan in <i>The
+Athen&aelig;um</i>, December 3, 1904, and had been recognised by Dr.
+Hay Fleming.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote7"></a><a href="#citation7">{7}</a>&nbsp; Beza,
+writing in 1580, says that study of St. Jerome and St. Augustine suggested
+his doubts.&nbsp; <i>Icones Virorum Doctrina Simul ac Pietate Illustrium.</i></p>
+<p><a name="footnote9"></a><a href="#citation9">{9}</a>&nbsp; Pollen,
+<i>Papal Negotiations with Mary Stuart</i>, 428-430, 522, 524, 528.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote10"></a><a href="#citation10">{10}</a>&nbsp; <i>Knox</i>,
+vi. 172, 173.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote12"></a><a href="#citation12">{12}</a>&nbsp; Letter
+of Young to Beza.&nbsp; Hume Brown, <i>John Knox</i>, ii. 322-24.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote15a"></a><a href="#citation15a">{15a}</a>&nbsp;
+Cf. <i>Life of George Wishart</i>, by the Rev. Charles Rodger, 7-12
+(1876).</p>
+<p><a name="footnote15b"></a><a href="#citation15b">{15b}</a>&nbsp;
+Maxwell, <i>Old Dundee</i>, 83, 84.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote17"></a><a href="#citation17">{17}</a>&nbsp; M&lsquo;Crie&rsquo;s
+<i>Knox</i>, 24 (1855).</p>
+<p><a name="footnote18a"></a><a href="#citation18a">{18a}</a>&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Letter to the Faithful,&rdquo; <i>cf</i>. M&lsquo;Crie, <i>Life
+of John Knox</i>, 292.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote18b"></a><a href="#citation18b">{18b}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, vi. 229.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote19"></a><a href="#citation19">{19}</a>&nbsp; M&lsquo;Crie,
+292.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote20"></a><a href="#citation20">{20}</a>&nbsp; Dr.
+Hay Fleming has impugned this opinion, but I am convinced by the internal
+evidence of tone and style in the tract; indeed, an earlier student
+has anticipated my idea.&nbsp; The tract is described by Dr. M&lsquo;Crie
+in his <i>Life of Knox</i>, 326-327 (1855).</p>
+<p><a name="footnote22"></a><a href="#citation22">{22}</a>&nbsp; Most
+of the gentry of Fife were in the murder or approved of it, and the
+castle seems to have contained quite a pleasant country-house party.&nbsp;
+They were cheered by the smiles of beauty, and in the treasurer&rsquo;s
+accounts we learn that Janet Monypenny of Pitmilly (an estate still
+in the possession of her family), was &ldquo;summoned for remaining
+in the castle, and assisting&rdquo; the murderers.&nbsp; Dr. M&lsquo;Crie
+cites Janet in his list of &ldquo;Scottish Martyrs and Prosecutions
+for Heresy&rdquo; (<i>Life of Knox</i>, 315).&nbsp; This martyr was
+a cousin, once removed, of the murdered ecclesiastic.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote23a"></a><a href="#citation23a">{23a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, Laing&rsquo;s edition, i. 180.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote23b"></a><a href="#citation23b">{23b}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, i. 182.&nbsp; &ldquo;The siege continued to near the end
+of January.&rdquo;&nbsp; &ldquo;The truce was of treacherous purpose,&rdquo;
+i. 183.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote24"></a><a href="#citation24">{24}</a>&nbsp; <i>Knox</i>,
+i. 203-205.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote25a"></a><a href="#citation25a">{25a}</a>&nbsp;
+Thorpe&rsquo;s <i>Calendar</i>, i. 60; <i>Register Privy Council</i>,
+i. 57, 58; Tytler, vi. 8 (1837).</p>
+<p><a name="footnote25b"></a><a href="#citation25b">{25b}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>State Papers</i>, Scotland, Thorpe, i. 61.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote25c"></a><a href="#citation25c">{25c}</a>&nbsp;
+Bain, <i>Calendar of Scottish Papers</i>, 1547-69, i. I; Tytler, iii.
+51 (1864).</p>
+<p><a name="footnote26a"></a><a href="#citation26a">{26a}</a>&nbsp;
+Bain i. 2; <i>Knox</i>, i. 182, 183.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote26b"></a><a href="#citation26b">{26b}</a>&nbsp;
+For the offering of the papal remission to the garrison of the castle
+before April 2, 1547, see Stewart of Cardonald&rsquo;s letter of that
+date to Wharton, in Bain&rsquo;s <i>Calendar of Scottish Papers</i>,
+1547-69, i. 4-5.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote27a"></a><a href="#citation27a">{27a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>John Knox</i>, i. 80.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote27b"></a><a href="#citation27b">{27b}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>State Papers</i>, Domestic.&nbsp; Addenda, Edward VI., p. 327.&nbsp;
+Lord Eure says there were twenty galleys.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote27c"></a><a href="#citation27c">{27c}</a>&nbsp;
+Odet De Selve, <i>Correspondence Politique</i>, pp. 170-178.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote28"></a><a href="#citation28">{28}</a>&nbsp; <i>Knox</i>,
+i. 201.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote30a"></a><a href="#citation30a">{30a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Leonti Strozzio</i>, <i>incolumitatem modo pacti</i>, <i>se dediderunt</i>,
+writes Buchanan.&nbsp; Professor Hume Brown says that Buchanan evidently
+confirms Knox; but <i>incolumitas</i> means security for bare life,
+and nothing more.&nbsp; Lesley says that the terms <i>asked</i> were
+life and fortune, <i>salvi cum fortunis</i>, but the terms <i>granted</i>
+were but safety in life and limb, and, it seems, freedom to depart,
+<i>ut soli homines integri discederent</i>.&nbsp; If Lesley, a Catholic
+historian, is right, and if by <i>discederent</i> he means &ldquo;go
+freely away,&rdquo; the French broke the terms of surrender.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote30b"></a><a href="#citation30b">{30b}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, i. 206, 228.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote33a"></a><a href="#citation33a">{33a}</a>&nbsp;
+Lorimer, John Knox and the Church of England, 261.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote33b"></a><a href="#citation33b">{33b}</a>&nbsp;
+Ibid., 158.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote33c"></a><a href="#citation33c">{33c}</a>&nbsp;
+Ibid., 156, 157.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote35"></a><a href="#citation35">{35}</a>&nbsp;&nbsp;
+Compare the preface, under the Restoration, to our existing prayer book.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote36a"></a><a href="#citation36a">{36a}</a>&nbsp;
+Lorimer, John Knox and the Church of England, 98-136.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote36b"></a><a href="#citation36b">{36b}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, iii. 122.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote37a"></a><a href="#citation37a">{37a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, iii. 297.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote37b"></a><a href="#citation37b">{37b}</a>&nbsp;
+Ibid., iii. 122.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote38a"></a><a href="#citation38a">{38a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, iii. 280-282.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote38b"></a><a href="#citation38b">{38b}</a>&nbsp;
+Lorimer, i. 162-176.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote39"></a><a href="#citation39">{39}</a>&nbsp; But,
+for the date, <i>cf</i>. Hume Brown, <i>John Knox</i>, i. 148; and M&lsquo;Crie,
+65, <i>note</i> 5; <i>Knox</i>, iii. 156.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote40a"></a><a href="#citation40a">{40a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, iii. 120.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote40b"></a><a href="#citation40b">{40b}</a>&nbsp;
+Laing, <i>Knox</i>, vi. pp. lxxx., lxxxi.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote40c"></a><a href="#citation40c">{40c}</a>&nbsp;
+Pollen, <i>The Month</i>, September 1897.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote43"></a><a href="#citation43">{43}</a>&nbsp; <i>Knox</i>,
+iii. 366.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote45"></a><a href="#citation45">{45}</a>&nbsp; Lorimer,
+John Knox and the Church of England, 259.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote47a"></a><a href="#citation47a">{47a}</a>&nbsp;
+Original Letters, Parker Society, 745-747;<i> Knox</i>, iii. 221-226.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote47b"></a><a href="#citation47b">{47b}</a>&nbsp;
+M&lsquo;Crie, 65 (1855); <i>Knox</i>, iii. 235.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote48"></a><a href="#citation48">{48}</a>&nbsp; <i>Knox</i>,
+iii. 184.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote49a"></a><a href="#citation49a">{49a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, iii. 309.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote49b"></a><a href="#citation49b">{49b}</a>&nbsp;
+Ibid., iii. 328, 329.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote49c"></a><a href="#citation49c">{49c}</a>&nbsp;
+Ibid., iii. 194.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote54"></a><a href="#citation54">{54}</a>&nbsp; <i>cf</i>.
+Hume Brown, ii. 299, for the terms.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote56"></a><a href="#citation56">{56}</a>&nbsp; <i>John
+Knox</i>, i. 174, 175; <i>Corp. Ref</i>., xliii. 337-344.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote58"></a><a href="#citation58">{58}</a>&nbsp; For
+the Frankfort affair, see Laing&rsquo;s <i>Knox</i>, iv. 1-40, with
+Knox&rsquo;s own narrative, 41-49; the letters to and from Calvin, 51-68.&nbsp;
+Calvin, in his letter to the Puritans at Frankfort, writes: &ldquo;In
+the Anglican Liturgy, <i>as you describe it</i>, I see many trifles
+that may be put up with,&rdquo; Prof. Hume Brown&rsquo;s rendering of
+<i>tolerabiles ineptias</i>.&nbsp; The author of the &ldquo;Troubles
+at Frankfort&rdquo; (1575) leaves out &ldquo;as you describe it,&rdquo;
+and renders &ldquo;In the Liturgie of Englande I see that there were
+manye tollerable foolishe thinges.&rdquo;&nbsp; But Calvin, though he
+boasts him &ldquo;easy and flexible <i>in mediis rebus</i>, such as
+external rites,&rdquo; is decidedly in favour of the Puritans.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote60"></a><a href="#citation60">{60}</a>&nbsp; <i>Knox</i>
+i. 244.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote62a"></a><a href="#citation62a">{62a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, i. 245, <i>note</i> I.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote62b"></a><a href="#citation62b">{62b}</a>&nbsp;
+Ibid., iv. 245.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote66"></a><a href="#citation66">{66}</a>&nbsp; I conceive
+these to have been the arguments of the party of compromise, judging
+from the biblical texts which they adduced.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote67"></a><a href="#citation67">{67}</a>&nbsp; <i>Knox</i>,
+i. 247-249.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote71a"></a><a href="#citation71a">{71a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, i. 92.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote71b"></a><a href="#citation71b">{71b}</a>&nbsp;
+Ibid., iv. 75-84.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote73"></a><a href="#citation73">{73}</a>&nbsp; <i>Knox</i>;
+iv. 238-240.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote74"></a><a href="#citation74">{74}</a>&nbsp; We
+shall see that reformers like Lord James and Glencairn seem, at this
+moment, to have sided with Mary of Guise.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote76a"></a><a href="#citation76a">{76a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, i. 267-270.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote76b"></a><a href="#citation76b">{76b}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Corpus Reformatorum</i>, xlvi. 426.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote77a"></a><a href="#citation77a">{77a}</a>&nbsp;
+More probably by Calvin&rsquo;s opinion.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote77b"></a><a href="#citation77b">{77b}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, iv. 248-253; i. 267-273.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote78"></a><a href="#citation78">{78}</a>&nbsp; Stevenson,
+Selected MSS., pp. 69, 70 (1827); Bain, i. 585; Randolph to Cecil, January
+2, 1561.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote80a"></a><a href="#citation80a">{80a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, iv. 255-276.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote80b"></a><a href="#citation80b">{80b}</a>&nbsp;
+Ibid., i. 273, 274.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote81a"></a><a href="#citation81a">{81a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, i. 275, 276.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote81b"></a><a href="#citation81b">{81b}</a>&nbsp;
+Ibid., i. 273, 274.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote83"></a><a href="#citation83">{83}</a>&nbsp; <i>Knox</i>,
+iv. 501, 502.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote84"></a><a href="#citation84">{84}</a>&nbsp; <i>Knox</i>,
+iv. 358.&nbsp; <i>Zurich Letters</i>, 34-36.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote85"></a><a href="#citation85">{85}</a>&nbsp; <i>Knox</i>,
+iv. 486, 488.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote87a"></a><a href="#citation87a">{87a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Wodrow Miscellany</i>, vol. i.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote87b"></a><a href="#citation87b">{87b}</a>&nbsp;
+Here the &ldquo;Historie of the Estate&rdquo; is corroborated by the
+Treasurer&rsquo;s Accounts, recording payment to Rothesay Herald.&nbsp;
+He is summoning George Lovell, David Ferguson (a preacher, later minister
+of Dunfermline), and others unnamed to appear at Edinburgh on July 28,
+to answer for &ldquo;wrongous using and wresting of the Scriptures,
+disputing upon erroneous opinions, and eating flesh in Lent,&rdquo;
+and at other times forbidden by Acts of Parliament (M&lsquo;Crie, 359,
+<i>note</i> G).&nbsp; Nothing is here said about riotous iconoclasm,
+but Lovell had been at the hanging of an image of St. Francis as early
+as 1543, and in many such godly exercises, or was accused of these acts
+of zeal.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote87c"></a><a href="#citation87c">{87c}</a>&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Historie of the Estate of Scotland,&rdquo; <i>Wodrow Miscellany</i>,
+i. 53-55.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote88a"></a><a href="#citation88a">{88a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, i. 301.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote88b"></a><a href="#citation88b">{88b}</a>&nbsp;
+Knox appears (he is very vague) to date Calder&rsquo;s petition <i>after</i>
+Willock&rsquo;s second visit, which the &ldquo;Historie of the Estate
+of Scotland&rdquo; places in October 1558.&nbsp; Dr. M&lsquo;Crie accepts
+that date, but finds that Knox places Calder&rsquo;s petition before
+the burning of Myln, in April 1559.&nbsp; Dr. M&lsquo;Crie suggests
+that perhaps Calder petitioned twice, but deems Knox in the right.&nbsp;
+As the Reformer contradicts himself, unless there were two Calder petitions
+(i. 301, i. 307), he must have made an oversight.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote88c"></a><a href="#citation88c">{88c}</a>&nbsp;
+Hume Brown, <i>John Knox</i>, ii.&nbsp; Appendix, 301-303.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote88d"></a><a href="#citation88d">{88d}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, i. 301-306</p>
+<p><a name="footnote89a"></a><a href="#citation89a">{89a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, i. 294, 301-312.&nbsp; On p. 294 Knox dates the Parliament
+in October.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote89b"></a><a href="#citation89b">{89b}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, i. 309-312.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote90a"></a><a href="#citation90a">{90a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, i. 312-314.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote90b"></a><a href="#citation90b">{90b}</a>&nbsp;
+See Laing&rsquo;s edition, i. 320, 321.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote91"></a><a href="#citation91">{91}</a>&nbsp; Wodrow
+Miscellany, i. 55.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote92a"></a><a href="#citation92a">{92a}</a>&nbsp;
+M&lsquo;Crie, <i>Knox</i>, 359, 360.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote92b"></a><a href="#citation92b">{92b}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, i. 306, 307.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote93a"></a><a href="#citation93a">{93a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, i. 307.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote93b"></a><a href="#citation93b">{93b}</a>&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Historie,&rdquo; <i>Wodrow Miscellany</i>, i. 55, 56.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote93c"></a><a href="#citation93c">{93c}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, i. 312-314.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote94a"></a><a href="#citation94a">{94a}</a>&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Historie,&rdquo; <i>Wodrow Miscellany</i>, 56.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote94b"></a><a href="#citation94b">{94b}</a>&nbsp;
+Melville, 76, 77 (1827).</p>
+<p>But Professor Hume Brown appears to be misled in saying that Bettencourt,
+or Bethencourt, did not reach Scotland till June (<i>John Knox</i>,
+i. 344i <i>note</i> i), citing Forbes, i. 141.&nbsp; Bethencourt &ldquo;passed
+Berwick on April 13&rdquo; (<i>For. Cal. Eliz</i>., 1558-59, 214) to
+negotiate the Scottish part in the peace, signed at Upsettlington (May
+31).&nbsp; Bethencourt would be with the Regent by April 15, and he
+may have confirmed her in summoning the preachers who defied her proclamations,
+though, with or without his advice, she could do no less.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote95a"></a><a href="#citation95a">{95a}</a>&nbsp;
+Pitscottie, ii. 523.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote95b"></a><a href="#citation95b">{95b}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>State Papers</i>, Borders, vol. i.&nbsp; No. 421 MS.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote96a"></a><a href="#citation96a">{96a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Affaires Etrang&eacute;res, Angleterre</i>, vol. xv.&nbsp; MS.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote96b"></a><a href="#citation96b">{96b}</a>&nbsp;
+Forbes, 97; Throckmorton to Cecil, May 18.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote96c"></a><a href="#citation96c">{96c}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>For. Cal. Eliz</i>., 1558-59, 272.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote97"></a><a href="#citation97">{97}</a>&nbsp; Melville,
+80.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote98a"></a><a href="#citation98a">{98a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Statuta</i>, &amp;c.&nbsp; Robertson, vol. i. clv-clxii.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote98b"></a><a href="#citation98b">{98b}</a>&nbsp;
+Book of Discipline.&nbsp; <i>Knox</i>, ii. 253, 254.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote99a"></a><a href="#citation99a">{99a}</a>&nbsp;
+M&lsquo;Crie, 360.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote99b"></a><a href="#citation99b">{99b}</a>&nbsp;
+The Regent&rsquo;s account of the whole affair, as given by Francis
+and Mary to the Pope, is vague and mistily apologetic.&nbsp; (Published
+in French by Prof. Hume Brown, ii. 300-302.)&nbsp; The Regent wrote
+from Dunbar, July 1559, that she had in vain implored the Pope to aid
+her in reforming the lives of the clergy (as in 1556-57).&nbsp; Their
+negligence had favoured, though she did not know it (and she says nothing
+about it in 1556-57), the secret growth of heresy.&nbsp; Next, a public
+preacher arose in one town (probably Paul Methuen in Dundee) introducing
+the Genevan Church.&nbsp; The Regent next caused the bishops to assemble
+the clergy, bidding them reform their lives, and then repress heresy.&nbsp;
+She also called an assembly of the Estates, when most of the Lords,
+<i>hors du conseil et &agrave; part</i>, demanded &ldquo;a partial establishment
+of the new religion.&rdquo;&nbsp; This was refused, and the Provincial
+Council (of March 1559) was called for reform of the clergy.&nbsp; Nothing
+resulted but scandal and popular agitation.&nbsp; Public preachers arose
+in the towns.&nbsp; The Regent assembled her forces, and the Lords and
+Congregation began their career of violence.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote100"></a><a href="#citation100">{100}</a>&nbsp;
+As to Knox&rsquo;s account of this reforming Provincial Council (<i>Knox</i>,
+i. 291, 292), Lord Hailes calls it &ldquo;exceedingly partial and erroneous
+. . . no zeal can justify a man for misrepresenting an adversary.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Bold language for a judge to use in 1769!&nbsp; <i>Cf</i>.&nbsp; Robertson,
+<i>Statuta</i>, i. clxii, <i>note</i> I.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote101"></a><a href="#citation101">{101}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, v. 15-17.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote102a"></a><a href="#citation102a">{102a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, v. 207, 208.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote102b"></a><a href="#citation102b">{102b}</a>&nbsp;
+Ibid., v. 229.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote102c"></a><a href="#citation102c">{102c}</a>&nbsp;
+Ibid., v. 420, 421.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;
+Ibid., v. 495-523.&nbsp; [This footnote is provided in the original
+book but isn&rsquo;t referenced in the text.&nbsp; DP.]</p>
+<p><a name="footnote104"></a><a href="#citation104">{104}</a>&nbsp;
+John Knox and the Church of England, 215-218.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote105"></a><a href="#citation105">{105}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, ii. 460, 461.&nbsp; We return to this point.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote107"></a><a href="#citation107">{107}</a>&nbsp;
+Bale, <i>Scriptorum Illustrium Majoris Brit. Catalogus Poster</i>.,
+p. 219 (1559).&nbsp; Knox, i. 258-261.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote108a"></a><a href="#citation108a">{108a}</a>&nbsp;
+Dieppe, April 10-April 22, 1559.&nbsp; <i>Knox</i>, vi. 15-21.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote108b"></a><a href="#citation108b">{108b}</a>&nbsp;
+Desmarquets, <i>Mem. Chronol. Jour. l&rsquo;Hist, de Dieppe</i>, i.
+210.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote109a"></a><a href="#citation109a">{109a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Corp. Ref</i>., xlv. (Calv., xvii.) 541.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote109b"></a><a href="#citation109b">{109b}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Naissance de l&rsquo;H&eacute;r&eacute;sie &agrave; Dieppe</i>, Rouen,
+1877, ed. Lesens.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote111"></a><a href="#citation111">{111}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, i. 321-323.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote112"></a><a href="#citation112">{112}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, vi. 23.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote113a"></a><a href="#citation113a">{113a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Corpus Reformatorum</i>, xlvi. 609, xlvii. 409-411, August 13, 1561.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote113b"></a><a href="#citation113b">{113b}</a>&nbsp;
+The learned Dr. M&lsquo;Crie does not refer to this letter to Mrs. Locke,
+but observes: &ldquo;None of the gentry or sober part of the congregation
+were concerned in this unpremeditated tumult; it was wholly confined
+to the lowest of the inhabitants&rdquo; (M&lsquo;Crie&rsquo;s <i>Life
+of Knox</i>, 127, 1855).&nbsp; Yet an authority dear to Dr. M&lsquo;Crie,
+&ldquo;The Historie of the Estate of Scotland,&rdquo; gives the glory,
+not to the lowest of the inhabitants, but to &ldquo;the brethren.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Professor Hume Brown blames &ldquo;the Perth mob,&rdquo; and says nothing
+of the action of the &ldquo;brethren,&rdquo; as described to Mrs. Locke
+by Knox.&nbsp; <i>John Knox</i>, ii. 8.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote117"></a><a href="#citation117">{117}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Theses of Erastus</i>.&nbsp; Rev. Robert Lee.&nbsp; Edinburgh, 1844.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote120"></a><a href="#citation120">{120}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, i. 341,342; vi. 24.&nbsp; Did the brethren promise nothing
+but the evacuation of Perth?</p>
+<p><a name="footnote121a"></a><a href="#citation121a">{121a}</a>&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Historie,&rdquo; <i>Wodrow Miscellany</i>, i. 58.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote121b"></a><a href="#citation121b">{121b}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, i. 343, 344.&nbsp; The Congregation are said to have left
+Perth on May 29.&nbsp; They assert their presence there on May 31, in
+their Band.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote122"></a><a href="#citation122">{122}</a>&nbsp;
+Edinburgh Burgh Records.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote123a"></a><a href="#citation123a">{123a}</a>&nbsp;
+But see <i>Knox</i>, i. 347-349.&nbsp; Is a week (June 4 to June 11)
+accidentally omitted?</p>
+<p><a name="footnote123b"></a><a href="#citation123b">{123b}</a>&nbsp;
+Writing on June 23, Knox dates the &ldquo;Reformation&rdquo; &ldquo;June
+14.&rdquo;&nbsp; His dates, at this point, though recorded within three
+weeks, are to me inexplicable.&nbsp; <i>Knox</i>, vi. 25.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote124"></a><a href="#citation124">{124}</a>&nbsp;
+Keith, i. 265, <i>note.</i></p>
+<p><a name="footnote125a"></a><a href="#citation125a">{125a}</a>&nbsp;
+Lesley, ii. 443, <i>Scottish Text Society.</i></p>
+<p><a name="footnote125b"></a><a href="#citation125b">{125b}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>For. Cal. Eliz</i>., 1558-59, 367.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote126a"></a><a href="#citation126a">{126a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, vi. 26.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote126b"></a><a href="#citation126b">{126b}</a>&nbsp;
+Ibid., i. 355.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote126c"></a><a href="#citation126c">{126c}</a>&nbsp;
+Wodrow Miscellany, i. 60.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote127a"></a><a href="#citation127a">{127a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, vi. 26.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote127b"></a><a href="#citation127b">{127b}</a>&nbsp;
+See <i>Scottish Historical Review</i>, January 1905, 121-122, 128-130.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote131"></a><a href="#citation131">{131}</a>&nbsp;
+Bain, i. 215.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote133a"></a><a href="#citation133a">{133a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>For. Cal. Eliz</i>., 1558-59, 278.&nbsp; Erroneously dated &ldquo;May
+24&rdquo; (?).</p>
+<p><a name="footnote133b"></a><a href="#citation133b">{133b}</a>&nbsp;
+Bain, i. 216-218; <i>For. Cal. Eliz</i>., <i>ut supra</i>, 335, 336.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote133c"></a><a href="#citation133c">{133c}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Archives Etrang&eacute;res, Angleterre</i>, vol. xv. MS.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote133d"></a><a href="#citation133d">{133d}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>For. Cal. Eliz</i>., 336; <i>Knox</i>, i. 359, 360.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote134"></a><a href="#citation134">{134}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, i. 360-362.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote135a"></a><a href="#citation135a">{135a}</a>&nbsp;
+Knox dates the entry of the Reformers into Edinburgh on June 29.&nbsp;
+But he wrote to Mrs. Locke from Edinburgh on June 25, probably a misprint.&nbsp;
+The date June 29 is given in the &ldquo;Historie.&rdquo;&nbsp; Knox
+dates a letter to Cecil, &ldquo;Edinburgh, June 28.&rdquo;&nbsp; <i>The
+Diurnal of Occurrents</i> dates the sack of monasteries in Edinburgh
+June 28.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote135b"></a><a href="#citation135b">{135b}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Wodrow Miscellany</i>, i. 62; <i>Knox</i>, i. 366, 367, 370.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote135c"></a><a href="#citation135c">{135c}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, i. 363; <i>cf</i>. Keith, i. 213, 214; Spottiswoode, i.
+280, 281.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote136a"></a><a href="#citation136a">{136a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, i. 363-365; <i>For. Cal. Eliz</i>., 337.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote136b"></a><a href="#citation136b">{136b}</a>&nbsp;
+Teulet, i. 338-340.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote137a"></a><a href="#citation137a">{137a}</a>&nbsp;
+Bain, i. 218; <i>For. Cal. Eliz</i>., 1558-59, 339. 340.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote137b"></a><a href="#citation137b">{137b}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, vi. 45.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote138"></a><a href="#citation138">{138}</a>&nbsp;
+In Dr. Hay Fleming&rsquo;s <i>The Scottish Reformation</i> (p. 57),
+he dates the Regent&rsquo;s proclamation July 1.&nbsp; He omits the
+charge that, as proof of their disloyalty, &ldquo;they daily receive
+Englishmen with messages, and send the like into England&rdquo; (<i>Knox</i>,
+i. p. 364).&nbsp; &ldquo;The narrative of the proclamation, Knox says,
+is untrue,&rdquo; Dr. Hay Fleming remarks; but as to the dealing with
+England, the Reformer confessed to it in his &ldquo;History,&rdquo;
+Book III., when he could do so with safety.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote139a"></a><a href="#citation139a">{139a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, i. 365.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote139b"></a><a href="#citation139b">{139b}</a>&nbsp;
+Spottiswoode, i. 282.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote139c"></a><a href="#citation139c">{139c}</a>&nbsp;
+Teulet, i. 331.&nbsp; The Regent&rsquo;s instructions to Du Fresnoy.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote141"></a><a href="#citation141">{141}</a>&nbsp;
+Teulet, i. 334, 335, citing <i>Archives Etrang&eacute;res</i>, <i>Angleterre</i>,
+xiv.&nbsp; (xv.?), f. 221 (see the English translation), <i>For. Cal.
+Eliz</i>., 1558-59, 406, 407; Keith, i. 220, 221; Spottiswoode, i. 285,
+286.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote142a"></a><a href="#citation142a">{142a}</a>&nbsp;
+Extracts from Edinburgh Town Council Records, July 29, 1559; Keith,
+i. 487-489.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote142b"></a><a href="#citation142b">{142b}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Cf</i>. Hume Brown, <i>John Knox</i>, ii. 30.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote143a"></a><a href="#citation143a">{143a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, i. 376-379.&nbsp; The italicised articles are not in the
+other versions of the terms as finally settled; <i>cf</i>. &ldquo;Historie,&rdquo;
+<i>Wodrow Miscellany</i>, i. 55-57.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote143b"></a><a href="#citation143b">{143b}</a>&nbsp;
+Ibid., i. 379.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote144a"></a><a href="#citation144a">{144a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, i. 380.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote144b"></a><a href="#citation144b">{144b}</a>&nbsp;
+Sloane MSS., British Museum, 4144, 177b, 4737f, 100b.&nbsp; <i>For.
+Cal. Eliz</i>. 1558-59, 411.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote145a"></a><a href="#citation145a">{145a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, i. 381.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote145b"></a><a href="#citation145b">{145b}</a>&nbsp;
+My italics.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote146"></a><a href="#citation146">{146}</a>&nbsp;
+(Kyrkcaldy to Croft.)</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Theis salbe to certiffy you vpon monday the xxiii of Jully
+the quene and the lordis of the congregation are agreit on this maner
+as followeth.&nbsp; The armies beying boythe in Syghte betuix Eddingburght
+and Lietht or partye adversaire send mediatoris desyring that we sall
+agree and cease frome sheddinge of blude yf we wer men quhilkis wold
+fulfill in deid that thing quhilk we proffessit, that is the preachyng
+of godis worde and furth settyng of his glorye.&nbsp; Me lordis of the
+congregation movet by thare offres wer content to here commonyng.&nbsp;
+So fynallye after long talke, It is appointted on this maner.&nbsp;
+That the Religion here begoon sall proceid and contenew in all places
+wt owt impedement of the quenes authoretie, thare minesters sall neyther
+be trubillit nor stopped and in <i>all places whare ydolletre is put
+downe sall not be cett vp agane</i>.&nbsp; And whill the parlement be
+haldin to consele vpon all materes wch is fixit the x day of Januarye
+nixt, every man sall leive to his conscience not compellit be authoretye
+to do any thyng in religion yt his conscience repugnes to.&nbsp; And
+to this said parlement ther sall no man of or congregation be molested
+or trobillit in thair bodeis landis goodis possessions what someevir.&nbsp;
+<i>Further wt all dilligent spede ther frenche men here present salbe
+send awaye.&nbsp; And sall no other cum in this Realme w owt consent
+of the hole nobilite</i>.&nbsp; The towne of Eddingburght salbe keipit
+fre by the inhabitantes thairof and no maner of garnission laid or keip
+thair In, neyther of frenche nor scottis.&nbsp; For our part we sall
+remove of Eddingburght to or awne houssis, yt the quene may come to
+hir awne palyce, wch we tuke of before and hathe left it voyde to hir
+G.&nbsp; We have delyvered the prentyng yrunes of the coyne agayne wch
+we tuke becaus of the corruption of monye agaynst our laws and commonwealthe.&nbsp;
+Off truthe we believe nevir worde to be keipit of thir promises of her
+syde.&nbsp; And therfore hath tane me lord duke the erll of Huntlye
+and the rest of the nobillitye beying vpon hir syde bound to the performance
+hereof wt this condition yf sche brekkes any point heirof they sall
+renunce hir obeysance and joyne them selfis wt vs.&nbsp; In this meane-tyme
+we contenew or men of warr to gydder wt in or boundis of Fyfe, Angus,
+Stretherin and Westland, in aduenture the appointtment be broken, and
+dowtes not to mak vs daily stronger for by the furthe settying of religion
+and haittred of the frenche men we gett the hartis of the hole commonalties.&nbsp;
+Nowe to conclude yf it had not bene for some nobillmens causis who hes
+promised to be owres we hade not appointted wt the quene at this tyme.&nbsp;
+From hens forwardis send to the lard of Ormiston who will se all saifly
+conveyed to me.&nbsp; Thvs I commit you to god from Eddingburght the
+xxiiii of Jully</p>
+<p>yoris at power</p>
+<p>(W. KYRKCALDY).&rdquo; <a name="citation147"></a><a href="#footnote147">{147}</a></p>
+<p><a name="footnote147"></a><a href="#citation147">{147}</a>&nbsp;
+MS. Record Office; cf. <i>For. Cal. Eliz</i>., 1558 59, 408, 409.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote148a"></a><a href="#citation148a">{148a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, i. 379, 380.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote148b"></a><a href="#citation148b">{148b}</a>&nbsp;
+Ibid., i. 381.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote149a"></a><a href="#citation149a">{149a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, vi. 53.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote149b"></a><a href="#citation149b">{149b}</a>&nbsp;
+Ibid., i. 397-412.&nbsp; The Proclamation, and two Replies.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote149c"></a><a href="#citation149c">{149c}</a>&nbsp;
+My italics.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote150"></a><a href="#citation150">{150}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, i. xxvi.; vi. 87.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote151a"></a><a href="#citation151a">{151a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, i. 392, 393.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote151b"></a><a href="#citation151b">{151b}</a>&nbsp;
+Ibid., i. 382.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote152a"></a><a href="#citation152a">{152a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, ii. 15-38.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote152b"></a><a href="#citation152b">{152b}</a>&nbsp;
+Ibid., vi. 56-59.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote153"></a><a href="#citation153">{153}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>S. P. Scotland</i>, <i>Elizabeth</i>, MS. vol. i.&nbsp; No. 80; <i>cf</i>.
+Bain, i. 236, 237.&nbsp; Croft to Cecil, Berwick, August 3, 1559.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote154a"></a><a href="#citation154a">{154a}</a>&nbsp;
+For. Cal. Eliz., 470.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote154b"></a><a href="#citation154b">{154b}</a>&nbsp;
+I assume that he was the preacher at Edinburgh in d&rsquo;Oysel&rsquo;s
+letter of June 30-July 2, 1559.&nbsp; Teulet, i. 325.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote155"></a><a href="#citation155">{155}</a>&nbsp;
+Sadleir to Cecil, September 8, 1559.&nbsp; <i>For. Cal. Eliz</i>., 543,
+1558-1559.&nbsp; The fortification, says Professor Hume Brown, &ldquo;was
+a distinct breach of the late agreement&rdquo; (of July 24), &ldquo;and
+they weir not slow to remind her&rdquo; (the Regent) &ldquo;of her bad
+faith.&rdquo;&nbsp; The agreement of July 24 says nothing about fortifying.&nbsp;
+The ingenious brethren argued that to fortify Leith entailed &ldquo;oppression
+of our poor brethren, indwellers of the same.&rdquo;&nbsp; Now the agreement
+forbade &ldquo;oppression of any of the Congregation.&rdquo;&nbsp; But
+the people of Leith had &ldquo;rendered themselves&rdquo; to the Regent
+on July 24, and the breach of treaty, if any, was &ldquo;constructive.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+(<i>John Knox</i>, ii. 47; <i>Knox</i>, i. 413, 424-433.)</p>
+<p><a name="footnote158a"></a><a href="#citation158a">{158a}</a>&nbsp;
+The evidence as to these proceedings of the brethren is preserved in
+the French archives, and consists of testimonies given on oath in answer
+to inquiries made by Francis and Mary in November 1559.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote158b"></a><a href="#citation158b">{158b}</a>&nbsp;
+We have dated Lethington&rsquo;s desertion of the Regent about October
+25, because Knox says it was a &ldquo;few days before our first defeat&rdquo;
+on the last day in October.&nbsp; M. Teulet dates in the beginning of
+October a Latin manifesto by the Congregation to all the princes of
+Christendom.&nbsp; This document is a long arraignment of the Regent&rsquo;s
+policy; her very concessions as to religion are declared to be tricks,
+meant to bring the Protestant lords under the letter of the law.&nbsp;
+The paper may be thought to show the hand of Lethington, not of Knox.&nbsp;
+But, in point of fact, I incline to think that the real author of this
+manifesto was Cecil.&nbsp; He sketches it in a letter sent from the
+English Privy Council in November 15, 1559.&nbsp; This draft was to
+be used by the rebels in an appeal to Elizabeth.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote159"></a><a href="#citation159">{159}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, vi, 89, 90; M&lsquo;Crie, 143.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote160a"></a><a href="#citation160a">{160a}</a>&nbsp;
+Bothwell states the amount at 3000 <i>&eacute;cus de soleil</i>.&nbsp;
+French Archives MS.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote160b"></a><a href="#citation160b">{160b}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, i. 472.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote161a"></a><a href="#citation161a">{161a}</a>&nbsp;
+Sadleir to Cecil, Nov. 15, 1559.&nbsp; <i>For. Cal.&nbsp; Eliz</i>.,
+1559-60, 115.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote161b"></a><a href="#citation161b">{161b}</a>&nbsp;
+Labanoff, vii. 283.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote163"></a><a href="#citation163">{163}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, vi. 105-107.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote164"></a><a href="#citation164">{164}</a>&nbsp;
+See Appendix B.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote165a"></a><a href="#citation165a">{165a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Corp. Ref</i>., xlv. 645 (3118, <i>note</i> I).</p>
+<p><a name="footnote165b"></a><a href="#citation165b">{165b}</a>&nbsp;
+Calvinus Sturmio, <i>Corp. Ref</i>., xlvi. 38, 39, March 23, 1560.&nbsp;
+Sturmius Calvino, ibid., 53-56, April 15.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote166a"></a><a href="#citation166a">{166a}</a>&nbsp;
+Bain, i. 389, 390; <i>For. Cal. Eliz</i>., 1559-60, 604.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote166b"></a><a href="#citation166b">{166b}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, ii. 68; <i>cf</i>. the Regent&rsquo;s letter.&nbsp; Bain,
+i. 389.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote167a"></a><a href="#citation167a">{167a}</a>&nbsp;
+The date may be part of an interpolation.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote167b"></a><a href="#citation167b">{167b}</a>&nbsp;
+This account is from the French Archives MS., <i>Angleterre</i>, vol.
+xv.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote168"></a><a href="#citation168">{168}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, ii. 72.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote169"></a><a href="#citation169">{169}</a>&nbsp;
+It is an inexplicable fact that, less than a month before Glencairn
+and Lord James signed the first godly Band (December 3, 1557), these
+two, with Kirkcaldy of Grange, &ldquo;were acting with the Queen-Dowager
+against Huntly, Chatelherault, and Argyll,&rdquo; who in December signed
+with them the godly Band.&nbsp; The case is thus stated by Mr. Tytler,
+perhaps too vigorously.&nbsp; It appears that, after the refusal of
+the Lords to cross Tweed and attack England, in the autumn of 1557,
+the Regent, with the concurrence of Glencairn, Lord James, and Kirkcaldy
+of Grange, proposed to recall from exile in England the Earl of Lennox,
+father of Darnley.&nbsp; He, like the chief of the Hamiltons, had a
+claim to the crown of Scotland, failing heirs born of Mary Stuart.&nbsp;
+Lennox, therefore, would be a counterpoise to Hamilton and his ally
+in mutiny, Argyll.&nbsp; Thus Lord James and Glencairn, in November
+1557; support the Regent against the Hamiltons and Argyll, but in December
+Glencairn, reconciled to Argyll, signs with him the godly Band.&nbsp;
+We descry the old Stewart <i>versus</i> Hamilton feud in these proceedings.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote170"></a><a href="#citation170">{170}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, ii. 87, <i>note.</i></p>
+<p><a name="footnote172"></a><a href="#citation172">{172}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, ii. 89-127.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote174a"></a><a href="#citation174a">{174a}</a>&nbsp;
+Randolph to Cecil, September 7; Bain, i. 477, 478.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote174b"></a><a href="#citation174b">{174b}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, vi. 83, 84.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote174c"></a><a href="#citation174c">{174c}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, vi. lxxxii.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote175"></a><a href="#citation175">{175}</a>&nbsp;
+M&lsquo;Crie, <i>Life of John Knox</i>, 162 (1855).</p>
+<p><a name="footnote177a"></a><a href="#citation177a">{177a}</a>&nbsp;
+Keith, iii. 4-7.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote177b"></a><a href="#citation177b">{177b}</a>&nbsp;
+Bain, i. 461.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote177c"></a><a href="#citation177c">{177c}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Cf</i>. Edinburgh Burgh Records.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote182"></a><a href="#citation182">{182}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, ii. 193.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote186"></a><a href="#citation186">{186}</a>&nbsp;
+Queen Mary&rsquo;s Letter to Guise, p. xlii., <i>Scottish History Society</i>,
+1904.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote191a"></a><a href="#citation191a">{191a}</a>&nbsp;
+Lesley, ii. 454 (1895).</p>
+<p><a name="footnote191b"></a><a href="#citation191b">{191b}</a>&nbsp;
+See Lord James to Throckmorton, London, May 20, a passage quoted by
+Mr. Murray Rose, <i>Scot. Hist. Review</i>, No. 6, 154.&nbsp; Additional
+MSS. Brit. Mus., 358, 30, f. 117, 121.&nbsp; Lord James to Throckmorton,
+May 20-June 3, 1561.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote191c"></a><a href="#citation191c">{191c}</a>&nbsp;
+Bain, i. 540, 541.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote191d"></a><a href="#citation191d">{191d}</a>&nbsp;
+Lord James to Dudley, October 7, 1561, Bain, i. 557.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote192"></a><a href="#citation192">{192}</a>&nbsp;
+Pollen, <i>Papal Negotiations</i>, 62.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote193a"></a><a href="#citation193a">{193a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, ii, 266.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote193b"></a><a href="#citation193b">{193b}</a>&nbsp;
+Bain, ii. 543.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote194"></a><a href="#citation194">{194}</a>&nbsp;
+Bain, ii. 547.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote195"></a><a href="#citation195">{195}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, ii. 276, 277.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote196"></a><a href="#citation196">{196}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, vi. 131.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote197"></a><a href="#citation197">{197}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, ii. 279, 280.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote199"></a><a href="#citation199">{199}</a>&nbsp;
+Tracts by David Fergusson, Bannatyne Club, 1860.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote200a"></a><a href="#citation200a">{200a}</a>&nbsp;
+Bain, i. 551, 552.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote200b"></a><a href="#citation200b">{200b}</a>&nbsp;
+Lord James to Lord Robert Dudley, October 7, 1561.&nbsp; Bain, i. 557,
+558.&nbsp; Lethington&rsquo;s account of his reasonings with Elizabeth
+is not very hopeful.&nbsp; Pollen, &ldquo;Queen Mary&rsquo;s Letter
+to Guise,&rdquo; <i>Scot. Hist. Soc</i>., 38-45.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote201a"></a><a href="#citation201a">{201a}</a>&nbsp;
+Bain, i. 565.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote201b"></a><a href="#citation201b">{201b}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, vi. 131, 132; ii. 289.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote201c"></a><a href="#citation201c">{201c}</a>&nbsp;
+The proclamation against &ldquo;all monks, friars, priests, nuns, adulterers,
+fornicators, and all such filthy persons,&rdquo; was of October 2.&nbsp;
+On October 5 the Queen bade the council and community of the town to
+meet in the Tolbooth, depose the Provost and Bailies, and elect others.&nbsp;
+On October 8 the order was carried out, and protests were put in.&nbsp;
+A note from Lethington was received, containing three names, out of
+which the Queen commanded that one must be Provost.&nbsp; The Council
+&ldquo;thought good to pass to her Grace,&rdquo; show that they had
+already made their election, and await her pleasure.&nbsp; &ldquo;Jezebel&rsquo;s
+letter and wicked will is obeyed as law,&rdquo; says Knox.&mdash;<i>Extracts
+from Records of the Burgh of Edinburgh</i>, 126, 127.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote202"></a><a href="#citation202">{202}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, vi. 133-135.&nbsp; <i>Corp. Refor</i>., xlvii. 74.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote203a"></a><a href="#citation203a">{203a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Corp. Refor</i>., xlvii. 114, 115.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote203b"></a><a href="#citation203b">{203b}</a>&nbsp;
+Bain, i. 582, 583.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote203c"></a><a href="#citation203c">{203c}</a>&nbsp;
+Ibid., i. 491.&nbsp; Randolph to Cecil.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote205"></a><a href="#citation205">{205}</a>&nbsp;
+Bain, i. 565, 566.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote206a"></a><a href="#citation206a">{206a}</a>&nbsp;
+Froude, iii. 265-270 (1866).</p>
+<p><a name="footnote206b"></a><a href="#citation206b">{206b}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, vi. 83.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote207a"></a><a href="#citation207a">{207a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, vi. 11-14.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote207b"></a><a href="#citation207b">{207b}</a>&nbsp;
+Bain, i. 569.&nbsp; Randolph to Cecil, November 11.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote207c"></a><a href="#citation207c">{207c}</a>&nbsp;
+Ibid., i. 568-570.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote208a"></a><a href="#citation208a">{208a}</a>&nbsp;
+There was a small guard, but no powerful guard existed till after Riccio&rsquo;s
+murder.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote208b"></a><a href="#citation208b">{208b}</a>&nbsp;
+Bain, i. 575.&nbsp; Randolph to Cecil, December 7.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote208c"></a><a href="#citation208c">{208c}</a>&nbsp;
+Ibid., i. 571.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote209"></a><a href="#citation209">{209}</a>&nbsp;
+It is plain from Randolph (Bain, i. 575) that the precise feared that
+Mary, if secured by the English alliance, would be severe with &ldquo;true
+professors of Christ.&rdquo;</p>
+<p><a name="footnote210"></a><a href="#citation210">{210}</a>&nbsp;
+Keith, iii. 384, 385.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote211a"></a><a href="#citation211a">{211a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, ii. 300-313.&nbsp; Pollen, &ldquo;Mary&rsquo;s Letter to
+the Duc de Guise,&rdquo; xli.-xlvii.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote211b"></a><a href="#citation211b">{211b}</a>&nbsp;
+Bain, i. 568, 569.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote211c"></a><a href="#citation211c">{211c}</a>&nbsp;
+Ibid., i. 585.&nbsp; Randolph to Cecil, January 2, 1562.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote212a"></a><a href="#citation212a">{212a}</a>&nbsp;
+There is an air of secrecy in these transactions.&nbsp; In the Register
+of the Privy Seal, vol. xxxi. fol. 45 (MS.), is a &ldquo;Precept for
+a Charter under the Great Seal,&rdquo; a charter to Lord James for the
+Earldom of Moray.&nbsp; The date is January 31, 1560-61.&nbsp; On February
+7, 1560-61, Lord James receives the Earldom of Mar, having to pay a
+pair of gilded spurs on the feast of St. John (<i>Register of Privy
+Seal</i>, vol. xxx. fol. 2).&nbsp; Lord James now bore the title of
+Earl of Mar, not, as yet&mdash;not till Huntly was put at&mdash;of Moray.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote212b"></a><a href="#citation212b">{212b}</a>&nbsp;
+Dr. Hay Fleming quotes Randolph thus: &ldquo;The Papists mistrust greatly
+the meeting; the Protestants as greatly desire it.&nbsp; The preachers
+are more vehement than discreet or learned.&rdquo;&nbsp; (<i>Mary Queen
+of Scots</i>, p. 292, <i>note</i> 35, citing <i>For. Cal. Eliz</i>.,
+iv. 523.)&nbsp; The Calendar is at fault and gives the impression that
+the ministers vehemently preached in favour of the meeting of the Queen.&nbsp;
+This was not so, Randolph goes on, &ldquo;which I heartily lament.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+He uses the whole phrase, more than is here given, not only on January
+30, but on February 12.&nbsp; Now Randolph desired the meeting, so the
+preachers must have &ldquo;thundered&rdquo; against it!&nbsp; They feared
+that Mary would become a member of the Church of England, &ldquo;of
+which they both say and preach that it is little better than when it
+was at the worst&rdquo; (Bain, i. 603).</p>
+<p><a name="footnote212c"></a><a href="#citation212c">{212c}</a>&nbsp;
+Keith, ii. 139.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote213"></a><a href="#citation213">{213}</a>&nbsp;
+The Teviotdale Ormistouns of that ilk.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote214a"></a><a href="#citation214a">{214a}</a>&nbsp;
+In Pitcairn&rsquo;s <i>Criminal Trials</i> is Arran&rsquo;s report of
+Bothwell&rsquo;s very words, vol. i., part 2, pp. 462-465.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote214b"></a><a href="#citation214b">{214b}</a>&nbsp;
+Bain, i. 613, 614.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote215a"></a><a href="#citation215a">{215a}</a>&nbsp;
+Bain, i. 618, 619.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote215b"></a><a href="#citation215b">{215b}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, ii. 330.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote215c"></a><a href="#citation215c">{215c}</a>&nbsp;
+Ibid., ii. 330, 331.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote215d"></a><a href="#citation215d">{215d}</a>&nbsp;
+Cf. Baird, The Rise of the Huguenots, ii. 21 et seq.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote216a"></a><a href="#citation216a">{216a}</a>&nbsp;
+Bain, i. 627.&nbsp; Randolph to Cecil, May 29.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote216b"></a><a href="#citation216b">{216b}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Cf</i>. Froude, vi. 547-565.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote216c"></a><a href="#citation216c">{216c}</a>&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Book of Discipline,&rdquo; <i>Knox</i>, ii. 228.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote216d"></a><a href="#citation216d">{216d}</a>&nbsp;
+M&lsquo;Crie, 187.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote217a"></a><a href="#citation217a">{217a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, ii. 330-335.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote217b"></a><a href="#citation217b">{217b}</a>&nbsp;
+Bain, i. 673.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote217c"></a><a href="#citation217c">{217c}</a>&nbsp;
+Randolph mentions the joy of the Court over some Guisian successes against
+the Huguenots, then up in arms, while Mary was on her expedition against
+Huntly, in October 1562.&nbsp; On December 30 he says that there is
+little dancing, less because of Knox&rsquo;s sermons than on account
+of bad news from France.&nbsp; Bain, i. 658, 674.</p>
+<p>Dr. Hay Fleming dates the wicked dance in December 1562, but of course
+that date was not the moment when &ldquo;persecution was begun again
+in France,&rdquo; nor would Mary be skipping in December for joy over
+letters of the previous March.&nbsp; <i>Mary Queen of Scots</i>, 275.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote218"></a><a href="#citation218">{218}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, vi. 140, 141.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote219a"></a><a href="#citation219a">{219a}</a>&nbsp;
+Keith, iii. 50, 51.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote219b"></a><a href="#citation219b">{219b}</a>&nbsp;
+Bain, i. 630.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote219c"></a><a href="#citation219c">{219c}</a>&nbsp;
+Lesley, ii. 468.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote219d"></a><a href="#citation219d">{219d}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, vi. 193.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote220a"></a><a href="#citation220a">{220a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, ii. 337-345.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote220b"></a><a href="#citation220b">{220b}</a>&nbsp;
+Hay Fleming, <i>Mary Queen of Scots</i>, 301.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote221a"></a><a href="#citation221a">{221a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, ii. 347.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote221b"></a><a href="#citation221b">{221b}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Act Parl. Scot</i>., ii. 572.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote221c"></a><a href="#citation221c">{221c}</a>&nbsp;
+Bain, i. 665.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote221d"></a><a href="#citation221d">{221d}</a>&nbsp;
+Bain, i. 668.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote222a"></a><a href="#citation222a">{222a}</a>&nbsp;
+Chalmers, in his <i>Life of Queen Mary</i>, vol. i. 78-96 (1818), takes
+the view of the Huntly affair which we adopt, but, observing the quietly
+obtained title of Moray under the Privy Seal (January 30, 1561-62) and
+the publicly assumed title of Mar, granted on February 7, 1561-62, Chalmers
+(mistaking Huntly for a loyal man) denounces the treachery of Lord James
+and the &ldquo;credulity&rdquo; of the Queen.&nbsp; To myself it appears
+that brother and sister were equally deep in the scheme for exalting
+Moray and destroying Huntly.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote222b"></a><a href="#citation222b">{222b}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Cf</i>. Pollen, <i>Papal Negotiations</i>, 163, 164.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote222c"></a><a href="#citation222c">{222c}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, ii. 346.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote222d"></a><a href="#citation222d">{222d}</a>&nbsp;
+Ibid., ii. 358.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote223a"></a><a href="#citation223a">{223a}</a>&nbsp;
+Bain, i. 675.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote223b"></a><a href="#citation223b">{223b}</a>&nbsp;
+Froude, ii. 144 (1863).</p>
+<p><a name="footnote224a"></a><a href="#citation224a">{224a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Registrum de Panmure</i>, i.-xxxii., cited by Maxwell; Old Dundee,
+162.&nbsp; Book of the Universal Kirk, 26.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote225a"></a><a href="#citation225a">{225a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, ii. 364-367; ii. 531, 532; Keith, iii. 140, 141.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote225b"></a><a href="#citation225b">{225b}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Spanish Calendar</i>, i. 314.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote225c"></a><a href="#citation225c">{225c}</a>&nbsp;
+Bain, i. 684-686.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote225d"></a><a href="#citation225d">{225d}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, ii. 367-369.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote226a"></a><a href="#citation226a">{226a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, ii, 370.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote226b"></a><a href="#citation226b">{226b}</a>&nbsp;
+Bain, i. 686.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote226c"></a><a href="#citation226c">{226c}</a>&nbsp;
+Ibid., i. 687.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote226d"></a><a href="#citation226d">{226d}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, li. 361; Bain, i. 693.&nbsp; Lethington&rsquo;s argument
+against Lennox&rsquo;s claim, March 28, 1563.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote227a"></a><a href="#citation227a">{227a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, ii. 371.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote227b"></a><a href="#citation227b">{227b}</a>&nbsp;
+Bain, ii. 7.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote228a"></a><a href="#citation228a">{228a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, ii. 370-377.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote228b"></a><a href="#citation228b">{228b}</a>&nbsp;
+Ibid., ii. 377-379.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote228c"></a><a href="#citation228c">{228c}</a>&nbsp;
+Bain, ii. 9, 10.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote229a"></a><a href="#citation229a">{229a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, ii. 381.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote229b"></a><a href="#citation229b">{229b}</a>&nbsp;
+Ibid., ii. 387-389.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote231a"></a><a href="#citation231a">{231a}</a>&nbsp;
+Bain, ii. 24.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote231b"></a><a href="#citation231b">{231b}</a>&nbsp;
+Ibid., ii. 25.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote231c"></a><a href="#citation231c">{231c}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Spanish Calendar</i>, i. 338.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote231d"></a><a href="#citation231d">{231d}</a>&nbsp;
+Bain, ii. 19, 20.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote232a"></a><a href="#citation232a">{232a}</a>&nbsp;
+Bain, ii. 26; <i>Knox</i>, ii. 393, 394.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote232b"></a><a href="#citation232b">{232b}</a>&nbsp;
+Hume Brown, <i>Scotland under Queen Mary</i>, p. 99.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote232c"></a><a href="#citation232c">{232c}</a>&nbsp;
+Pitcairn, <i>Criminal Trials</i>, i. 434.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote232d"></a><a href="#citation232d">{232d}</a>&nbsp;
+Dr. M&lsquo;Crie accepts, like Keith, a story of Spottiswoode&rsquo;s
+not elsewhere found (M&lsquo;Crie, 204), but innocently remarks that,
+as to the brawl in chapel, Spottiswoode could not know the facts so
+well as Knox! (p. 210).&nbsp; Certainly twenty-two attendants on the
+Mass were &ldquo;impanelled&rdquo; for trial for their religious misdemeanour.&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, ii. 394, <i>note</i> I.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote233a"></a><a href="#citation233a">{233a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, ii. 397.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote233b"></a><a href="#citation233b">{233b}</a>&nbsp;
+Randolph to Cecil; Bain, ii. 28, 29.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote233c"></a><a href="#citation233c">{233c}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, ii. 399-401.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote234a"></a><a href="#citation234a">{234a}</a>&nbsp;
+Keith, ii. 210.&nbsp; The version in Bain, ii. 30, is differently worded.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote234b"></a><a href="#citation234b">{234b}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, ii. 403.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote235"></a><a href="#citation235">{235}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, ii. 399-415.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote236"></a><a href="#citation236">{236}</a>&nbsp;
+Pitcairn, <i>Criminal Trials</i>, i. 434, 435.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote237a"></a><a href="#citation237a">{237a}</a>&nbsp;
+Randolph, December 31; Bain, ii. 33; <i>Knox</i>, ii. 415.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote237b"></a><a href="#citation237b">{237b}</a>&nbsp;
+Randolph, February 19, 1564; Bain, i. 113, 125.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote237c"></a><a href="#citation237c">{237c}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, ii. 415, <i>note</i> 3.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote238"></a><a href="#citation238">{238}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, ii. 417-419.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote239"></a><a href="#citation239">{239}</a>&nbsp;
+Bain, i. 680; ii. 54.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote240"></a><a href="#citation240">{240}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, ii. 291, 292.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote241a"></a><a href="#citation241a">{241a}</a>&nbsp;
+Lethington spoke merely of &ldquo;controversies&rdquo; (<i>Knox</i>,
+ii. 460).&nbsp; I give the confessed meaning of the controversy.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote241b"></a><a href="#citation241b">{241b}</a>&nbsp;
+Compare <i>Knox</i>, ii. 291, as to the discussion at Makgill&rsquo;s
+house in November 1561.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote241c"></a><a href="#citation241c">{241c}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, ii. 460, 461.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote242a"></a><a href="#citation242a">{242a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Original Letters</i>, <i>Parker Society</i>, Bullinger to Calvin,
+March 26, 1554, pp. 744-747.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote242b"></a><a href="#citation242b">{242b}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, ii. 441, 442.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote243a"></a><a href="#citation243a">{243a}</a>&nbsp;
+The very programme of the General Assembly for the treatment of Catholics,
+in November 1572.&nbsp; See p. 269 <i>infra.</i></p>
+<p><a name="footnote243b"></a><a href="#citation243b">{243b}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, v. 462-464.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote244a"></a><a href="#citation244a">{244a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, ii. 441.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote244b"></a><a href="#citation244b">{244b}</a>&nbsp;
+Ibid., ii. 442, 443.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote246"></a><a href="#citation246">{246}</a>&nbsp;
+Randolph to Cecil, February 27, 1565; Bain, ii. 128.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote247a"></a><a href="#citation247a">{247a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, ii. 497.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote247b"></a><a href="#citation247b">{247b}</a>&nbsp;
+Ibid., vi. 224, 225.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote248a"></a><a href="#citation248a">{248a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, vi. 273; ii. 499.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote248b"></a><a href="#citation248b">{248b}</a>&nbsp;
+Ibid., ii. 514.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote248c"></a><a href="#citation248c">{248c}</a>&nbsp;
+Ibid., vi. 402.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote249a"></a><a href="#citation249a">{249a}</a>&nbsp;
+Book of the Universal Kirk, 34.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote249b"></a><a href="#citation249b">{249b}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, vi. 416.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote249c"></a><a href="#citation249c">{249c}</a>&nbsp;
+Bain, ii. 254, 255.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote249d"></a><a href="#citation249d">{249d}</a>&nbsp;
+Stevenson, <i>Selections</i>, 153-159.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote250a"></a><a href="#citation250a">{250a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Papal Negotiations</i>, xxxviii.-xliii.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote250b"></a><a href="#citation250b">{250b}</a>&nbsp;
+Keith, ii. 412-413.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote250c"></a><a href="#citation250c">{250c}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, ii. 524.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote251a"></a><a href="#citation251a">{251a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, i. 235.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote251b"></a><a href="#citation251b">{251b}</a>&nbsp;
+Hume Brown, <i>John Knox</i>, ii. 231.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote252a"></a><a href="#citation252a">{252a}</a>&nbsp;
+Randolph to Cecil, March 21, 1566.&nbsp; Bain, ii. 269, 270.&nbsp; <i>Diurnal</i>,
+March 17, 1566.&nbsp; Knox&rsquo;s prayer, <i>Knox</i>, vi. 483, 484.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote252b"></a><a href="#citation252b">{252b}</a>&nbsp;
+Bain, ii. 269, 270.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote252c"></a><a href="#citation252c">{252c}</a>&nbsp;
+See Calvin&rsquo;s letter of January 24 or April 1, 1564, <i>Corpus
+Reformatorum</i>, xlviii. 244-249.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote253a"></a><a href="#citation253a">{253a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Life of Knox</i>, 235, <i>note</i> 3; cf. <i>Knox</i>, ii. 533.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote253b"></a><a href="#citation253b">{253b}</a>&nbsp;
+Burnet, <i>History of the Reformation</i>, iii. 360.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote253c"></a><a href="#citation253c">{253c}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, ii. 544-560.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote254a"></a><a href="#citation254a">{254a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, vi. 545-547.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote254b"></a><a href="#citation254b">{254b}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>State Papers</i>, Mary, Queen of Scots, vol. xiii., No. 20, MS.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote256a"></a><a href="#citation256a">{256a}</a>&nbsp;
+Book of the Universal Kirk, 61-67.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote256b"></a><a href="#citation256b">{256b}</a>&nbsp;
+Stevenson, Illustrations of the Reign of Queen Mary, 208.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote256c"></a><a href="#citation256c">{256c}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, ii. 563.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote257a"></a><a href="#citation257a">{257a}</a>&nbsp;
+Stevenson, 221.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote257b"></a><a href="#citation257b">{257b}</a>&nbsp;
+Ibid., 240, July 21.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote257c"></a><a href="#citation257c">{257c}</a>&nbsp;
+Chalmers&rsquo;s &ldquo;Life of Mary,&rdquo; ii. 487.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote258a"></a><a href="#citation258a">{258a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, vi. 558-561.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote258b"></a><a href="#citation258b">{258b}</a>&nbsp;
+If born in 1513-15, he was only about fifty-three to fifty-five.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote259a"></a><a href="#citation259a">{259a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, vi. 567.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote259b"></a><a href="#citation259b">{259b}</a>&nbsp;
+Knox and the Church of England, 230.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote259c"></a><a href="#citation259c">{259c}</a>&nbsp;
+Strype&rsquo;s <i>Grindal</i>, 168-179 (1821).</p>
+<p><a name="footnote260a"></a><a href="#citation260a">{260a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Corp. Ref</i>., xlvii. 417, 418.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote260b"></a><a href="#citation260b">{260b}</a>&nbsp;
+Strype&rsquo;s <i>Grindal</i>, 507-516.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote261a"></a><a href="#citation261a">{261a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Zurich Letters</i>. 1558-1602, pp. 152-155.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote261b"></a><a href="#citation261b">{261b}</a>&nbsp;
+Strype&rsquo;s <i>Grindal</i>, 180.&nbsp; Also the letter of Grindal
+in Ellis, iii. iii. 304</p>
+<p><a name="footnote262a"></a><a href="#citation262a">{262a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, ii. 247-249.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote262b"></a><a href="#citation262b">{262b}</a>&nbsp;
+Knox and the Church of England, 298-301.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote263a"></a><a href="#citation263a">{263a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, vi. 559.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote263b"></a><a href="#citation263b">{263b}</a>&nbsp;
+Ibid., vi. 568.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote263c"></a><a href="#citation263c">{263c}</a>&nbsp;
+M&lsquo;Crie, 248.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote264a"></a><a href="#citation264a">{264a}</a>&nbsp;
+Bannatyne&rsquo;s <i>Memorials</i>, 5-13 (1836).</p>
+<p><a name="footnote264b"></a><a href="#citation264b">{264b}</a>&nbsp;
+Calderwood, ii. 515-525.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote266"></a><a href="#citation266">{266}</a>&nbsp;
+Bannatyne&rsquo;s <i>Transactions</i>, 70-82.&nbsp; Bannatyne was Knox&rsquo;s
+secretary, and fragments dictated by the Reformer appear in his pages.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote267a"></a><a href="#citation267a">{267a}</a>&nbsp;
+Melville&rsquo;s &ldquo;Diary,&rdquo; 20-26.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote267b"></a><a href="#citation267b">{267b}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, vi. 606-612.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote268a"></a><a href="#citation268a">{268a}</a>&nbsp;
+Bannatyne, 223, 224 (1836).</p>
+<p><a name="footnote268b"></a><a href="#citation268b">{268b}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, vi. 620-622.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote268c"></a><a href="#citation268c">{268c}</a>&nbsp;
+Ibid., 236</p>
+<p><a name="footnote269a"></a><a href="#citation269a">{269a}</a>&nbsp;
+Bannatyne, 268.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote269b"></a><a href="#citation269b">{269b}</a>&nbsp;
+Ibid., 273.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote269c"></a><a href="#citation269c">{269c}</a>&nbsp;
+Ibid., 278.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote269d"></a><a href="#citation269d">{269d}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>John Knox</i>, ii. 282, 283.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote270"></a><a href="#citation270">{270}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Cf</i>. Leicester&rsquo;s letter of October 10, 1574, in Tytler,
+vii. chap, iv., and Appendix.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote271"></a><a href="#citation271">{271}</a>&nbsp;
+Tytler, vii. chap. iv.; Appendix xi, with letters.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote272a"></a><a href="#citation272a">{272a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, ii. 356; Bannatyne, 281, 282.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote272b"></a><a href="#citation272b">{272b}</a>&nbsp;
+Morton to Killigrew, August 5, 1573.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote273"></a><a href="#citation273">{273}</a>&nbsp;
+Bannatyne, 283-290.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote274"></a><a href="#citation274">{274}</a>&nbsp;
+There was another Falsyde.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote275a"></a><a href="#citation275a">{275a}</a>&nbsp;
+See the letter in Maxwell&rsquo;s <i>Old Dundee</i>, 399-401.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote275b"></a><a href="#citation275b">{275b}</a>&nbsp;
+Bain&rsquo;s <i>Calendar</i> is misleading here (vol. i. 202).&nbsp;
+Why Mr. Bain summarised wrongly in 1898, what Father Stevenson had done
+correctly in 1863 (<i>For. Cal. Eliz</i>,, p. 263) is a mystery.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote276a"></a><a href="#citation276a">{276a}</a>&nbsp;
+See the &ldquo;Prefatio,&rdquo; <i>Knox</i>, i. 297, 298.&nbsp; In this
+preface Knox represents the brethren as still being &ldquo;unjustly
+persecuted by France and their faction.&rdquo;&nbsp; The book ends with
+the distresses of the Protestants in November 1559, with the words,
+&ldquo;Look upon us, O Lord, in the multitude of Thy mercies; for we
+are brought even to the deep of the dungeon.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Knox</i>,
+i. 473.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote276b"></a><a href="#citation276b">{276b}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, vi. 22, 23.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote276c"></a><a href="#citation276c">{276c}</a>&nbsp;
+M&lsquo;Crie&rsquo;s <i>Knox</i>, 360.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote277a"></a><a href="#citation277a">{277a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Knox</i>, i. 317-319.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote277b"></a><a href="#citation277b">{277b}</a>&nbsp;
+Hume Brown, <i>John Knox</i>, ii. 6.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote277c"></a><a href="#citation277c">{277c}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>John Knox</i>, ii. 4.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote277d"></a><a href="#citation277d">{277d}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Scot. Hist. Review</i>, January 1905.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote278a"></a><a href="#citation278a">{278a}</a>&nbsp;
+Lesley, ii. 40, <i>Scottish Text Society</i>, 1895.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote278b"></a><a href="#citation278b">{278b}</a>&nbsp;
+In the French Archives MS., <i>Angleterre</i>, vol. xv.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote279a"></a><a href="#citation279a">{279a}</a>&nbsp;
+Melville, 79 (1827).</p>
+<p><a name="footnote279b"></a><a href="#citation279b">{279b}</a>&nbsp;
+Spottiswoode, i. 320.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote279c"></a><a href="#citation279c">{279c}</a>&nbsp;
+Keith, i. 493, 494 (1835).</p>
+<p><a name="footnote280a"></a><a href="#citation280a">{280a}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>Angl. Reg</i>., xvi., fol. 346.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote280b"></a><a href="#citation280b">{280b}</a>&nbsp;
+Teulet, i. 407.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote280c"></a><a href="#citation280c">{280c}</a>&nbsp;
+Ibid., i. 410.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote280d"></a><a href="#citation280d">{280d}</a>&nbsp;
+<i>For. Cal. Eliz</i>., 1559-60, p. 453.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote280e"></a><a href="#citation280e">{280e}</a>&nbsp;
+Ibid., p. 469.</p>
+<p><a name="footnote280f"></a><a href="#citation280f">{280f}</a>&nbsp;
+Ibid., p. 480.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JOHN KNOX AND THE REFORMATION***</p>
+<pre>
+
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, John Knox and the Reformation, by Andrew Lang
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: John Knox and the Reformation
+
+Author: Andrew Lang
+
+Release Date: November 10, 2004 [eBook #14016]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK JOHN KNOX AND THE REFORMATION***
+
+
+
+
+Transcribed from the 1905 Longmans, Green and Co. edition by David Price,
+email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk
+
+
+
+
+
+John Knox and the Reformation
+
+
+[John Knox. From a Posthumous Portrait. Beza's Icones, 1850: knox1.jpg]
+
+To Maurice Hewlett
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+In this brief Life of Knox I have tried, as much as I may, to get behind
+Tradition, which has so deeply affected even modern histories of the
+Scottish Reformation, and even recent Biographies of the Reformer. The
+tradition is based, to a great extent, on Knox's own "History," which I
+am therefore obliged to criticise as carefully as I can. In his valuable
+John Knox, a Biography, Professor Hume Brown says that in the "History"
+"we have convincing proof alike of the writer's good faith, and of his
+perception of the conditions of historic truth." My reasons for
+dissenting from this favourable view will be found in the following
+pages. If I am right, if Knox, both as a politician and an historian,
+resembled Charles I. in "sailing as near the wind" as he could, the
+circumstance (as another of his biographers remarks) "only makes him more
+human and interesting."
+
+Opinion about Knox and the religious Revolution in which he took so great
+a part, has passed through several variations in the last century. In
+the Edinburgh Review of 1816 (No. liii. pp. 163-180), is an article with
+which the present biographer can agree. Several passages from Knox's
+works are cited, and the reader is expected to be "shocked at their
+principles." They are certainly shocking, but they are not, as a rule,
+set before the public by biographers of the Reformer.
+
+Mr. Carlyle introduced a style of thinking about Knox which may be called
+platonically Puritan. Sweet enthusiasts glide swiftly over all in the
+Reformer that is specially distasteful to us. I find myself more in
+harmony with the outspoken Hallam, Dr. Joseph Robertson, David Hume, and
+the Edinburgh reviewer of 1816, than with several more recent students of
+Knox.
+
+"The Reformer's violent counsels and intemperate speech were remarkable,"
+writes Dr. Robertson, "even in his own ruthless age," and he gives
+fourteen examples. {0a} "Lord Hailes has shown," he adds, "how little
+Knox's statements" (in his "History") "are to be relied on even in
+matters which were within the Reformer's own knowledge." In Scotland
+there has always been the party of Cavalier and White Rose
+sentimentalism. To this party Queen Mary is a saintly being, and their
+admiration of Claverhouse goes far beyond that entertained by Sir Walter
+Scott. On the other side, there is the party, equally sentimental, which
+musters under the banner of the Covenant, and sees scarcely a blemish in
+Knox. A pretty sample of the sentiment of this party appears in a
+biography (1905) of the Reformer by a minister of the Gospel. Knox
+summoned the organised brethren, in 1563, to overawe justice, when some
+men were to be tried on a charge of invading in arms the chapel of
+Holyrood. No proceeding could be more anarchic than Knox's, or more in
+accordance with the lovable customs of my dear country, at that time. But
+the biographer of 1905, "a placed minister," writes that "the doing of
+it" (Knox's summons) "was only an assertion of the liberty of the Church,
+and of the members of the Commonwealth as a whole, to assemble for
+purposes which were clearly lawful"--the purposes being to overawe
+justice in the course of a trial!
+
+On sentiment, Cavalier or Puritan, reason is thrown away.
+
+I have been surprised to find how completely a study of Knox's own works
+corroborates the views of Dr. Robertson and Lord Hailes. That Knox ran
+so very far ahead of the Genevan pontiffs of his age in violence; and
+that in his "History" he needs such careful watching, was, to me, an
+unexpected discovery. He may have been "an old Hebrew prophet," as Mr.
+Carlyle says, but he had also been a young Scottish notary! A Hebrew
+prophet is, at best, a dangerous anachronism in a delicate crisis of the
+Church Christian; and the notarial element is too conspicuous in some
+passages of Knox's "History."
+
+That Knox was a great man; a disinterested man; in his regard for the
+poor a truly Christian man; as a shepherd of Calvinistic souls a man
+fervent and considerate; of pure life; in friendship loyal; by jealousy
+untainted; in private character genial and amiable, I am entirely
+convinced. In public and political life he was much less admirable; and
+his "History," vivacious as it is, must be studied as the work of an old-
+fashioned advocate rather than as the summing up of a judge. His
+favourite adjectives are "bloody," "beastly," "rotten," and "stinking."
+
+Any inaccuracies of my own which may have escaped my correction will be
+dwelt on, by enthusiasts for the Prophet, as if they are the main
+elements of this book, and disqualify me as a critic of Knox's "History."
+At least any such errors on my part are involuntary and unconscious. In
+Knox's defence we must remember that he never saw his "History" in print.
+But he kept it by him for many years, obviously re-reading, for he
+certainly retouched it, as late as 1571.
+
+In quoting Knox and his contemporaries, I have used modern spelling: the
+letter from the State Papers printed on pp. 146, 147, shows what the
+orthography of the period was really like. Consultation of the original
+MSS. on doubtful points, proves that the printed Calendars, though
+excellent guides, cannot be relied on as authorities.
+
+The portrait of Knox, from Beza's book of portraits of Reformers, is
+posthumous, but is probably a good likeness drawn from memory, after a
+description by Peter Young, who knew him, and a design, presumably by
+"Adrianc Vaensoun," a Fleming, resident in Edinburgh. {0b}
+
+There is an interesting portrait, possibly of Knox, in the National
+Gallery of Portraits, but the work has no known authentic history.
+
+The portrait of Queen Mary, at the age of thirty-six, and a prisoner, is
+from the Earl of Morton's original; it is greatly superior to the
+"Sheffield" type of likenesses, of about 1578; and, with Janet's and
+other drawings (1558-1561), the Bridal medal of 1558, and (in my opinion)
+the Earl of Leven and Melville's portrait, of about 1560-1565, is the
+best extant representation of the Queen.
+
+The Leven and Melville portrait of Mary, young and charming, and wearing
+jewels which are found recorded in her Inventories, has hitherto been
+overlooked. An admirable photogravure is given in Mr. J. J. Foster's
+"True Portraiture of Mary, Queen of Scots" (1905), and I understand that
+a photograph was done in 1866 for the South Kensington Museum.
+
+A. LANG.
+
+8 Gibson Place, St. Andrews.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I: ANCESTRY, BIRTH, EDUCATION, ENVIRONMENT: 1513(?)-1546
+
+
+"November 24, 1572.
+
+"John Knox, minister, deceased, who had, as was alleged, the most part of
+the blame of all the sorrows of Scotland since the slaughter of the late
+Cardinal."
+
+It is thus that the decent burgess who, in 1572, kept The Diurnal of such
+daily events as he deemed important, cautiously records the death of the
+great Scottish Reformer. The sorrows, the "cumber" of which Knox was
+"alleged" to bear the blame, did not end with his death. They persisted
+in the conspiracies and rebellions of the earlier years of James VI.;
+they smouldered through the later part of his time; they broke into far
+spreading flame at the touch of the Covenant; they blazed at "dark
+Worcester and bloody Dunbar"; at Preston fight, and the sack of Dundee by
+Monk; they included the Cromwellian conquest of Scotland, and the shame
+and misery of the Restoration; to trace them down to our own age would be
+invidious.
+
+It is with the "alleged" author of the Sorrows, with his life, works, and
+ideas that we are concerned.
+
+John Knox, son of William Knox and of --- Sinclair, his wife, {2a} unlike
+most Scotsmen, unlike even Mr. Carlyle, had not "an ell of pedigree." The
+common scoff was that each Scot styled himself "the King's poor cousin."
+But John Knox declared, "I am a man of base estate and condition." {2b}
+The genealogy of Mr. Carlyle has been traced to a date behind the Norman
+Conquest, but of Knox's ancestors nothing is known. He himself, in 1562,
+when he "ruled the roast" in Scotland, told the ruffian Earl of Bothwell,
+"my grandfather, my maternal grandfather, and my father, have served your
+Lordship's predecessors, and some of them have died under their
+standards; and this" (namely goodwill to the house of the feudal
+superior) "is a part of the obligation of our Scottish kindness." Knox,
+indeed, never writes very harshly of Bothwell, partly for the reason he
+gives; partly, perhaps, because Bothwell, though an infamous character,
+and a political opponent, was not in 1562-67 "an idolater," that is, a
+Catholic: if ever he had been one; partly because his "History" ends
+before Bothwell's murder of Darnley in 1567.
+
+Knox's ancestors were, we may suppose, peasant farmers, like the
+ancestors of Burns and Hogg; and Knox, though he married a maid of the
+Queen's kin, bore traces of his descent. "A man ungrateful and
+unpleasable," Northumberland styled him: he was one who could not
+"smiling, put a question by"; if he had to remonstrate even with a person
+whom it was desirable to conciliate, he stated his case in the plainest
+and least flattering terms. "Of nature I am churlish, and in conditions
+different from many," he wrote; but this side of his character he kept
+mainly for people of high rank, accustomed to deference, and indifferent
+or hostile to his aims. To others, especially to women whom he liked, he
+was considerate and courteous, but any assertion of social superiority
+aroused his wakeful independence. His countrymen of his own order had
+long displayed these peculiarities of humour.
+
+The small Scottish cultivators from whose ranks Knox rose, appear, even
+before his age, in two strangely different lights. If they were not
+technically "kindly tenants," in which case their conditions of existence
+and of tenure were comparatively comfortable and secure, they were liable
+to eviction at the will of the lord, and, to quote an account of their
+condition written in 1549, "were in more servitude than the children of
+Israel in Egypt." Henderson, the writer of 1549 whom we have quoted,
+hopes that the agricultural class may yet live "as substantial commoners,
+not miserable cottars, charged daily to war and slay their neighbours _at
+their own expense_," as under the standards of the unruly Bothwell House.
+This Henderson was one of the political observers who, before the
+Scottish Reformation, hoped for a secure union between Scotland and
+England, in place of the old and romantic league with France. That
+alliance had, indeed, enabled both France and Scotland to maintain their
+national independence. But, with the great revolution in religion, the
+interest of Scotland was a permanent political league with England, which
+Knox did as much as any man to forward, while, by resisting a religious
+union, he left the seeds of many sorrows.
+
+If the Lowland peasantry, from one point of view, were terribly
+oppressed, we know that they were of independent manners. In 1515 the
+chaplain of Margaret Tudor, the Queen Mother, writes to one Adam
+Williamson: "You know the use of this country. Every man speaks what he
+will without blame. The man hath more words than the master, and will
+not be content unless he knows the master's counsel. There is no order
+among us."
+
+Thus, two hundred and fifty years before Burns, the Lowland Scot was
+minded that "A man's a man for a' that!" Knox was the true flower of
+this vigorous Lowland thistle. Throughout life he not only "spoke what
+he would," but uttered "the Truth" in such a tone as to make it unlikely
+that his "message" should be accepted by opponents. Like Carlyle,
+however, he had a heart rich in affection, no breach in friendship, he
+says, ever began on his side; while, as "a good hater," Dr. Johnson might
+have admired him. He carried into political and theological conflicts
+the stubborn temper of the Border prickers, his fathers, who had ridden
+under the Roses and the Lion of the Hepburns. So far Knox was an example
+of the doctrine of heredity; that we know, however little we learn in
+detail about his ancestors.
+
+The birthplace of Knox was probably a house in a suburb of Haddington, in
+a district on the path of English invasion. The year of his birth has
+long been dated, on a late statement of little authority, as 1505. {4}
+Seven years after his death, however, a man who knew him well, namely,
+Peter Young, tutor and librarian of James VI., told Beza that Knox died
+in his fifty-ninth year. Dr. Hay Fleming has pointed out that his natal
+year was probably 1513-15, not 1505, and this reckoning, we shall see,
+appears to fit in better with the deeds of the Reformer.
+
+If Knox was born in 1513-15, he must have taken priest's orders, and
+adopted the profession of a notary, at nearly the earliest moment which
+the canonical law permitted. No man ought to be in priest's orders
+before he was twenty-five; Knox, if born in 1515, was just twenty-five in
+1540, when he is styled "Sir John Knox" (one of "The Pope's Knights") in
+legal documents, and appears as a notary. {5} He certainly continued in
+orders and in the notarial profession as late as March 1543. The law of
+the Church did not, in fact, permit priests to be notaries, but in an age
+when "notaires" were often professional forgers, the additional security
+for character yielded by Holy Orders must have been welcome to clients,
+and Bishops permitted priests to practise this branch of the law.
+
+Of Knox's near kin no more is known than of his ancestors. He had a
+brother, William, for whom, in 1552, he procured a licence to trade in
+England as owner of a ship of 100 tons. Even as late as 1656, there were
+not a dozen ships of this burden in Scotland, so William Knox must have
+been relatively a prosperous man. In 1544-45, there was a William Knox,
+a fowler or gamekeeper to the Earl of Westmoreland, who acted as a secret
+agent between the Scots in English pay and their paymasters. We much
+later (1559) find the Reformer's brother, William, engaged with him in a
+secret political mission to the Governor of Berwick; probably this
+William knew shy Border paths, and he may have learned them as the Lord
+Westmoreland's fowler in earlier years.
+
+About John Knox's early years and education nothing is known. He
+certainly acquired such Latin (satis humilis, says a German critic) as
+Scotland then had to teach; probably at the Burgh School of Haddington. A
+certain John Knox matriculated at the University of Glasgow in 1522, but
+he cannot have been the Reformer, if the Reformer was not born till 1513-
+15. Beza, on the other hand (1580), had learned, probably from the
+Reformer, whom he knew well, that Knox was a St. Andrews man, and though
+his name does not occur in the University Register, the Register was very
+ill kept. Supposing Knox, then, to have been born in 1513-15, and to
+have been educated at St. Andrews, we can see how he comes to know so
+much about the progress of the new religious ideas at that University,
+between 1529 and 1535. "The Well of St. Leonard's College" was a
+notorious fountain of heresies, under Gawain Logie, the Principal. Knox
+very probably heard the sermons of the Dominicans and Franciscans
+"against the pride and idle life of bishops," and other abuses. He
+speaks of a private conversation between Friar Airth and Major (about
+1534), and names some of the persons present at a sermon in the parish
+church of St. Andrews, as if he had himself been in the congregation. He
+gives the text and heads of the discourse, including "merry tales" told
+by the Friar. {6} If Knox heard the sermons and stories of clerical
+scandals at St. Andrews, they did not prevent him from taking orders. His
+Greek and Hebrew, what there was of them, Knox must have acquired in
+later life, at least we never learn that he was taught by the famous
+George Wishart, who, about that time, gave Greek lectures at Montrose.
+
+The Catholic opponents of Knox naturally told scandalous anecdotes
+concerning his youth. These are destitute of evidence: about his youth
+we know nothing. It is a characteristic trait in him, and a fact much to
+his credit, that, though he is fond of expatiating about himself, he
+never makes confessions as to his earlier adventures. On his own years
+of the wild oat St. Augustine dilates in a style which still has charm:
+but Knox, if he sowed wild oats, is silent as the tomb. If he has
+anything to repent, it is not to the world that he confesses. About the
+days when he was "one of Baal's shaven sort," in his own phrase; when he
+was himself an "idolater," and a priest of the altar: about the details
+of his conversion, Knox is mute. It is probable that, as a priest, he
+examined Lutheran books which were brought in with other merchandise from
+Holland; read the Bible for himself; and failed to find Purgatory, the
+Mass, the intercession of Saints, pardons, pilgrimages, and other
+accessories of mediaeval religion in the Scriptures. {7} Knox had only
+to keep his eyes and ears open, to observe the clerical ignorance and
+corruption which resulted in great part from the Scottish habit of
+securing wealthy Church offices for ignorant, brutal, and licentious
+younger sons and bastards of noble families. This practice in Scotland
+was as odious to good Catholics, like Quentin Kennedy, Ninian Winzet,
+and, rather earlier, to Ferrerius, as to Knox himself. The prevalent
+anarchy caused by the long minorities of the Stuart kings, and by the
+interminable wars with England, and the difficulty of communications with
+Rome, had enabled the nobles thus to rob and deprave the Church, and so
+to provide themselves with moral reasons good for robbing her again; as a
+punishment for the iniquities which they had themselves introduced!
+
+The almost incredible ignorance and profligacy of the higher Scottish
+clergy (with notable exceptions) in Knox's youth, are not matter of
+controversy. They are as frankly recognised by contemporary Catholic as
+by Protestant authors. In the very year of the destruction of the
+monasteries (1559) the abuses are officially stated, as will be told
+later, by the last Scottish Provincial Council. Though three of the four
+Scottish universities were founded by Catholics, and the fourth,
+Edinburgh, had an endowment bequeathed by a Catholic, the clerical
+ignorance, in Knox's time, was such that many priests could hardly read.
+
+If more evidence is needed as to the debauched estate of the Scottish
+clergy, we obtain it from Mary of Guise, widow of James V., the Regent
+then governing Scotland for her child, Mary Stuart. The Queen, in
+December 1555, begged Pius IV. to permit her to levy a tax on her clergy,
+and to listen to what Cardinal Sermoneta would tell him about their need
+of reformation. The Cardinal drew a terrible sketch of the nefarious
+lives of "every kind of religious women" in Scotland. They go about with
+their illegal families and dower their daughters out of the revenues of
+the Church. The monks, too, have bloated wealth, while churches are
+allowed to fall into decay. "The only hope is in the Holy Father," who
+should appoint an episcopal commission of visitation. For about forty
+years prelates have been alienating Church lands illegally, and churches
+and monasteries, by the avarice of those placed in charge, are crumbling
+to decay. Bishops are the chief dealers in cattle, fish, and hides,
+though we have, in fact, good evidence that their dealings were very
+limited, "sma' sums."
+
+Not only the clergy, but the nobles and people were lawless. "They are
+more difficult to manage than ever," writes Mary of Guise (Jan. 13,
+1557). They are recalcitrant against law and order; every attempt at
+introducing these is denounced as an attack on their old laws: not that
+their laws are bad, but that they are badly administered. {9} Scotland,
+in brief, had always been lawless, and for centuries had never been
+godly. She was untouched by the first fervour of the Franciscan and
+other religious revivals. Knox could not fail to see what was so patent:
+many books of the German reformers may have come in his way; no more was
+wanted than the preaching of George Wishart in 1543-45, to make him an
+irreconcilable foe of the doctrine as well as the discipline of his
+Church.
+
+Knox had a sincerely religious nature, and a conviction that he was, more
+than most men, though a sinner, in close touch with Him "in whom we live
+and move and have our being." We ask ourselves, had Knox, as "a priest
+of the altar," never known the deep emotions, which tongue may not utter,
+that the ceremonies and services of his Church so naturally awaken in the
+soul of the believer? These emotions, if they were in his experience, he
+never remembered tenderly, he flung them from him without regret; not
+regarding them even as dreams, beautiful and dear, but misleading, that
+came through the Ivory Gate. To Knox's opponent in controversy, Quentin
+Kennedy, the mass was "the blessed Sacrament of the Altar . . . which is
+one of the chief Sacraments whereby our Saviour, for the salvation of
+mankind, has appointed the fruit of His death and passion to be daily
+renewed and applied." In this traditional view there is nothing
+unedifying, nothing injurious to the Christian life. But to Knox the
+wafer is an idol, a god "of water and meal," "but a feeble and miserable
+god," that can be destroyed "by a bold and puissant mouse." "Rats and
+mice will desire no better dinner than white round gods enough." {10}
+
+The Reformer and the Catholic take up the question "by different
+handles"; and the Catholic grounds his defence on a text about
+Melchizedek! To Knox the mass is the symbol of all that he justly
+detested in the degraded Church as she then was in Scotland, "that
+horrible harlot with her filthiness." To Kennedy it was what we have
+seen.
+
+Knox speaks of having been in "the puddle of papistry." He loathes what
+he has left behind him, and it is natural to guess that, in his first
+years of priesthood, his religious nature slept; that he became a priest
+and notary merely that he "might eat a morsel of bread"; and that real
+"conviction" never was his till his studies of Protestant
+controversialists, and also of St. Augustine and the Bible, and the
+teaching of Wishart, raised him from a mundane life. Then he awoke to a
+passionate horror and hatred of his old routine of "mumbled masses," of
+"rites of human invention," whereof he had never known the poetry and the
+mystic charm. Had he known them, he could not have so denied and
+detested them. On the other hand, when once he had embraced the new
+ideas, Knox's faith in them, or in his own form of them, was firm as the
+round world, made so fast that it cannot be moved. He had now a pou sto,
+whence he could, and did, move the world of human affairs. A faith not
+to be shaken, and enormous energy were the essential attributes of the
+Reformer. It is almost impossible to find an instance in which Knox
+allows that he may have been mistaken: d'avoir toujours raison was his
+claim. If he admits an error in details, it is usually an error of
+insufficient severity. He did not attack Northumberland or Mary Stuart
+with adequate violence; he did not disapprove enough of our prayer book;
+he did not hand a heretic over to the magistrates.
+
+While acting as a priest and notary, between 1540, at latest, and 1543,
+Knox was engaged as private tutor to a boy named Brounefield, son of
+Brounefield of Greenlaw, and to other lads, spoken of as his "bairns." In
+this profession of tutor he continued till 1547.
+
+Knox's personal aspect did not give signs of the uncommon strength which
+his unceasing labours demanded, but, like many men of energy, he had a
+perpetual youth of character and vigour. After his death, Peter Young
+described him as he appeared in his later years. He was somewhat below
+the "just" standard of height; his limbs were well and elegantly shaped;
+his shoulders broad, his fingers rather long, his head small, his hair
+black, his face somewhat swarthy, and not unpleasant to behold. There
+was a certain geniality in a countenance serious and stern, with a
+natural dignity and air of command; his eyebrows, when he was in anger,
+were expressive. His forehead was rather narrow, depressed above the
+eyebrows; his cheeks were full and ruddy, so that the eyes seemed to
+retreat into their hollows: they were dark grey, keen, and lively. The
+face was long, the nose also; the mouth was large, the upper lip being
+the thicker. The beard was long, rather thick and black, with a few grey
+hairs in his later years. {12} The nearest approach to an authentic
+portrait of Knox is a woodcut, engraved after a sketch from memory by
+Peter Young, and after another sketch of the same kind by an artist in
+Edinburgh. Compared with the peevish face of Calvin, also in Beza's
+Icones, Knox looks a broad-minded and genial character.
+
+Despite the uncommon length to which Knox carried the contemporary
+approval of persecution, then almost universal, except among the
+Anabaptists (and any party out of power), he was not personally rancorous
+where religion was not concerned. But concerned it usually was! He was
+the subject of many anonymous pasquils and libels, we know, but he
+entirely disregarded them. If he hated any mortal personally, and beyond
+what true religion demands of a Christian, that mortal was the mother of
+Mary Stuart, an amiable lady in an impossible position. Of jealousy
+towards his brethren there is not a trace in Knox, and he told Queen Mary
+that he could ill bear to correct his own boys, though the age was as
+cruel to schoolboys as that of St. Augustine.
+
+The faults of Knox arose not in his heart, but in his head; they sprung
+from intellectual errors, and from the belief that he was always right.
+He applied to his fellow-Christians--Catholics--the commands which early
+Israel supposed to be divinely directed against foreign worshippers of
+Chemosh and Moloch. He endeavoured to force his own theory of what the
+discipline of the Primitive Apostolic Church had been upon a modern
+nation, following the example of the little city state of Geneva, under
+Calvin. He claimed for preachers chosen by local congregations the
+privileges and powers of the apostolic companions of Christ, and in place
+of "sweet reasonableness," he applied the methods, quite alien to the
+Founder of Christianity, of the "Sons of Thunder." All controversialists
+then relied on isolated and inappropriate scriptural texts, and Biblical
+analogies which were not analogous; but Knox employed these things, with
+perhaps unusual inconsistency, in varying circumstances. His "History"
+is not more scrupulous than that of other partisans in an exciting
+contest, and examples of his taste for personal scandal are not scarce.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II: KNOX, WISHART, AND THE MURDER OF BEATON: 1545-1546
+
+
+Our earliest knowledge of Knox, apart from mention of him in notarial
+documents, is derived from his own History of the Reformation. The
+portion of that work in which he first mentions himself was written about
+1561-66, some twenty years after the events recorded, and in reading all
+this part of his Memoirs, and his account of the religious struggle,
+allowance must be made for errors of memory, or for erroneous
+information. We meet him first towards the end of "the holy days of
+Yule"--Christmas, 1545. Knox had then for some weeks been the constant
+companion and armed bodyguard of George Wishart, who was calling himself
+"the messenger of the Eternal God," and preaching the new ideas in
+Haddington to very small congregations. This Wishart, Knox's master in
+the faith, was a Forfarshire man; he is said to have taught Greek at
+Montrose, to have been driven thence in 1538 by the Bishop of Brechin,
+and to have recanted certain heresies in 1539. He had denied the merits
+of Christ as the Redeemer, but afterwards dropped that error, when
+persistence meant death at the stake. It was in Bristol that he "burned
+his faggot," in place of being burned himself. There was really nothing
+humiliating in this recantation, for, after his release, he did not
+resume his heresy; clearly he yielded, not to fear, but to conviction of
+theological error. {15a}
+
+He next travelled in Germany, where a Jew, on a Rhine boat, inspired or
+increased his aversion to works of sacred art, as being "idolatrous."
+About 1542-43 he was reading with pupils at Cambridge, and was remarked
+for the severity of his ascetic virtue, and for his great charity. At
+some uncertain date he translated the Helvetic Confession of Faith, and
+he was more of a Calvinist than a Lutheran. In July 1543 he returned to
+Scotland; at least he returned with some "commissioners to England," who
+certainly came home in July 1543, as Knox mentions, though later he gives
+the date of Wishart's return in 1544, probably by a slip of the pen.
+
+Coming home in July 1543, Wishart would expect a fair chance of preaching
+his novel ideas, as peace between Scotland and Protestant England now
+seemed secure, and Arran, the Scottish Regent, the chief of the almost
+Royal House of Hamilton, was, for the moment, himself a Protestant. For
+five days (August 28-September 3, 1543) the great Cardinal Beaton, the
+head of the party of the Church, was outlawed, and Wishart's preaching at
+Dundee, about that date, is supposed by some {15b} to have stimulated an
+attack then made on the monasteries in the town. But Arran suddenly
+recanted, deserted the Protestants and the faction attached to England,
+and joined forces with Cardinal Beaton, who, in November 1543, visited
+Dundee, and imprisoned the ringleaders in the riots. They are called
+"the honestest men in the town," by the treble traitor and rascal,
+Crichton, laird of Brunston in Lothian, at this time a secret agent of
+Sadleir, the envoy of Henry VIII. (November 25, 1543).
+
+By April 1544, Henry was preparing to invade Scotland, and the "earnest
+professors" of Protestant doctrines in Scotland sent to him "a Scottish
+man called Wysshert," with a proposal for the kidnapping or murder of
+Cardinal Beaton. Brunston and other Scottish lairds of Wishart's circle
+were agents of the plot, and in 1545-46 our George Wishart is found
+companioning with them. When Cassilis took up the threads of the plot
+against Beaton, it was to Cassilis's country in Ayrshire that Wishart
+went and there preached. Thence he returned to Dundee, to fight the
+plague and comfort the citizens, and, towards the end of 1545, moved to
+Lothian, expecting to be joined there by his westland supporters, led by
+Cassilis--but entertaining dark forebodings of his doom.
+
+There were, however, other Wisharts, Protestants, in Scotland. It is not
+possible to prove that this reformer, though the associate, was the agent
+of the murderers, or was even conscious of their schemes. Yet if he had
+been, there was no matter for marvel. Knox himself approved of and
+applauded the murders of Cardinal Beaton and of Riccio, and, in that age,
+too many men of all creeds and parties believed that to kill an opponent
+of their religious cause was to imitate Phinehas, Jael, Jehu, and other
+patriots of Hebrew history. Dr. M'Crie remarks that Knox "held the
+opinion, that persons who, according to the law of God and the just laws
+of society, have forfeited their lives by the commission of flagrant
+crimes, such as notorious murderers and tyrants, may warrantably be put
+to death by private individuals, provided all redress in the ordinary
+course of justice is rendered impossible, in consequence of the offenders
+having usurped the executive authority, or being systematically protected
+by oppressive rulers." The ideas of Knox, in fact, varied in varying
+circumstances and moods, and, as we shall show, at times he preached
+notions far more truculent than those attributed to him by his
+biographer; at times was all for saint-like submission and mere "passive
+resistance." {17}
+
+The current ideas of both parties on "killing no murder" were little
+better than those of modern anarchists. It was a prevalent opinion that
+a king might have a subject assassinated, if to try him publicly entailed
+political inconveniences. The Inquisition, in Spain, vigorously
+repudiated this theory, but the Inquisition was in advance of the age.
+Knox, as to the doctrine of "killing no murder," was, and Wishart may
+have been, a man of his time. But Knox, in telling the story of a murder
+which he approves, unhappily displays a glee unbecoming a reformer of the
+Church of Him who blamed St. Peter for his recourse to the sword. The
+very essence of Christianity is cast to the winds when Knox utters his
+laughter over the murders or misfortunes of his opponents, yielding, as
+Dr. M'Crie says, "to the strong propensity which he felt to indulge his
+vein of humour." Other good men rejoiced in the murder of an enemy, but
+Knox chuckled.
+
+Nothing has injured Knox more in the eyes of posterity (when they happen
+to be aware of the facts) than this "humour" of his.
+
+Knox might be pardoned had he merely excused the murder of "the devil's
+own son," Cardinal Beaton, who executed the law on his friend and master,
+George Wishart. To Wishart Knox bore a tender and enthusiastic
+affection, crediting him not only with the virtues of charity and courage
+which he possessed, but also with supernormal premonitions; "he was so
+clearly illuminated with the spirit of prophecy." These premonitions
+appear to have come to Wishart by way of vision. Knox asserted some
+prophetic gift for himself, but never hints anything as to the method,
+whether by dream, vision, or the hearing of voices. He often alludes to
+himself as "the prophet," and claims certain privileges in that capacity.
+For example the prophet may blamelessly preach what men call "treason,"
+as we shall see. As to his actual predictions of events, he occasionally
+writes as if they were mere deductions from Scripture. God will punish
+the idolater; A or B is an idolater; therefore it is safe to predict that
+God will punish him or her. "What man then can cease to prophesy?" he
+asks; and there is, if we thus consider the matter, no reason why anybody
+should ever leave off prophesying. {18a}
+
+But if the art of prophecy is common to all Bible-reading mankind, all
+mankind, being prophets, may promulgate treason, which Knox perhaps would
+not have admitted. He thought himself more specially a seer, and in his
+prayer after the failure of his friends, the murderers of Riccio, he
+congratulates himself on being favoured above the common sort of his
+brethren, and privileged to "forespeak" things, in an unique degree.
+
+"I dare not deny . . . but that God hath revealed unto me secrets unknown
+to the world," he writes {18b}; and these claims soar high above mere
+deductions from Scripture. His biographer, Dr. M'Crie, doubts whether we
+can dismiss, as necessarily baseless, all stories of "extraordinary
+premonitions since the completion of the canon of inspiration." {19}
+Indeed, there appears to be no reason why we should draw the line at a
+given date, and "limit the operations of divine Providence." I would be
+the last to do so, but then Knox's premonitions are sometimes, or
+usually, without documentary and contemporary corroboration; once he
+certainly prophesied after the event (as we shall see), and he never
+troubles himself about his predictions which were unfulfilled, as against
+Queen Elizabeth.
+
+He supplied the Kirk with the tradition of supernormal premonitions in
+preachers--second-sight and clairvoyance--as in the case of Mr. Peden and
+other saints of the Covenant. But just as good cases of clairvoyance as
+any of Mr. Peden's are attributed to Catherine de Medici, who was not a
+saint, by her daughter, La Reine Margot, and others. In Knox, at all
+events, there is no trace of visual or auditory hallucinations, so common
+in religious experiences, whatever the creed of the percipient. He was
+not a visionary. More than this we cannot safely say about his prophetic
+vein.
+
+The enthusiasm which induced a priest, notary, and teacher like Knox to
+carry a claymore in defence of a beloved teacher, Wishart, seems more
+appropriate to a man of about thirty than a man of forty, and, so far,
+supports the opinion that, in 1545, Knox was only thirty years of age. In
+that case, his study of the debates between the Church and the new
+opinions must have been relatively brief. Yet, in 1547, he already
+reckoned himself, not incorrectly, as a skilled disputant in favour of
+ideas with which he cannot have been very long familiar.
+
+Wishart was taken, was tried, was condemned; was strangled, and his dead
+body was burned at St. Andrews on March 1, 1546. It is highly improbable
+that Knox could venture, as a marked man, to be present at the trial. He
+cites the account of it in his "History" from the contemporary Scottish
+narrative used by Foxe in his "Martyrs," and Laing, Knox's editor, thinks
+that Foxe "may possibly have been indebted for some" of the Scottish
+accounts "to the Scottish Reformer." It seems, if there be anything in
+evidence of tone and style, that what Knox quotes from Foxe in 1561-66 is
+what Knox himself actually wrote about 1547-48. Mr. Hill Burton observes
+in the tract "the mark of Knox's vehement colouring," and adds, "it is
+needless to seek in the account for precise accuracy." In "precise
+accuracy" many historians are as sadly to seek as Knox himself, but his
+peculiar "colouring" is all his own, and is as marked in the pamphlet on
+Wishart's trial, which he cites, as in the "History" which he
+acknowledged.
+
+There are said to be but few copies of the first edition of the black
+letter tract on Wishart's trial, published in London, with Lindsay's
+"Tragedy of the Cardinal," by Day and Seres. I regard it as the earliest
+printed work of John Knox. {20} The author, when he describes Lauder,
+Wishart's official accuser, as "a fed sow . . . his face running down
+with sweat, and frothing at the mouth like ane bear," who "spat at
+Maister George's face, . . . " shows every mark of Knox's vehement and
+pictorial style. His editor, Laing, bids us observe "that all these
+opprobrious terms are copied from Foxe, or rather from the black letter
+tract." But the black letter tract, I conceive, must be Knox's own. Its
+author, like Knox, "indulges his vein of humour" by speaking of friars as
+"fiends"; like Knox he calls Wishart "Maister George," and "that servand
+of God."
+
+The peculiarities of the tract, good and bad, the vivid familiar manner,
+the vehemence, the pictorial quality, the violent invective, are the
+notes of Knox's "History." Already, by 1547, or not much later, he was
+the perfect master of his style; his tone no more resembles that of his
+contemporary and fellow-historian, Lesley, than the style of Mr. J. R.
+Green resembles that of Mr. S. R. Gardiner.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III: KNOX IN ST. ANDREWS CASTLE: THE GALLEYS: 1547-1549
+
+
+We now take up Knox where we left him: namely when Wishart was arrested
+in January 1546. He was then tutor to the sons of the lairds of
+Langniddrie and Ormiston, Protestants and of the English party. Of his
+adventures we know nothing, till, on Beaton's murder (May 29, 1546), the
+Cardinal's successor, Archbishop Hamilton, drove him "from place to
+place," and, at Easter, 1547, he with his pupils entered the Castle of
+St. Andrews, then held, with some English aid, against the Regent Arran,
+by the murderers of Beaton and their adherents. {22} Knox was not
+present, of course, at Beaton's murder, about which he writes so
+"merrily," in his manner of mirth; nor at the events of Arran's siege of
+the castle, prior to April 1547. He probably, as regards these matters,
+writes from recollection of what Kirkcaldy of Grange, James Balfour,
+Balnaves, and the other murderers or associates of the murderers of the
+Cardinal told him in 1547, or later communicated to him as he wrote,
+about 1565-66. With his unfortunate love of imputing personal motives,
+he attributes the attacks by the rulers on the murderers mainly to the
+revengeful nature of Mary of Guise; the Cardinal having been "the comfort
+to all gentlewomen, and _especially to wanton widows_. His death must be
+revenged." {23a}
+
+Knox avers that the besiegers of St. Andrews Castle, despairing of their
+task, near the end of January 1547 made a fraudulent truce with the
+assassins, hoping for the betrayal of the castle, or of some of the
+leaders. {23b} In his narrative we find partisanship or very erroneous
+information. The conditions were, he says, that (1) the murderers should
+hold the castle till Arran could obtain for them, from the Pope, a
+sufficient absolution; (2) that they should give hostages, as soon as the
+absolution was delivered to them; (3) that they and their friends should
+not be prosecuted, nor undergo any legal penalties for the murder of the
+Cardinal; (4) that they should meanwhile keep the eldest son of Arran as
+hostage, so long as their own hostages were kept. The Government,
+however, says Knox, "never minded to keep word of them" (of these
+conditions), "as the issue did declare."
+
+There is no proof of this accusation of treachery on the part of Arran,
+or none known to me. The constant aim of Knox, his fixed idea, as an
+historian, is to accuse his adversaries of the treachery which often
+marked the negotiations of his friends.
+
+From this point, the truce, dated by Knox late in January 1547, he
+devotes eighteen pages to his own call to the ministry by the castle
+people, and to his controversies and sermons in St. Andrews. He then
+returns to history, and avers that, about June 21, 1547, the papal
+absolution was presented to the garrison merely as a veil for a
+treasonable attack, but was rejected, as it included the dubious phrase,
+Remittimus irremissibile--"We remit the crime that cannot be remitted."
+Nine days later, June 29, he says, by "the treasonable mean" of Arran,
+Archbishop Hamilton, and Mary of Guise, twenty-one French galleys, and
+such an army as the Firth had never seen, hove into view, and on June 30
+summoned the castle to surrender. The siege of St Andrews Castle, from
+the sea, by the French then began, but the garrison and castle were
+unharmed, and many of the galley slaves and some French soldiers were
+slain, and a ship was driven out of action. The French "shot two days"
+only. On July 19 the siege was renewed by land, guns were mounted on the
+spires of St. Salvator's College chapel and on the Cathedral, and did
+much scathe, though, during the first three weeks of the siege, the
+garrison "had many prosperous chances." Meanwhile Knox prophesied the
+defeat of his associates, because of "their corrupt life." They had
+robbed and ravished, and were probably demoralised by Knox's prophecies.
+On the last day of July the castle surrendered. {24} Knox adds that his
+friends would deal with France alone, as "Scottish men had all
+traitorously betrayed them."
+
+Now much of this narrative is wrong; wrong in detail, in suggestion, in
+omission. That a man of fifty, or sixty, could attribute the attacks on
+Beaton's murderers to mere revenge, specially to that of a "wanton
+widow," Mary of Guise (who had, we are to believe, so much of the
+Cardinal's attentions as his mistress, Mariotte Ogilvy, could spare), is
+significant of the spirit in which Knox wrote history. He had a strong
+taste for such scandals as this about the "wanton widow."
+
+Wherever he touches on Mary of Guise (who once treated him in a spirit of
+banter), he deals a stab at her name and fame. On all that concerns her
+personal character and political conduct, he is unworthy of credit when
+uncorroborated by better authority. Indeed Knox's spirit is so unworthy
+that for this, among other reasons, Archbishop Spottiswoode declined to
+believe in his authorship of the "History." The actual facts were not
+those recorded by Knox.
+
+As regards the "Appointment" or arrangement of the Scottish Government
+with the Castilians, it was not made late in January 1547, but was at
+least begun by December 17-19, 1546. {25a} On January 11, 1547, a spy of
+England, Stewart of Cardonald, reports that the garrison have given
+pledges and await their absolution from Rome. {25b} With regard to
+Knox's other statements in this place, it was not _after_ this truce,
+first, but before it, on November 26, that Arran invited French
+assistance, if England would not include Scotland in a treaty of peace
+with France. An English invasion was expected in February 1547, and
+Arran's object in the "Appointment" with the garrison was to prevent the
+English from becoming possessed of the Castle of St. Andrews. Far from
+desiring a papal pardon--a mere pretext to gain time for English
+relief--the garrison actually asked Henry VIII. to request the Emperor,
+to implore the Pope, "to stop and hinder their absolution." {25c} Knox
+very probably knew nothing of all this, but his efforts to throw the
+blame of treachery on his opponents are obviously futile.
+
+As to the honesty of his associates--before the death of Henry VIII.
+(January 28, 1547), the Castilians had promised him not to surrender the
+place without his consent, and to put Arran's son in his hands, promises
+which they also made, on Henry's death, to the English Government; in
+February they repeated these promises, quite incompatible with their vow
+to surrender if absolved. Knox represents them as merely promising to
+Henry that they would return Arran's son, and support the plan of
+marrying Mary Stuart to Prince Edward of Wales! {26a} In March 1547,
+English ships gathered at Holy Island, to relieve the castle. Not on
+June 21, 1547, as Knox alleges, but before April 2, the papal absolution
+for the murderers arrived. They mocked at it; and the spy who reports
+the facts is told that they "would rather have a boll of wheat than all
+the Pope's remissions." {26b} Whatever the terms of the papal remission,
+they had already, before it arrived, bound themselves to England not to
+accept it save with English concurrence; and England, then preparing to
+invade Scotland, could not possibly concur. Such was the honesty of
+Knox's party, and we already see how far his "History" deserves to be
+accepted as historical.
+
+Next, what is most surprising, Knox's account of the month of ineffectual
+siege by the French, while he was actually in the castle, rests on a
+strange error of his memory. The contemporary diary, Diurnal of
+Occurrences dates the _sending_ (the arrival must be meant) of the French
+galleys, not on June 29, as Knox dates their arrival, but on July 24.
+Professor Hume Brown says that the Diurnal gives the date as _June_ 24 (a
+slip of the pen), "but Knox had surely the best opportunity of knowing
+both facts" {27a}--that is, the number of the galleys, and the date of
+their coming. Despite his unrivalled opportunities of knowledge, Knox
+did not know. It is not quite correct to say that "Knox in his 'History'
+shows throughout a conscientious regard to accuracy of statement."
+Whatever the number of the galleys (Knox says twenty-one; the Diurnal
+says sixteen), on July 13-14, they are reported by Lord Eure, at Berwick,
+as passing or having just passed Eyemouth. {27b} They did not therefore
+suffer for three weeks at the garrison's hands, or for three weeks desert
+the siege, but probably reached the scene of action before the date in
+the Diurnal (July 24), as, on July 23, the French Ambassador in England
+heard that they were investing the castle. {27c} Allowing five or six
+days for transmission of news, they probably began the attack from the
+sea about July 16 or 17, not, as Knox says, on June 30. Perhaps he is
+right in saying that the French galleys only fired for two days and
+retreated, rather battered, to Dundee. Land forces next attacked the
+hold, which surrendered on July 29 (as was known in London on August 5),
+that is, on the first day that the _land_ battery was erected.
+
+Knox gives a much more full account of his own controversies, in April-
+June 1547, than of political events. He first, on arrival at the castle,
+drew up a catechism for his pupils, and publicly catechised them on its
+tenets, in the parish kirk in South Street. It is unfortunate that we do
+not possess this catechism. At the time when he wrote, Knox was possibly
+more of "Martin's" mind, as he familiarly terms Luther, both as to the
+Sacrament and as to the Order of Bishops, than he was after his residence
+in Geneva. Wishart, however, was well acquainted with Helvetic doctrine;
+he had, as we saw, translated a Helvetic Confession of Faith, perhaps
+with the view of introducing it into Scotland, and Knox may already have
+imbibed Calvinism from him. He was not yet--he never was--a full-blown
+Presbyterian, and, while thinking nothing of "orders," would not have
+rejected a bishop, if the bishop _preached_ and was of godly and frugal
+life. Already sermons were the most important part of public worship in
+the mind of Knox.
+
+In addition to public catechising he publicly expounded, and lectured on
+the Fourth Gospel, in the chapel of the castle. He doubted if he had "a
+lawful vocation" to _preach_. The castle pulpit was then occupied by an
+ex-friar named Rough. This divine, later burned in England, preached a
+sermon declaring a doctrine accepted by Knox, namely, that any
+congregation could call on any man in whom they "espied the gifts of God"
+to be their preacher; he offered Knox the post, and all present agreed.
+Knox wept, and for days his gloom declared his sense of his
+responsibility: such was "his holy vocation." The garrison was,
+confessedly, brutal, licentious, and rapacious, but they "all" partook of
+the holy Communion. {28}
+
+In controversy, Knox declared the Church to be "the synagogue of Satan,"
+and in the Pope he detected and denounced "the Man of Sin." On the
+following Sunday he proved, from Daniel, that the Roman Church is "that
+last Beast." The Church is also anti-Christ, and "the Hoore of Babylon,"
+and Knox dilated on the personal misconduct of Popes and "all shavelings
+for the most part." He contrasted Justification by Faith with the
+customs of pardons and pilgrimages.
+
+After these remarks, a controversy was held between Knox and the
+sub-prior, Wynram, the Scottish Vicar of Bray, Knox being understood to
+maintain that no bishop who did not preach was really a bishop; that the
+Mass is "abominable idolatry"; that Purgatory does not exist; and that
+the tithes are not necessarily the property of churchmen--a doctrine very
+welcome to the hungry nobles of Scotland. Knox, of course, easily
+overcame an ignorant opponent, a friar, who joined in the fray. His own
+arguments he later found time to write out fully in the French galleys,
+in which he was a prisoner, after the fall of the castle. If he "wrate
+in the galleys," as he says, they cannot have been always such floating
+hells as they are usually reckoned.
+
+That Knox, and other captives from the castle, were placed in the galleys
+after their surrender, was an abominable stretch of French power. They
+were not subjects of France. The terms on which they surrendered are not
+exactly known. Knox avers that they were to be free to live in France,
+and that, if they wished to leave, they were to be conveyed, at French
+expense, to any country except Scotland. Buchanan declares that only the
+lives of the garrison and their friends were secured by the terms of
+surrender. Lesley supports Knox, {30a} who is probably accurate.
+
+To account for the French severity, Knox tells us that the Pope insisted
+on it, appealing to both the Scottish and French Governments; and
+Scotland sent an envoy to France to beg "that those of the castle should
+be sharply handled." Men of birth were imprisoned, the rest went to the
+galleys. Knox's life cannot have been so bad as that of the Huguenot
+galley slaves under Louis XIV. He was allowed to receive letters; he
+read and commented on a treatise written in prison by Balnaves; and he
+even wrote a theological work, unless this work was his commentary on
+Balnaves. These things can only have been possible when the galleys were
+not on active service. In a very manly spirit, he never dilated on his
+sufferings, and merely alludes to "the torment I sustained in the
+galleys." He kept up his heart, always prophesying deliverance; and once
+(June, 1548?), when in view of St. Andrews, declared that he should
+preach again in the kirk where his career began. Unluckily, the person
+to whom he spoke, at a moment when he himself was dangerously ill, denied
+that he had ever been in the galleys at all! {30b} He was Sir James
+Balfour, a notorious scoundrel, quite untrustworthy; according to Knox,
+he had spoken of the prophecy, in Scotland, long before its fulfilment.
+
+Knox's health was more or less undermined, while his spiritual temper was
+not mollified by nineteen months of the galleys, mitigated as they
+obviously were.
+
+It is, doubtless, to his "torment" in the galleys that Knox refers when
+he writes: "I know how hard the battle is between the spirit and the
+flesh, under the heavy cross of affliction, where no worldly defence, but
+present death, does appear. . . . Rests only Faith, provoking us to call
+earnestly, and pray for assistance of God's spirit, wherein if we
+continue, our most desperate calamities shall turn to gladness, and to a
+prosperous end. . . . With experience I write this."
+
+In February or March, 1549, Knox was released; by April he was in
+England, and, while Edward VI. lived, was in comparative safety.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV: KNOX IN ENGLAND: THE BLACK RUBRIC: EXILE: 1549-1554
+
+
+Knox at once appeared in England in a character revolting to the later
+Presbyterian conscience, which he helped to educate. The State permitted
+no cleric to preach without a Royal license, and Knox was now a State
+licensed preacher at Berwick, one of many "State officials with a
+specified mission." He was an agent of the English administration, then
+engaged in forcing a detested religion on the majority of the English
+people. But he candidly took his own line, indifferent to the
+compromises of the rulers in that chaos of shifting opinions. For
+example, the Prayer Book of Edward VI. at that time took for granted
+kneeling as the appropriate attitude for communicants. Knox, at Berwick,
+on the other hand, bade his congregation sit, as he conceived that to
+have been the usage at the first institution of the rite. Possibly the
+Apostles, in fact, supped in a recumbent attitude, as Cranmer justly
+remarked later (John xiii. 25), but Knox supposed them to have sat. In a
+letter to his Berwick flock, he reminds them of his practice on this
+point; but he would not dissent from kneeling if "magistrates make known,
+as that they" (would?) "have done if ministers were willing to do their
+duties, that kneeling is not retained in the Lord's Supper for
+maintenance of any superstition," much less as "adoration of the Lord's
+Supper." This, "for a time," would content him: and this he obtained.
+{33a} Here Knox appears to make the civil authority--"the
+magistrates"--governors of the Church, while at the same time he does not
+in practice obey them unless they accept his conditions.
+
+This letter to the Berwick flock must be prior to the autumn of 1552, in
+which, as we shall see, Knox obtained his terms as to kneeling. He went
+on, in his epistle to the Berwickians, to speak in "a tone of moderation
+and modesty," for which, says Dr. Lorimer, not many readers will be
+prepared. {33b} In this modest passage, Knox says that, as to "the chief
+points of religion," he, with God's help, "will give place to neither man
+nor angel teaching the contrary" of his preaching. Yet an angel might be
+supposed to be well informed on points of doctrine! "But as to
+ceremonies or rites, things of smaller weight, I was not minded to move
+contention. . . ." The one point which--"because I am but one, having in
+my contrary magistrates, common order, and judgments, and many
+learned"--he is prepared to yield, and that for a time, is the practice
+of kneeling, but only on three conditions. These being granted, "with
+patience will I bear that one thing, daily thirsting and calling unto God
+for reformation of that and others." {33c} But he did not bear that one
+thing; he would _not_ kneel even after his terms were granted! This is
+the sum of Knox's "moderation and modesty"!
+
+Though he is not averse from talking about himself, Knox, in his
+"History," spares but three lines to his five years' residence in England
+(1549-54). His first charge was Berwick (1549-51), where we have seen he
+celebrated holy Communion by the Swiss rite, all meekly sitting. The
+Second Prayer Book, of 1552, when Knox ministered in Newcastle, bears
+marks of his hand. He opposed, as has been said, the rubric bidding the
+communicants kneel; the attitude savoured of "idolatry."
+
+The circumstances in which Knox carried his point on this question are
+most curious. Just before October 12, 1552, a foreign Protestant,
+Johannes Utenhovius, wrote to the Zurich Protestant, Bullinger, to the
+effect that a certain vir bonus, Scotus natione (a good man and a Scot),
+a preacher (concionator), of the Duke of Northumberland, had delivered a
+sermon before the King and Council, "in which he freely inveighed against
+the Anglican custom of kneeling at the Lord's Supper." Many listeners
+were greatly moved, and Utenhovius prayed that the sermon might be of
+blessed effect. Knox was certainly in London at this date, and was
+almost certainly the excellent Scot referred to by Utenhovius. The
+Second Prayer Book of Edward VI. was then in such forwardness that
+Parliament had appointed it to be used in churches, beginning on November
+1. The book included the command to kneel at the Lord's Supper, and any
+agitation against the practice might seem to be too late. Cranmer, the
+Primate, was in favour of the rubric as it stood, and on October 7, 1552,
+addressed the Privy Council in a letter which, without naming Knox,
+clearly shows his opinion of our Reformer. The book, _as it stood_, said
+Cranmer, had the assent of King and Parliament--now it was to be altered,
+apparently, "without Parliament." The Council ought not to be thus
+influenced by "glorious and unquiet spirits." Cranmer calls Knox, as
+Throckmorton later called Queen Mary's Bothwell, "glorious" in the sense
+of the Latin gloriosus, "swaggering," or "arrogant."
+
+Cranmer goes on to denounce the "glorious and unquiet spirits, which can
+like nothing but that is after their own fancy, and cease not to make
+trouble and disquietude when things be most quiet and in good order."
+{35} Their argument (Knox's favourite), that whatever is not commanded
+in Scripture is unlawful and ungodly, "is a subversion of all order as
+well in religion as in common policy."
+
+Cranmer ends with the amazing challenge: "I will set my foot by his to be
+tried in the fire, that his doctrine is untrue, and not only untrue but
+seditious, and perilous to be heard of any subjects, as a thing breaking
+the bridle of obedience and loosing them from the bond of all princes'
+laws."
+
+Cranmer had a premonition of the troubled years of James VI. and of the
+Covenant, when this question of kneeling was the first cause of the
+Bishops' wars. But Knox did not accept, as far as we know, the mediaeval
+ordeal by fire.
+
+Other questions about practices enjoined in the Articles arose. A
+"Confession," in which Knox's style may be traced, was drawn up, and
+consequently that "Declaration on Kneeling" was intercalated into the
+Prayer Book, wherein it is asserted that the attitude does not imply
+adoration of the elements, or belief in the Real Presence, "for that were
+idolatry." Elizabeth dropped, and Charles II. restored, this "Black
+Rubric" which Anglicanism owes to the Scottish Reformer. {36a} He "once
+had a good opinion," he says, of the Liturgy as it now stood, but he soon
+found that it was full of idolatries.
+
+The most important event in the private life of Knox, during his stay at
+Berwick, was his acquaintance with a devout lady of tormented conscience,
+Mrs. Bowes, wife of the Governor of Norham Castle on Tweed. Mrs. Bowes's
+tendency to the new ideas in religion was not shared by her husband and
+his family; the results will presently be conspicuous. In April 1550,
+Knox preached at Newcastle a sermon on his favourite doctrine that the
+Mass is "Idolatry," because it is "of man's invention," an opinion not
+shared by Tunstall, then Bishop of Durham. Knox used "idolatry" in a
+constructive sense, as when we talk of "constructive treason." But, in
+practice, he regarded Catholics as "idolaters," in the same sense as
+Elijah regarded Hebrew worshippers of alien deities, Chemosh or Moloch,
+and he later drew the inference that idolaters, as in the Old Testament,
+must be put to death. Thus his was logically a persecuting religion.
+
+Knox was made a King's chaplain and transferred to Newcastle. He saw
+that the country was, by preference, Catholic; that the life of Edward
+VI. hung on a thread; and that with the accession of his sister, Mary
+Tudor, Protestant principles would be as unsafe as under "umquhile the
+Cardinal." Knox therefore, "from the foresight of troubles to come" (so
+he writes to Mrs. Bowes, February 28, 1554), {36b} declined any post, a
+bishopric, or a living, which would in honour oblige him to face the fire
+of persecution. At the same time he was even then far at odds with the
+Church of England that he had sound reasons for refusing benefices.
+
+On Christmas day, 1552, {37a} he preached at Newcastle against Papists,
+as "thirsting nothing more than the King's death, which their iniquity
+would procure." In two brief years Knox was himself publicly expressing
+his own thirst for the Queen's death, and praying for a Jehu or a
+Phinehas, slayers of idolaters, such as Mary Tudor. If any fanatic had
+taken this hint, and the life of Mary Tudor, Catholics would have said
+that Knox's "iniquity procured" the murder, and they would have had fair
+excuse for the assertion.
+
+Meanwhile charges were brought against the Reformer, on the ground of his
+Christmas sermon of peace and goodwill. Northumberland (January 9, 1552-
+53) sends to Cecil "a letter of poor Knox, by the which you may perceive
+what perplexity the poor soul remaineth in at this present." We have not
+Knox's interesting letter, but Northumberland pled his cause against a
+charge of treason. In fact, however, the Court highly approved of his
+sermon. He was presently again in what he believed to be imminent danger
+of life: "I fear that I be not yet ripe, nor able to glorify Christ by my
+faith," he wrote to Mrs. Bowes, "but what lacketh now, God shall perform
+in His own time." {37b} We do not know what peril threatened the
+Reformer now (probably in March 1553), but he frequently, later, seems to
+have doubted his own "ripeness" for martyrdom. His reluctance to suffer
+did not prevent him from constant attendance to the tedious
+self-tormentings of Mrs. Bowes, and of "three honest poor women" in
+London.
+
+Knox, at all events, was not so "perplexed" that he feared to speak his
+mind in the pulpit. In Lent, 1553, preaching before the boy king, he
+denounced his ministers in trenchant historical parallels between them
+and Achitophel, Shebna, and Judas. Later, young Mr. Mackail, applying
+the same method to the ministers of Charles II., was hanged. "What
+wonder is it then," said Knox, "that a young and innocent king be
+deceived by crafty, covetous, wicked, and ungodly councillors? I am
+greatly afraid that Achitophel be councillor, that Judas bear the purse,
+and that Shebna be scribe, comptroller, and treasurer." {38a}
+
+This appears the extreme of audacity. Yet nothing worse came to Knox
+than questions, by the Council, as to his refusal of a benefice, and his
+declining, as he still did, to kneel at the Communion (April 14, 1553).
+His answers prove that he was out of harmony with the fluctuating
+Anglicanism of the hour. Northumberland could not then resent the
+audacities of pulpiteers, because the Protestants were the only party who
+might stand by him in his approaching effort to crown Lady Jane Grey. Now
+all the King's preachers, obviously by concerted action, "thundered"
+against Edward's Council, in the Lent or Easter of 1553. Manifestly, in
+the old Scots phrase, "the Kirk had a back"; had some secular support,
+namely that of their party, which Northumberland could not slight.
+Meanwhile Knox was sent on a preaching tour in Buckinghamshire, and there
+he was when Edward VI. died, in the first week of July 1553. {38b}
+
+Knox's official attachment to England expired with his preaching license,
+on the death of Edward VI. and the accession of Mary Tudor. He did not
+at once leave the country, but preached both in London and on the English
+border, while the new queen was settling herself on the throne. While
+within Mary's reach, Knox did not encourage resistance against that
+idolatress; he did not do so till he was safe in France. Indeed, in his
+prayer used after the death of Edward VI., before the fires of Oxford and
+Smithfield were lit, Knox wrote: "Illuminate the heart of our Sovereign
+Lady, Queen Mary, with pregnant gifts of the Holy Ghost. . . . Repress
+thou the pride of those that would rebel. . . . Mitigate the hearts of
+those that persecute us."
+
+In the autumn of 1553, Knox's health was very bad; he had gravel, and
+felt his bodily strength broken. Moreover, he was in the disagreeable
+position of being betrothed to a very young lady, Marjorie Bowes, with
+the approval of her devout mother, the wife of Richard Bowes, commander
+of Norham Castle, near Berwick, but to the anger and disgust of the Bowes
+family in general. They by no means shared Knox's ideas of religion,
+rather regarding him as a penniless unfrocked "Scot runagate," whose
+alliance was discreditable and distasteful, and might be dangerous.
+"Maist unpleasing words" passed, and it is no marvel that Knox, being
+persecuted in one city, fled to another, leaving England for Dieppe early
+in March 1554. {39}
+
+His conscience was not entirely at ease as to his flight. "Why did I
+flee? Assuredly I cannot tell, but of one thing I am sure, the fear of
+death was not the chief cause of my fleeing," he wrote to Mrs. Bowes from
+Dieppe. "Albeit that I have, in the beginning of this battle, appeared
+to play the faint-hearted and feeble soldier (the cause I remit to God),
+yet my prayer is that I may be restored to the battle again." {40a} Knox
+was, in fact, most valiant when he had armed men at his back; he had no
+enthusiasm for taking part in the battle when unaided by the arm of
+flesh. On later occasions this was very apparent, and he has confessed,
+as we saw, that he did not choose to face "the trouble to come" without
+means of retreat. His valour was rather that of the general than of the
+lonely martyr. The popular idea of Knox's personal courage, said to have
+been expressed by the Regent Morton in the words spoken at his funeral,
+"here lieth a man who in his life never feared the face of man," is
+entirely erroneous. His learned and sympathetic editor, David Laing,
+truly writes: "Knox cannot be said to have possessed the impetuous and
+heroic boldness of a Luther when surrounded with danger. . . . On more
+than one occasion Knox displayed a timidity or shrinking from danger,
+scarcely to have been expected from one who boasted of his willingness to
+endure the utmost torture, or suffer death in his Master's cause. Happily
+he was not put to the test. . . ." {40b}
+
+Dr. Laing puts the case more strongly than I feel justified in doing, for
+Knox, far from "boasting of his willingness to face the utmost torture,"
+more than once doubts his own readiness for martyrdom. We must remember
+that even Blessed Edmund Campion, who went gaily to torture and death,
+had doubts as to the necessity of that journey. {40c}
+
+Nor was there any reason why Knox should stay in England to be burned, if
+he could escape--with less than ten groats in his pocket--as he did. It
+is not for us moderns to throw the first stone at a reluctant martyr,
+still less to applaud useless self-sacrifice, but we do take leave to
+think that, having fled early, himself, from the martyr's crown, Knox
+showed bad taste in his harsh invectives against Protestants who, staying
+in England, conformed to the State religion under Mary Tudor.
+
+It is not impossible that his very difficult position as the lover of
+Marjorie Bowes--a position of which, while he remained in England, the
+burden fell on the poor girl--may have been one reason for Knox's flight,
+while the entreaties of his friends that he would seek safety must have
+had their influence.
+
+On the whole it seems more probable that when he committed himself to
+matrimony with a young girl, the fifth daughter of Mrs. Bowes, he was
+approaching his fortieth rather than his fiftieth year. Older than he
+are happy husbands made, sometimes, though Marjorie Bowes's choice may
+have been directed by her pious mother, whose soul could find no rest in
+the old faith, and not much in the new.
+
+At thirty-eight the Reformer, we must remember, must have been no
+uncomely wooer. His conversation must have been remarkably vivid: he had
+adventures enough to tell, by land and sea; while such a voice as he
+raised withal in the pulpit, like Edward Irving, has always been potent
+with women, as Sir Walter Scott remarks in Irving's own case. His
+expression, says Young, had a certain geniality; on the whole we need not
+doubt that Knox could please when he chose, especially when he was looked
+up to as a supreme authority. He despised women in politics, but had
+many friends of the sex, and his letters to them display a manly
+tenderness of affection without sentimentality.
+
+Writing to Mrs. Bowes from London in 1553, Knox mentions, as one of the
+sorrows of life, that "such as would most gladly remain together, for
+mutual comfort, cannot be suffered so to do. Since the first day that it
+pleased the providence of God to bring you and me in familiarity, I have
+always delighted in your company." He then wanders into religious
+reflections, but we see that he liked Mrs. Bowes, and Marjorie Bowes too,
+no doubt: he is careful to style the elderly lady "Mother." Knox's
+letters to Mrs. Bowes show the patience and courtesy with which the
+Reformer could comfort and counsel a middle-aged lady in trouble about
+her innocent soul. As she recited her infirmities, he reminds her, he
+"started back, and that is my common consuetude when anything pierces or
+touches my heart. Call to your mind what I did standing at the cupboard
+at Alnwick; in very deed I thought that no creature had been tempted as I
+was"--not by the charms of Mrs. Bowes, of course: he found that Satan
+troubled the lady with "the very same words that he troubles me with."
+Mrs. Bowes, in truth, with premature scepticism, was tempted to think
+that "the Scriptures of God are but a tale, and no credit to be given to
+them." The Devil, she is reminded by Knox, has induced "some
+philosophers to affirm that the world never had a beginning," which he
+refutes by showing that God predicted the pains of childbearing; and Mrs.
+Bowes, as the mother of twelve, knows how true _this_ is.
+
+The circular argument may or may not have satisfied Mrs. Bowes. {43}
+
+The young object of Knox's passion, Marjorie Bowes, is only alluded to as
+"she whom God hath offered unto me, and commanded me to love as my own
+flesh,"--after her, Mrs. Bowes is the dearest of mankind to Knox. No
+mortal was ever more long-suffering with a spiritual hypochondriac, who
+avers that "the sins that reigned in Sodom and Gomore reign in me, and I
+have small power or none to resist!" Knox replies, with common sense,
+that Mrs. Bowes is obviously ignorant of the nature of these offences.
+
+Writing to his betrothed he says nothing personal: merely reiterates his
+lessons of comfort to her mother. Meanwhile the lovers were parted, Knox
+going abroad; and it is to be confessed that he was not eager to come
+back.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V: EXILE: APPEALS FOR A PHINEHAS, AND A JEHU: 1554
+
+
+No change of circumstances could be much more bitter than that which
+exile brought to Knox. He had been a decently endowed official of State,
+engaged in bringing a reluctant country into the ecclesiastical fold
+which the State, for the hour, happened to prefer. His task had been
+grateful, and his congregations, at least at Berwick and Newcastle, had,
+as a rule, been heartily with him. Wherever he preached, affectionate
+women had welcomed him and hung upon his words. The King and his
+ministers had hearkened unto him--young Edward with approval,
+Northumberland with such emotions as we may imagine--while the Primate of
+England had challenged him to a competitive ordeal by fire, and had been
+defeated, apparently without recourse to the fire-test.
+
+But now all was changed; Knox was a lonely rover in a strange land,
+supported probably by collections made among his English friends, and by
+the hospitality of the learned. In his wanderings his heart burned
+within him many a time, and he abruptly departed from his theory of
+passive resistance. Now he eagerly desired to obtain, from Protestant
+doctors and pontiffs, support for the utterly opposite doctrine of armed
+resistance. Such support he did not get, or not in a satisfactory
+measure, so he commenced prophet on his own lines, and on his own
+responsibility.
+
+When Knox's heart burned within him, he sometimes seized the pen and
+dashed off fiery tracts which occasionally caused inconvenience to the
+brethren, and trouble to himself in later years. In cooler moments, and
+when dubious or prosperous, he now and again displayed a calm opportunism
+much at odds with the inspirations of his grief and anger.
+
+After his flight to Dieppe in March 1554, Knox was engaged, then, with a
+problem of difficulty, one of the central problems of his career and of
+the distracted age. In modern phrase, he wished to know how far, and in
+what fashion, persons of one religion might resist another religion,
+imposed upon them by the State of which they were subjects. On this
+point we have now no doubt, but in the sixteenth century "Authority" was
+held sacred, and martyrdom, according to Calvin, was to be preferred to
+civil war. If men were Catholics, and if the State was Protestant, they
+were liable, later, under Knox, to fines, exile, and death; but power was
+not yet given to him. If they were Protestants under a Catholic ruler,
+or Puritans under Anglican authority, Knox himself had laid down the rule
+of their conduct in his letter to his Berwick congregation. {45}
+"Remembering always, beloved brethren, that due obedience be given to
+magistrates, rulers, and princes, without tumult, grudge, or sedition.
+For, howsoever wicked themselves be in life, or howsoever ungodly their
+precepts or commandments be, ye must obey them for conscience' sake;
+except in chief points of religion, and then ye ought rather to obey God
+than man: _not to pretend to defend God's truth or religion, ye being
+subjects, by violence or sword, but patiently suffering what God shall
+please be laid upon you for constant confession of your faith and
+belief_." Man or angel who teaches contrary doctrine is corrupt of
+judgment, sent by God to blind the unworthy. And Knox proceeded to teach
+contrary doctrine!
+
+His truly Christian ideas are of date 1552, with occasional revivals as
+opportunity suggested. In exile he was now asking (1554), how was a
+Protestant minority or majority to oppose the old faith, backed by kings
+and princes, fire and sword? He answered the question in direct
+contradiction of his Berwick programme: he was now all for active
+resistance. Later, in addressing Mary of Guise, and on another occasion,
+he recurred to his Berwick theory, and he always found biblical texts to
+support his contradictory messages.
+
+At this moment resistance seemed hopeless enough. In England the
+Protestants of all shades were decidedly in a minority. They had no
+chance if they openly rose in arms; their only hope was in the death of
+Mary Tudor and the succession of Elizabeth--itself a poor hope in the
+eyes of Knox, who detested the idea of a female monarch. Might they "bow
+down in the House of Rimmon" by a feigned conformity? Knox, in a letter
+to the Faithful, printed in 1554, entirely rejected this compromise, to
+which Cecil stooped, thereby deserving hell, as the relentless Knox (who
+had fled) later assured him.
+
+In the end of March 1554, probably, Knox left Dieppe for Geneva, where he
+could consult Calvin, not yet secure in his despotism, though he had
+recently burned Servetus. Next he went to Zurich, and laid certain
+questions before Bullinger, who gave answers in writing as to Knox's
+problems.
+
+Could a woman rule a kingdom by divine right, and transfer the same to
+her husband?--Mary Tudor to Philip of Spain, is, of course, to be
+understood. Bullinger replied that it was a hazardous thing for the
+godly to resist the laws of a country. Philip the eunuch, though
+converted, did not drive Queen Candace out of Ethiopia. If a tyrannous
+and ungodly Queen reign, godly persons "have example and consolation in
+the case of Athaliah." The transfer of power to a husband is an affair
+of the laws of the country.
+
+Again, must a ruler who enforces "idolatry" be obeyed? May true
+believers, in command of garrisons, repel "this ungodly violence"?
+Bullinger answered, in effect, that "it is very difficult to pronounce
+upon every particular case." He had not the details before him. In
+short, nothing definite was to be drawn out of Bullinger. {47a}
+
+Dr. M'Crie observes, indeed, that Knox submitted to the learned of
+Switzerland "certain difficult questions, which were suggested by the
+present condition of affairs in England, and about which his mind had
+been greatly occupied. Their views with respect to these coinciding with
+his own, he was confirmed in the judgment which he had already formed for
+himself." {47b}
+
+In fact, Knox himself merely says that he had "reasoned with" pastors and
+the learned; he does not say that they agreed with him, and they
+certainly did not. Despite the reserve of Bullinger and of Calvin, Knox
+was of his new opinions still. These divines never backed his views.
+
+By May, Knox had returned to Dieppe, and published an epistle to the
+Faithful. The rebellion of Sir Thomas Wyatt had been put down, a blow to
+true religion. We have no evidence that Knox stimulated the rising, but
+he alludes once to his exertions in favour of the Princess Elizabeth. The
+details are unknown.
+
+In July, apparently, Knox printed his "Faithful Admonition to the
+Professors of God's Truth in England," and two editions of the tract were
+published in that country. The pamphlet is full of violent language
+about "the bloody, butcherly brood" of persecutors, and Knox spoke of
+what might have occurred had the Queen "been sent to hell before these
+days." The piece presents nothing, perhaps, so plain spoken about the
+prophet's right to preach treason as a passage in the manuscript of an
+earlier Knoxian epistle of May 1554 to the Faithful. "The prophets of
+God sometimes may teach treason against kings, and yet neither he, nor
+such as obey the word spoken in the Lord's name by him, offends God."
+{48} That sentence contains doctrine not submitted to Bullinger by Knox.
+He could not very well announce himself to Bullinger as a "prophet of
+God." But the sentence, which occurs in manuscript copies of the letter
+of May 1554, does not appear in the black letter printed edition. Either
+Knox or the publisher thought it too risky.
+
+In the published "Admonition," however, of July 1554, we find Knox
+exclaiming: "God, for His great mercy's sake, stir up some Phineas,
+Helias, or Jehu, that the blood of abominable idolaters may pacify God's
+wrath, that it consume not the whole multitude. Amen." {49a} This is a
+direct appeal to the assassin. If anybody will play the part of Phinehas
+against "idolaters"--that is the Queen of England and Philip of
+Spain--God's anger will be pacified. "Delay not thy vengeance, O Lord,
+but let death devour them in haste . . . For there is no hope of their
+amendment, . . . He shall send Jehu to execute his just judgments against
+idolaters. Jezebel herself shall not escape the vengeance and plagues
+that are prepared for her portion." {49b} These passages are essential.
+Professor Hume Brown expresses our own sentiments when he remarks: "In
+casting such a pamphlet into England at the time he did, Knox indulged
+his indignation, in itself so natural under the circumstances, at no
+personal risk, while he seriously compromised those who had the strongest
+claims on his most generous consideration." This is plain truth, and
+when some of Knox's English brethren later behaved to him in a manner
+which we must wholly condemn, their conduct, they said, had for a motive
+the mischief done to Protestants in England by his fiery "Admonition,"
+and their desire to separate themselves from the author of such a
+pamphlet.
+
+Knox did not, it will be observed, here call all or any of the faithful
+to a general massacre of their Catholic fellow-subjects. He went to that
+length later, as we shall show. In an epistle of 1554 he only writes:
+"Some shall demand, 'What then, shall we go and slay all idolaters?'
+_That_ were the office, dear brethren, of every civil magistrate within
+his realm. . . . The slaying of idolaters appertains not to every
+particular man." {49c}
+
+This means that every Protestant king should massacre all his
+inconvertible Catholic subjects! This was indeed a counsel of
+perfection; but it could never be executed, owing to the carnal policy of
+worldly men.
+
+In writing about "the office of the civil magistrate," Knox, a Border
+Scot of the age of the blood feud, seems to have forgotten, first, that
+the Old Testament prophets of the period were not unanimous in their
+applause of Jehu's massacre of the royal family; next, that between the
+sixteenth century A.D. and Jehu, had intervened the Christian revelation.
+Our Lord had given no word of warrant to murder or massacre! No
+persecuted apostle had dealt in appeals to the dagger. As for Jehu, a
+prophet had condemned _his_ conduct. Hosea writes that the Lord said
+unto him, "Yet a little while, and I will avenge the blood of Jezreel
+upon the house of Jehu," but doubtless Knox would have argued that Hosea
+was temporarily uninspired, as he argued about St. Paul and St. James
+later.
+
+However this delicate point may be settled, the appeal for a Phinehas is
+certainly unchristian. The idolaters, the unreformed, might rejoice,
+with the Nuncio of 1583, that the Duc de Guise had a plan for murdering
+Elizabeth, though it was not to be communicated to the Vicar of God, who
+should have no such dealings against "that wicked woman." To some
+Catholics, Elizabeth: to Knox, Mary was as Jezebel, and might laudably be
+assassinated. In idolaters nothing can surprise us; when persecuted
+they, in their unchristian fashion, may retort with the dagger or the
+bowl. But that Knox should have frequently maintained the doctrine of
+death to religious opponents is a strange and deplorable circumstance. In
+reforming the Church of Christ he omitted some elements of Christianity.
+
+Suppose, for a moment, that in deference to the teaching of the Gospel,
+Knox had never called for a Jehu, but had ever denounced, by voice and
+pen, those murderous deeds of his own party which he celebrates as "godly
+facts," he would have raised Protestantism to a moral pre-eminence. Dark
+pages of Scottish history might never have been written: the consciences
+of men might have been touched, and the cruelties of the religious
+conflict might have been abated. Many of them sprang from the fear of
+assassination.
+
+But Knox in some of his writings identified his cause with the palace
+revolutions of an ancient Oriental people. Not that he was a man of
+blood; when in France he dissuaded Kirkcaldy of Grange and others from
+stabbing the gaolers in making their escape from prison. Where idolaters
+in official position were concerned, and with a pen in his hand, he had
+no such scruples. He was a child of the old pre-Christian scriptures; of
+the earlier, not of the later prophets.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI: KNOX IN THE ENGLISH PURITAN TROUBLES AT FRANKFORT: 1554-1555
+
+
+The consequences of the "Admonition" came home to Knox when English
+refugees in Frankfort, impeded by him and others in the use of their
+Liturgy, accused him of high treason against Philip and Mary, and the
+Emperor, whom he had compared to Nero as an enemy of Christ.
+
+The affair of "The Troubles at Frankfort" brought into view the great
+gulf for ever fixed between Puritanism and the Church of England. It was
+made plain that Knox and the Anglican community were of incompatible
+temperaments, ideas, and, we may almost say, instincts. To Anglicans
+like Cranmer, Knox, from the first, was as antipathetic as they were to
+him. "We can assure you," wrote some English exiles for religion's sake
+to Calvin, "that that outrageous pamphlet of Knox's" (his "Admonition")
+"added much oil to the flame of persecution in England. For before the
+publication of that book not one of our brethren had suffered death; but
+as soon as it came forth we doubt not but you are well aware of the
+number of excellent men who have perished in the flames; to say nothing
+of how many other godly men have been exposed to the risk of all their
+property, and even life itself, on the sole ground of either having had
+this book in their possession or having read it."
+
+Such were the charges brought against Knox by these English Protestant
+exiles, fleeing from the persecution that followed the "Admonition," and,
+they say, took fresh ferocity from that tract.
+
+The quarrel between Knox and them definitely marks the beginning of the
+rupture between the fathers of the Church of England and the fathers of
+Puritanism, Scottish Presbyterianism, and Dissent. The representatives
+of Puritans and of Anglicans were now alike exiled, poor, homeless,
+without any abiding city. That they should instantly quarrel with each
+other over their prayer book (that which Knox had helped to correct) was,
+as Calvin told them, "extremely absurd." Each faction probably
+foresaw--certainly Knox's party foresaw--that, in the English
+congregation at Frankfort, a little flock barely tolerated, was to be
+settled the character of Protestantism in England, if ever England
+returned to Protestantism. "This evil" (the acceptance of the English
+Second Book of Prayer of Edward VI.) "shall in time be established . . .
+and never be redressed, neither shall there for ever be an end of this
+controversy in England," wrote Knox's party to the Senate of Frankfort.
+The religious disruption in England was, in fact, incurable, but so it
+would have been had the Knoxians prevailed in Frankfort. The difference
+between the Churchman and the Dissenter goes to the root of the English
+character; no temporary triumph of either side could have brought Peace
+and union. While the world stands they will not be peaceful and united.
+
+The trouble arose thus. At the end of June 1554, some English exiles of
+the Puritan sort, men who objected to surplices, responses, kneeling at
+the Communion, and other matters of equal moment, came to Frankfort. They
+obtained leave to use the French Protestant Chapel, provided that they
+"should not dissent from the Frenchmen in doctrine or ceremonies, lest
+they should thereby minister occasions of offence." They had then to
+settle what Order of services they should use; "anything they pleased,"
+said the magistrates of Frankfort, "as long as they and the French kept
+the peace." They decided to adopt the English Order, barring responses,
+the Litany, the surplice, "and many other things." {54} The Litany was
+regarded by Knox as rather of the nature of magic than of prayer, the
+surplice was a Romish rag, and there was some other objection to the
+congregation's taking part in the prayers by responses, though they were
+not forbidden to mingle their voices in psalmody. Dissidium valde
+absurdum--"a very absurd quarrel," among exiled fellow-countrymen, said
+Calvin, was the dispute which arose on these points. The Puritans,
+however, decided to alter the service to their taste, and enjoyed the use
+of the chapel. They had obtained a service which they were not likely to
+have been allowed to enforce in England had Edward VI. lived; but on this
+point they were of another opinion.
+
+This success was providential. They next invited English exiles abroad
+to join them at Frankfort, saying nothing about their mutilations of the
+service book. If these brethren came in, when they were all restored to
+England, if ever they were restored, their example, that of sufferers,
+would carry the day, and their service would for ever be that of the
+Anglican Church. The other exiled brethren, on receiving this
+invitation, had enough of the wisdom of the serpent to ask, "Are we to be
+allowed to use our own prayer book?" The answer of the godly of
+Frankfort evaded the question. At last the Frankfort Puritans showed
+their hand: they disapproved of various things in the Prayer Book. Knox,
+summoned from Geneva, a reluctant visitor, was already one of their
+preachers. In November 1554 came Grindal, later Archbishop of
+Canterbury, from Zurich, ready to omit some ceremonies, so that he and
+his faction might have "the substance" of the Prayer Book. Negotiations
+went on, and it was proposed by the Puritans to use the Geneva service.
+But Knox declined to do that, without the knowledge of the non-Puritan
+exiles at Zurich and elsewhere, or to use the English book, and offered
+his resignation. Nothing could be more fair and above-board.
+
+There was an inchoate plan for a new Order. That failed; and Knox, with
+others, consulted Calvin, giving him a sketch of the nature of the
+English service. They drew his attention to the surplice; the Litany,
+"devised by Pope Gregory," whereby "we use a certain conjuring of God";
+the kneeling at the Communion; the use of the cross in baptism, and of
+the ring in marriage, clearly a thing of human, if not of diabolical
+invention, and the "imposition of hands" in confirmation. The churching
+of women, they said, is both Pagan and Jewish. "Other things not so much
+shame itself as a certain kind of pity compelleth us to keep close."
+
+"The tone of the letter throughout was expressly calculated to prejudice
+Calvin on the point submitted to him," says Professor Hume Brown. {56}
+Calvin replied that the quarrel might be all very well if the exiles were
+happy and at ease in their circumstances, though in the Liturgy, as
+described, there were "tolerable (endurable) follies." On the whole he
+sided with the Knoxian party. The English Liturgy is not pure enough;
+and the English exiles, not at Frankfort, merely like it because they are
+accustomed to it. Some are partial to "popish dregs."
+
+To the extreme Reformers no break with the past could be too abrupt and
+precipitous: the framers of the English Liturgy had rather adopted the
+principle of evolution than of development by catastrophe, and had wedded
+what was noblest in old Latin forms and prayers to music of the choicest
+English speech. To this service, for which their fellow-religionists in
+England were dying at the stake, the non-Frankfortian exiles were
+attached. They were Englishmen; their service, they said, should bear
+"an English face": so Knox avers, who could as yet have no patriotic love
+of any religious form as exclusively and essentially Scottish.
+
+A kind of truce was now proclaimed, to last till May 1, 1555; Knox aiding
+in the confection of a service without responses, "some part taken out of
+the English book, and other things put to," while Calvin, Bullinger, and
+three others were appointed as referees. The Frankfort congregation had
+now a brief interval of provisional peace, till, on March 13, 1555,
+Richard Cox, with a band of English refugees, arrived. He had been tutor
+to Edward VI., the young Marcellus of Protestantism, but for Frankfort he
+was not puritanic enough. His company would give a large majority to the
+anti-Knoxian congregation. He and his at once uttered the responses, and
+on Sunday one of them read the Litany. This was an unruly infraction of
+the provisional agreement. Cox and his party (April 5) represented to
+Calvin that they had given up surplices, crosses, and other things, "not
+as impure and papistical," but as indifferent, and for the sake of peace.
+This was after they had driven Knox from the place, as they presently
+did; in the beginning it was distinctly their duty to give up the Litany
+and responses, while the truce lasted, that is, till the end of April. In
+the afternoon of the Sunday Knox preached, denouncing the morning's
+proceedings, the "impurity" of the Prayer Book, of which "I once had a
+good opinion," and the absence, in England, of "discipline," that is,
+interference by preachers with private life. Pluralities also he
+denounced, and some of the exiles had been pluralists.
+
+For all this Knox was "very sharply reproved," as soon as he left the
+pulpit. Two days later, at a meeting, he insisted that Cox's people
+should have a vote in the congregation, thus making the anti-puritans a
+majority; Knox's conduct was here certainly chivalrous: "I fear not your
+judgment," he said. He had never wished to go to Frankfort; in going he
+merely obeyed Calvin, and probably he had no great desire to stay. He
+was forbidden to preach by Cox and his majority; and a later conference
+with Cox led to no compromise. It seems probable that Cox and the anti-
+puritans already cherished a grudge against Knox for his tract, the
+"Admonition." He had a warning that they would use the pamphlet against
+him, and he avers that "some devised how to have me cast into prison."
+The anti-puritans, admitting in a letter to Calvin that they brought the
+"Admonition" before the magistrates of Frankfort as "a book which would
+supply their enemies with just ground for overturning the whole Church,
+and one which had added much oil to the flame of persecution in England,"
+deny that they desired more than that Knox might be ordered to quit the
+place. The passages selected as treasonable in the "Admonition" do not
+include the prayer for a Jehu. They were enough, however, to secure the
+dismissal of Knox from Frankfort.
+
+Cox had accepted the Order used by the French Protestant congregation,
+probably because it committed him and his party to nothing in England;
+however, Knox had no sooner departed than the anti-puritans obtained
+leave to use, without surplice, cross, and some other matters, the Second
+Prayer Book of Edward VI. In September the Puritans seceded, the anti-
+puritans remained, squabbling with the Lutherans and among themselves.
+
+In the whole affair Knox acted the most open and manly part; in his
+"History" he declines to name the opponents who avenged themselves, in a
+manner so dubious, on his "Admonition." If they believed their own
+account of the mischief that it wrought in England, their denunciation of
+him to magistrates, who were not likely to do more than dismiss him, is
+the less inexcusable. They did not try to betray him to a body like the
+Inquisition, as Calvin did in the case of Servetus. But their conduct
+was most unworthy and unchivalrous. {58}
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII: KNOX IN SCOTLAND: LETHINGTON: MARY OF GUISE: 1555-1556
+
+
+Meanwhile the Reformer returned to Geneva (April 1555), where Calvin was
+now supreme. From Geneva, "the den of mine own ease, the rest of quiet
+study," Knox was dragged, "maist contrarious to mine own judgement," by a
+summons from Mrs. Bowes. He did not like leaving his "den" to rejoin his
+betrothed; the lover was not so fervent as the evangelist was cautious.
+Knox had at that time probably little correspondence with Scotland. He
+knew that there was no refuge for him in England under Mary Tudor, "who
+nowise may abide the presence of God's prophets."
+
+In Scotland, at this moment, the Government was in the hands of Mary of
+Guise, a sister of the Duke of Guise and of the Cardinal. Mary was now
+aged forty; she was born in 1515, as Knox probably was. She was a tall
+and stately woman; her face was thin and refined; Henry VIII., as being
+himself a large man, had sought her hand, which was given to his nephew,
+James V. On the death of that king, Mary, with Cardinal Beaton, kept
+Scotland true to the French alliance, and her daughter, the fair Queen of
+Scots, was at this moment a child in France, betrothed to the Dauphin. As
+a Catholic, of the House of Lorraine, Mary could not but cleave to her
+faith and to the French alliance. In 1554 she had managed to oust from
+the Regency the Earl of Arran, the head of the all but royal Hamiltons,
+now gratified with the French title of Duc de Chatelherault. To crown
+her was as seemly a thing, says Knox, "if men had but eyes, as a saddle
+upon the back of ane unrewly kow." She practically deposed Huntly, the
+most treacherous of men, from the Chancellorship, substituting, with more
+or less reserve, a Frenchman, de Rubay; and d'Oysel, the commander of the
+French troops in Scotland, was her chief adviser.
+
+[Picture of King James V and Mary of Guise: knox2.jpg]
+
+Writing after the death of Mary of Guise, Knox avers that she only waited
+her chance "to cut the throats of all those in whom she suspected the
+knowledge of God to be, within the realm of Scotland." {60} As a matter
+of fact, the Regent later refused a French suggestion that she should
+peacefully call Protestants together, and then order a massacre after the
+manner of the Bartholomew: itself still in the womb of the future. "Mary
+of Guise," says Knox's biographer, Professor Hume Brown, "had the
+instincts of a good ruler--the love of order and justice, and the desire
+to stand well with the people."
+
+Knox, however, believed, or chose to say, that she wanted to cut all
+Protestant throats, just as he believed that a Protestant king should cut
+all Catholic throats. He attributed to her, quite erroneously and
+uncharitably, his own unsparing fervour. As he held this view of her
+character and purposes, it is not strange that a journey to Scotland was
+"contrairious to his judgement."
+
+He did not understand the situation. Ferocious as had been the English
+invasion of Scotland in 1547, the English party in Scotland, many of them
+paid traitors, did not resent these "rebukes of a friend," so much as
+both the nobles and the people now began to detest their French allies,
+and were jealous of the Queen Mother's promotion of Frenchmen.
+
+There were not, to be sure, many Scots whom she, or any one, could trust.
+Some were honestly Protestant: some held pensions from England: others
+would sacrifice national interests to their personal revenges and clan
+feuds. The Rev. the Lord James Stewart, Mary's bastard brother, Prior of
+St. Andrews and of Pittenweem, was still very young. He had no interest
+in his clerical profession beyond drawing his revenues as prior of two
+abbeys; and his nearness to the Crown caused him to be suspected of
+ambition: moreover, he tended towards the new ideas in religion. He had
+met Knox in London, apparently in 1552. Morton was a mere wavering
+youth; Argyll was very old: Chatelherault was a rival of the Regent, a
+competitor for the Crown and quite incompetent. The Regent, in short,
+could scarcely have discovered a Scottish adviser worthy of employment,
+and when she did trust one, he was the brilliant "chamaeleon," young
+Maitland of Lethington, who would rather betray his master cleverly than
+run a straight course, and did betray the Regent. Thus Mary, a
+Frenchwoman and a Catholic, governing Scotland for her Catholic daughter,
+the Dauphiness, with the aid of a few French troops who had just saved
+the independence of the country, naturally employed French advisers. This
+made her unpopular; her attempts to bring justice into Scottish courts
+were odious, and she would not increase the odium by persecuting the
+Protestants. The Duke's bastard brother, again, the Archbishop, sharing
+his family ambition, was in no mood for burning heretics. The Queen
+Mother herself carried conciliation so far as to pardon and reinstate
+such trebly dyed traitors as the notorious Crichton of Brunston, and she
+employed Kirkcaldy of Grange, who intrigued against her while in her
+employment. An Edinburgh tailor, Harlaw, who seems to have been a deacon
+in English orders, was allowed to return to Scotland in 1554. He became
+a very notable preacher. {62a}
+
+Going from Mrs. Bowes's house to Edinburgh, Knox found that "the
+fervency" of the godly "did ravish him." At the house of one Syme "the
+trumpet blew the auld sound three days thegither," he informed Mrs.
+Bowes, and Knox himself was the trumpeter. He found another lady, "who,
+by reason that she had a troubled conscience, delighted much in the
+company of the said John." There were pleasant sisters in Edinburgh, who
+later consulted Knox on the delicate subject of dress. He was more
+tolerant in answering them than when he denounced "the stinking pride of
+women" at Mary Stuart's Court; admitting that "in clothes, silks,
+velvets, gold, and other such, there is no uncleanness," yet "I cannot
+praise the common superfluity which women now use in their apparel." He
+was quite opposed, however, to what he pleasingly calls "correcting
+natural beauty" (as by dyeing the hair), and held that "farthingales
+cannot be justified."
+
+On the whole, he left the sisters fairly free to dress as they pleased.
+His curious phrase, {62b} in a letter to a pair of sisters, "the prophets
+of God are often impeded to pray for such as carnally they love
+unfeignedly," is difficult to understand. We leave it to the learned to
+explain this singular limitation of the prophet, which Knox says that he
+had not as yet experienced. He must have heard about it from other
+prophets.
+
+Knox found at this time a patron remarkable, says Dr. M'Crie, "for great
+respectability of character," Erskine of Dun. Born in 1508, about 1530
+he slew a priest named Thomas Froster, in a curiously selected place, the
+belfry tower of Montrose. Nobody seems to have thought anything of it,
+nor should we know the fact, if the record of the blood-price paid by Mr.
+Erskine to the priest's father did not testify to the fervent act. Six
+years later, according to Knox, "God had marvellously illuminated"
+Erskine, and the mildness of his nature is frequently applauded. He was,
+for Scotland, a man of learning, and our first amateur of Greek. Why did
+he kill a priest in a bell tower!
+
+In the winter or autumn of 1555, Erskine gave a supper, where Knox was to
+argue against crypto-protestantism. When once the Truth, whether
+Anglican or Presbyterian, was firmly established, Catholics were
+compelled, under very heavy fines, to attend services and sermons which
+they believed to be at least erroneous, if not blasphemous. I am not
+aware that, in 1555, the Catholic Church, in Scotland, thus vigorously
+forced people of Protestant opinions to present themselves at Mass,
+punishing nonconformity with ruin. I have not found any complaints to
+this effect, at that time. But no doubt an appearance of conformity
+might save much trouble, even in the lenient conditions produced by the
+character of the Regent and by the political situation. Knox, then,
+discovered that "divers who had a zeal to godliness made small scruple to
+go to the Mass, or to communicate with the abused sacraments in the
+Papistical manner." He himself, therefore, "began to show the impiety of
+the Mass, and how dangerous a thing it was to communicate in any sort
+with idolatry."
+
+Now to many of his hearers this essential article of his faith--that the
+Catholic doctrine of the Eucharist and form of celebration were
+"idolatry"--may have been quite a new idea. It was already, however, a
+commonplace with Anglican Protestants. Nothing of the sort was to be
+found in the _first_ Prayer Book of Edward VI.; broken lights of various
+ways of regarding the Sacrament probably played, at this moment, over the
+ideas of Knox's Scottish disciples. Indeed, their consciences appear to
+have been at rest, for it was _after_ Knox's declaration about the
+"idolatrous" character of the Mass that "the matter began to be agitated
+from man to man, the conscience of some being afraid."
+
+To us it may seem that the sudden denunciation of a Christian ceremony,
+even what may be deemed a perverted Christian ceremony, as sheer
+"idolatry," equivalent to the worship of serpents, bulls, or of a foreign
+Baal in ancient Israel--was a step calculated to confuse the real issues
+and to provoke a religious war of massacre. Knox, we know, regarded
+extermination of idolaters as a counsel of perfection, though in the
+Christian scriptures not one word could be found to justify his position.
+He relied on texts about massacring Amalekites and about Elijah's
+slaughter of the prophets of Baal. The Mass was idolatry, was Baal
+worship; and Baal worshippers, if recalcitrant, must die.
+
+These extreme unchristian ideas, then, were new in Scotland, even to
+"divers who had a zeal to godliness." For their discussion, at Erskine
+of Dun's party, were present, among others, Willock, a Scots preacher
+returned from England, and young Maitland of Lethington. We are not told
+what part Willock took in the conversation. The arguments turned on
+biblical analogies, never really coincident with the actual modern
+circumstances. The analogy produced in discussion by those who did not
+go to all extremes with Knox did not, however, lack appropriateness.
+Christianity, in fact, as they seem to have argued, did arise out of
+Judaism; retaining the same God and the same scriptures, but, in virtue
+of the sacrifice of its Founder, abstaining from the sacrifices and
+ceremonial of the law. In the same way Protestantism arose out of
+mediaeval Catholicism, retaining the same God and the same scriptures,
+but rejecting the mediaeval ceremonial and the mediaeval theory of the
+sacrifice of the Mass. It did not follow that the Mass was sheer
+"idolatry," at which no friend of the new ideas could be present.
+
+As a proof that such presence or participation was not unlawful, was not
+idolatry, in the existing state of affairs, was adduced the conduct of
+St. Paul and the advice given to him by St. James and the Church in
+Jerusalem (Acts xxi. 18-36). Paul was informed that many thousands of
+Jews "believed," yet remained zealous for the law, the old order. They
+had learned that Paul advised the Jews in Greece and elsewhere not to
+"walk after the customs." Paul should prove that "he also kept the law."
+For this purpose he, with four Christian Jews under a vow, was to purify
+himself, and he went into the Temple, "until that an offering should be
+offered for every one of them."
+
+"Offerings," of course, is the term in our version for sacrifices,
+whether of animals or of "unleavened wafers anointed with oil." The
+argument from analogy was, I infer, that the Mass, with its wafer, was
+precisely such an "offering," such a survival in Catholic ritual, as in
+Jewish ritual St. Paul consented to, by the advice of the Church of
+Jerusalem; consequently Protestants in a Catholic country, under the
+existing circumstances, might attend the Mass. The Mass was not
+"idolatry." The analogy halts, like all analogies, but so, of course,
+and to fatal results, does Knox's analogy between the foreign worships of
+Israel and the Mass. "She thinks not _that_ idolatry, but good
+religion," said Lethington to Knox once, speaking of Queen Mary's Mass.
+"So thought they that offered their children unto Moloch," retorted the
+reformer. Manifestly the Mass is, of the two, much more on a level with
+the "offering" of St. Paul than with human sacrifices to Moloch! {66}
+
+In his reply Knox, as he states his own argument, altogether overlooked
+the _offering_ of St. Paul, which, as far as we understand, was the
+essence of his opponents' contention. He said that "to pay _vows_ was
+never idolatry," but "the Mass from the original was and remained odious
+idolatry, therefore the facts were most unlike. Secondly, I greatly
+doubt whether either James's commandment or Paul's obedience proceeded
+from the Holy Ghost," about which Knox was, apparently, better informed
+than these Apostles and the Church of Jerusalem. Next, Paul was
+presently in danger from a mob, which had been falsely told that he took
+Greeks into the Temple. Hence it was manifest "that God approved not
+that means of reconciliation." Obviously the danger of an Apostle from a
+misinformed mob is no sort of evidence to divine approval or disapproval
+of his behaviour. {67} We shall later find that when Knox was urging on
+some English nonconformists the beauty of conformity (1568), he employed
+the very precedent of St. Paul's conduct at Jerusalem, which he rejected
+when it was urged at Erskine's supper party!
+
+We have dwelt on this example of Knox's logic, because it is crucial. The
+reform of the Church of Christ could not be achieved without cruel
+persecution on both parts, while Knox was informing Scotland that all
+members of the old Faith were as much idolaters as Israelites who
+sacrificed their children to a foreign God, while to extirpate idolaters
+was the duty of a Christian prince. Lethington, as he soon showed, was
+as clear-sighted in regard to Knox's logical methods as any man of to-
+day, but he "concluded, saying, I see perfectly that our shifts will
+serve nothing before God, seeing that they stand us in so small stead
+before man." But either Lethington conformed and went to Mass, or Mary
+of Guise expected nothing of the sort from him, for he remained high in
+her favour, till he betrayed her in 1559.
+
+Knox's opinion being accepted--it obviously was a novelty to many of his
+hearers--the Reformers must either convert or persecute the Catholics
+even to extermination. Circumstances of mere worldly policy forbade the
+execution of this counsel of perfection, but persistent "idolaters,"
+legally, lay after 1560 under sentence of death. There was to come a
+moment, we shall see, when even Knox shrank from the consequences of a
+theory ("a murderous syllogism," writes one of his recent biographers,
+Mr. Taylor Innes), which divided his countrymen into the godly, on one
+hand, and idolaters doomed to death by divine law, on the other. But he
+put his hesitation behind him as a suggestion of Satan.
+
+Knox now associated with Lord Erskine, then Governor of Edinburgh Castle,
+the central strength of Scotland; with Lord Lorne, soon to be Earl of
+Argyll (a "Christian," but not a remarkably consistent walker), with
+"Lord James," the natural brother of Queen Mary (whose conscience, as we
+saw, permitted him to draw the benefices of the Abbacy of St. Andrews, of
+Pittenweem, and of an abbey in France, without doing any duties), and
+with many redoubtable lairds of the Lothians, Ayrshire, and Forfarshire.
+He also preached for ten days in the town house, at Edinburgh, of the
+Bishop of Dunkeld. On May 15, 1556, he was summoned to appear in the
+church of the Black Friars. As he was backed by Erskine of Dun, and
+other gentlemen, according to the Scottish custom when legal proceedings
+were afoot, no steps were taken against him, the clergy probably dreading
+Knox's defenders, as Bothwell later, in similar circumstances, dreaded
+the assemblage under the Earl of Moray; as Lennox shrank from facing the
+supporters of Bothwell, and Moray from encountering the spears of
+Lethington's allies. It was usual to overawe the administrators of
+justice by these gatherings of supporters, perhaps a survival of the old
+"compurgators." This, in fact, was "part of the obligation of our
+Scottish kyndness," and the divided ecclesiastical and civil powers
+shrank from a conflict.
+
+Glencairn and the Earl Marischal, in the circumstances, advised Knox to
+write a letter to Mary of Guise, "something that might move her to hear
+the Word of God," that is, to hear Knox preach. This letter, as it then
+stood, was printed in a little black-letter volume, probably of 1556.
+Knox addresses the Regent and Queen Mother as "her humble subject." The
+document has an interest almost pathetic, and throws light on the whole
+character of the great Reformer. It appears that Knox had been reported
+to the Regent by some of the clergy, or by rumour, as a heretic and
+seducer of the people. But Knox had learned that the "dew of the
+heavenly grace" had quenched her displeasure, and he hoped that the
+Regent would be as clement to others in his case as to him. Therefore he
+returns to his attitude in the letter to his Berwick congregation (1552).
+He calls for no Jehu, he advises no armed opposition to the sovereign,
+but says of "God's chosen children" (the Protestants), that "their
+victory standeth not in resisting but in suffering," "in quietness,
+silence, and hope," as the Prophet Isaiah recommends. The Isaiahs
+(however numerous modern criticism may reckon them) were late prophets,
+not of the school of Elijah, whom Knox followed in 1554 and 1558-59, not
+in 1552 or 1555, or on one occasion in 1558-59. "The Elect of God" do
+not "shed blood and murder," Knox remarks, though he approves of the
+Elect, of the brethren at all events, when they _do_ murder and shed
+blood.
+
+Meanwhile Knox is more than willing to run the risks of the preacher of
+the truth, "partly because I would, with St. Paul, wish myself accursed
+from Christ, as touching earthly pleasures" (whatever that may mean),
+"for the salvation of my brethren and illumination of your Grace." He
+confesses that the Regent is probably not "so free as a public
+reformation perhaps would require," for that required the downcasting of
+altars and images, and prohibition to celebrate or attend Catholic rites.
+Thus Knox would, apparently, be satisfied for the moment with toleration
+and immunity for his fellow-religionists. Nothing of the sort really
+contented him, of course, but at present he asked for no more.
+
+Yet, a few days later, he writes, the Regent handed his letter to the
+Archbishop of Glasgow, saying, "Please you, my Lord, to read a pasquil,"
+an offence which Knox never forgave and bitterly avenged in his
+"History."
+
+It is possible that the Regent merely glanced at his letter. She would
+find herself alluded to in a biblical parallel with "the Egyptian
+midwives," with Nebuchadnezzar, and Rahab the harlot. Her acquaintance
+with these amiable idolaters may have been slight, but the comparison was
+odious, and far from tactful. Knox also reviled the creed in which she
+had been bred as "a poisoned cup," and threatened her, if she did not act
+on his counsel, with "torment and pain everlasting." Those who drink of
+the cup of her Church "drink therewith damnation and death." As for her
+clergy, "proud prelates do Kings maintain to murder the souls for which
+the blood of Christ Jesus was shed."
+
+These statements were dogmatic, and the reverse of conciliatory. One
+should not, in attempting to convert any person, begin by reviling his
+religion. Knox adopted the same method with Mary Stuart: the method is
+impossible. It is not to be marvelled at if the Regent did style the
+letter a "pasquil."
+
+Knox took his revenge in his "History" by repeating a foolish report that
+Mary of Guise had designed to poison her late husband, James V. "Many
+whisper that of old his part was in the pot, and that the suspicion
+thereof caused him to be inhibited the Queen's company, while the
+Cardinal got his secret business sped of that gracious lady either by day
+or night." {71a} He styled her, as we saw, "a wanton widow"; he hinted
+that she was the mistress of Cardinal Beaton; he made similar
+insinuations about her relations with d'Oysel (who was "a secretis
+mulierum"); he said, as we have seen, that she only waited her chance to
+cut the throats of all suspected Protestants; he threw doubt on the
+legitimacy of her daughter, Mary Stuart; and he constantly accuses her of
+treachery, as will appear, when the charge is either doubtful, or, as far
+as I can ascertain, absolutely false.
+
+These are unfortunately examples of Knox's Christianity. {71b} It is
+very easy for modern historians and biographers to speak with genial
+applause of the prophet's manly bluffness. But if we put ourselves in
+the position of opponents whom he was trying to convert, of the two Marys
+for example, we cannot but perceive that his method was hopelessly
+mistaken. In attempting to evangelise an Euahlayi black fellow, we
+should not begin by threats of damnation, and by railing accusations
+against his god, Baiame.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII: KNOX'S WRITINGS FROM ABROAD: BEGINNING OF THE SCOTTISH
+REVOLUTION, 1556-1558
+
+
+Knox was about this time summoned to be one of the preachers to the
+English at Geneva. He sent in advance Mrs. Bowes and his wife, visited
+Argyll and Glenorchy (now Breadalbane), wrote (July 7) an epistle bidding
+the brethren be diligent in reading and discussing the Bible, and went
+abroad. His effigy was presently burned by the clergy, as he had not
+appeared in answer to a second summons, and he was outlawed in absence.
+
+It is not apparent that Knox took any part in the English translation of
+the Bible, then being executed at Geneva. Greek and Hebrew were not his
+forte, though he had now some knowledge of both tongues, but he preached
+to the men who did the work. The perfections of Genevan Church
+discipline delighted him. "Manners and religion so sincerely reformed I
+have not yet seen in any other place." The genius of Calvin had made
+Geneva a kind of Protestant city state [Greek text]; a Calvinistic
+Utopia--everywhere the vigilant eyes of the preachers and magistrates
+were upon every detail of daily life. Monthly and weekly the magistrates
+and ministers met to point out each other's little failings. Knox felt
+as if he were indeed in the City of God, and later he introduced into
+Scotland, and vehemently abjured England to adopt, the Genevan
+"discipline." England would none of it, and would not, even in the days
+of the Solemn League and Covenant, suffer the excommunication by
+preachers to pass without lay control.
+
+It is unfortunate that the ecclesiastical polity and discipline of a
+small city state, like a Greek [Greek word polis], feasible in such a
+community as Geneva at a moment of spiritual excitement, was brought by
+Knox and his brethren into a nation like Scotland. The results were a
+hundred and twenty-nine years of unrest, civil war, and persecution.
+
+Though happy in the affection of his wife and Mrs. Bowes, Knox, at this
+time, needed more of feminine society. On November 19, 1556, he wrote to
+his friend, Mrs. Locke, wife of a Cheapside merchant: "You write that
+your desire is earnest to see me. Dear sister, if I should express the
+thirst and languor which I have had for your presence, I should appear to
+pass measure. . . . Your presence is so dear to me that if the charge of
+this little flock . . . did not impede me, my presence should anticipate
+my letter." Thus Knox was ready to brave the fires of Smithfield, or,
+perhaps, forgot them for the moment in his affection for Mrs. Locke. He
+writes to no other woman in this fervid strain. On May 8, 1557, Mrs.
+Locke with her son and daughter (who died after her journey), joined Knox
+at Geneva. {73}
+
+He was soon to be involved in Scottish affairs. After his departure from
+his country, omens and prodigies had ensued. A comet appeared in
+November-December 1556. Next year some corn-stacks were destroyed by
+lightning. Worse, a calf with two heads was born, and was exhibited as a
+warning to Mary of Guise by Robert Ormistoun. The idolatress merely
+sneered, and said "it was but a common thing." Such a woman was
+incorrigible. Mary of Guise is always blamed for endangering Scotland in
+the interests of her family, the Guises of the House of Lorraine. In
+fact, so far as she tried to make Scotland a province of France, she was
+serving the ambition of Henri II. It could not be foreseen, in 1555,
+that Henri II. would be slain in 1559, leaving the two kingdoms in the
+hands of Francis II. and Mary Stuart, who were so young, that they would
+inevitably be ruled by the Queen's uncles of the House of Lorraine.
+Shortly before Knox arrived in Scotland in 1555, the Duc de Guise had
+advised the Regent to "use sweetness and moderation," as better than
+"extremity and rigour"; advice which she acted on gladly.
+
+Unluckily the war between France and Spain, in 1557, brought English
+troops into collision with French forces in the Low Countries (Philip II.
+being king of England); this led to complications between Scotland, as
+ally of France, and the English on the Borders. Border raids began;
+d'Oysel fortified Eyemouth, as a counterpoise to Berwick, war was
+declared in November, and the discontented Scots, such as Chatelherault,
+Huntly, Cassilis, and Argyll, mutinied and refused to cross Tweed. {74}
+Thus arose a breach between the Regent and some of her nobles, who at
+last, in 1559, rebelled against her on the ground of religion. While the
+weak war languished on, in 1557-58, "the Evangel of Jesus Christ began
+wondrously to flourish," says Knox. Other evangelists of his pattern,
+Harlaw, Douglas, Willock, and a baker, Methuen (later a victim of the
+intolerably cruel "discipline" of the Kirk Triumphant), preached at
+Dundee, and Methuen started a reformed Kirk (though not without being
+declared rebels at the horn). When these persons preached, their hearers
+were apt to raise riots, wreck churches, and destroy works of sacred art.
+No Government could for ever wink at such lawless actions, and it was
+because the pulpiteers, Methuen, Willock, Douglas, and the rest, were
+again "put at," after being often suffered to go free, that the final
+crash came, and the Reformation began in the wrack and ruin of
+monasteries and churches.
+
+There was drawing on another thunder-cloud. The policy of Mary of Guise
+certainly tended to make Scotland a mere province of France, a province
+infested by French forces, slender, but ill-paid and predacious. Before
+marrying the Dauphin, in April 1558, Mary Stuart, urged it is said by the
+Guises, signed away the independence of her country, to which her
+husband, by these deeds, was to succeed if she died without issue. Young
+as she was, Mary was perfectly able to understand the infamy of the
+transaction, and probably was not so careless as to sign the deeds
+unread.
+
+Even before this secret treaty was drafted, on March 10, 1557, Glencairn,
+Lorne, Erskine, and the Prior of St. Andrews--best known to us in after
+years as James Stewart, Earl of Moray--informed Knox that no "cruelty" by
+way of persecution was being practised; that his presence was desired,
+and that they were ready to jeopard their lives and goods for the cause.
+The rest would be told to Knox by the bearer of the letter. Knox
+received the letter in May 1557, with verbal reports by the bearers, but
+was so far from hasty that he did not leave Geneva till the end of
+September, and did not reach Dieppe on his way to Scotland till October
+24. Three days later he wrote to the nobles who had summoned him seven
+months earlier. He had received, he said, at Dieppe two private letters
+of a discouraging sort; one correspondent said that the enterprise was to
+be reconsidered, the other that the boldness and constancy required "for
+such an enterprise" were lacking among the nobles. Meanwhile Knox had
+spent his time, or some of it, in asking the most godly and the most
+learned of Europe, including Calvin, for opinions of such an adventure,
+for the assurance of his own conscience and the consciences of the Lord
+James, Erskine, Lorne, and the rest. {76a} This indicates that Knox
+himself was not quite sure of the lawfulness of an armed rising, and
+perhaps explains his long delay. Knox assures us that Calvin and other
+godly ministers insisted on his going to Scotland. But it is quite
+certain that of an armed rising Calvin absolutely disapproved. On April
+16, 1561, writing to Coligny, Calvin says that he was consulted several
+months before the tumult of Amboise (March 1560) and absolutely
+discouraged the appeal to arms. "Better that we all perish a hundred
+times than that the name of Christianity and the Gospel should come under
+such disgrace." {76b} If Calvin bade Knox go to Scotland, he must have
+supposed that no rebellion was intended. Knox tells his correspondents
+that they have betrayed themselves and their posterity ("in conscience I
+can except none that bear the name of nobility"), they have made him and
+their own enterprise ridiculous, and they have put him to great trouble.
+What is he to say when he returns to Geneva, and is asked why he did not
+carry out his purpose? He then encourages them to be resolute.
+
+Knox "certainly made the most," says Professor Hume Brown, "of the two
+letters from correspondents unknown to us." He at once represented them
+as the cause of his failure to keep tryst; but, in April 1558, writing
+from Geneva to "the sisters," he said, "the cause of my stop to this day
+I do not clearly understand." He did not know why he left England before
+the Marian persecutions; and he did not know why he had not crossed over
+to Scotland in 1557. "It may be that God justly permitted Sathan to put
+in my mind such cogitations as these: I heard such troubles as appeared
+in that realm;"--troubles presently to be described.
+
+Hearing, at Dieppe, then, in October 1557, of the troubles, and of the
+faint war with England, and moved, perhaps, he suggests, by Satan, {77a}
+Knox "began to dispute with himself, as followeth, 'Shall Christ, the
+author of peace, concord, and quietness, be preached where war is
+proclaimed, and tumults appear to rise? What comfort canst thou have to
+see the one part of the people rise up against the other,'" and so forth.
+These truly Christian reflections, as we may think them, "yet do trouble
+and move my wicked heart," says Knox. He adds, hypothetically, that
+perhaps the letters received at Dieppe "did somewhat discourage me."
+{77b} He was only certain that the devil was at the bottom of the whole
+affair.
+
+The "tumults that appear to arise" are probably the dissensions between
+the Regent and the mutinous nobles who refused to invade England at her
+command. D'Oysel needed a bodyguard; and he feared that the Lords would
+seize and carry off the Regent. Arran, in 1564, speaks of a plot to
+capture her in Holyrood. Here were promises of tumults. There were also
+signs of a renewed feud between the house of Hamilton and the Stewart
+Earl of Lennox, the rival claimant of the crown. There seems, moreover,
+to have been some tumultuary image-breaking. {78}
+
+Knox may have been merely timid: he is not certain, but his delay passed
+in consulting the learned, for the satisfaction of his conscience, and
+his confessed doubts as to whether Christianity should be pushed by civil
+war, seem to indicate that he was not always the prophet patron of modern
+Jehus, that he did, occasionally, consult the Gospel as well as the
+records of pre-Christian Israel.
+
+The general result was that, from October 1557 to March 1558, Knox stayed
+in Dieppe, preaching with great success, raising up a Protestant church,
+and writing.
+
+His condition of mind was unenviable. He had been brought all the way
+across France, leaving his wife and family; he had, it seems, been met by
+no letters from his noble friends, who may well have ceased to expect
+him, so long was his delay. He was not at ease in his conscience, for,
+to be plain, he was not sure that he was not afraid to risk himself in
+Scotland, and he was not certain that his new scruples about the
+justifiableness of a rising for religion were not the excuses suggested
+by his own timidity. Perhaps they were just that, not whisperings either
+of conscience or of Satan. Yet in this condition Knox was extremely
+active. On December 1 and 17 he wrote, from Dieppe, a "Letter to His
+Brethren in Scotland," and another to "The Lords and Others Professing
+the Truth in Scotland." In the former he censures, as well he might,
+"the dissolute life of (some) such as have professed Christ's holy
+Evangel." That is no argument, he says, against Protestantism. Many
+Turks are virtuous; many orthodox Hebrews, Saints, and Patriarchs
+occasionally slipped; the Corinthians, though of a "trew Kirk," were
+notoriously profligate. Meanwhile union and virtue are especially
+desirable; for Satan "fiercely stirreth his terrible tail." We do not
+know what back-slidings of the brethren prompted this letter.
+
+The Lords, in the other letter, are reminded that they had resolved to
+hazard life, rank, and fortune for the delivery of the brethren: the
+first step must be to achieve a godly frame of mind. Knox hears rumours
+"that contradiction and rebellion is made by some to the Authority" in
+Scotland. He advises "that none do suddenly disobey or displease the
+established authority in things lawful," nor rebel from private motives.
+By "things lawful" does he mean the command of the Regent to invade
+England, which the nobles refused to do? They may "lawfully attempt the
+extremity," if Authority will not cease to persecute, and permit
+Protestant preaching and administration of the Sacraments (which usually
+ended in riot and church-wrecking). Above all, they are not to back the
+Hamiltons, whose chief, Chatelherault, had been a professor, had fallen
+back, and become a persecutor. "Flee all confederacy with that
+generation," the Hamiltons; with whom, after all, Knox was presently to
+be allied, though by no means fully believing in the "unfeigned and
+speedy repentance" of their chief. {80a}
+
+All the movements of that time are not very clear. Apparently Lorne,
+Lord James, and the rest, in their letter of March 10, 1557, intended an
+armed rising: they were "ready to jeopardise lives and goods" for "the
+glory of God." If no more than an appeal to "the Authority" for
+tolerance was meant, why did Knox consult the learned so long, on the
+question of conscience? Yet, in December 1557, he bids his allies first
+of all seek the favour of "the Authority," for bare toleration of
+Protestantism.
+
+From the scheme of March 10, of which the details, unknown to us, were
+_orally_ delivered by bearer, he appears to have expected civil war.
+
+Again, just when Knox was writing to Scotland in December 1557, his
+allies there, he says, made "a common Band," a confederacy and covenant
+such as the Scots usually drew up before a murder, as of Riccio or
+Darnley, or for slaying Argyll and "the bonny Earl o' Murray," under
+James VI. These Bands were illegal. A Band, says Knox, was now signed
+by Argyll, Lorne, Glencairn, Morton, and Erskine of Dun, and many others
+unknown, on December 3, 1557. It is alleged that "Satan cruelly doth
+rage." Now, how was Satan raging in December 1557? Myln, the last
+martyr, was not pursued till April 1558, by Knox's account.
+
+The first godly Band being of December 1557, {80b} and drawn up, perhaps,
+on the impulse of Knox's severe letter from Dieppe of October 27, in that
+year; just after they signed the Band, what were the demands of the
+Banders? They asked, apparently, that the Second Prayer Book of Edward
+VI. should be read in all parish churches, with the Lessons: _if the
+curates are able to read_: if not, then by any qualified parishioner.
+Secondly, preaching must be permitted in private houses, "without great
+conventions of the people." {81a} Whether the Catholic service was to be
+concurrently permitted does not appear; it is not very probable, for that
+service is idolatrous, and the Band itself denounces the Church as "the
+Congregation of Satan." Dr. M'Crie thinks that the Banders, or
+Congregation of God, did not ask for the universal adoption of the
+English Prayer Book, but only requested that they themselves might bring
+it in "in places to which their authority and influence extended." They
+took that liberty, certainly, without waiting for leave, but their demand
+appears to apply to all parish churches. War, in fact, was denounced
+against Satan's Congregation; {81b} if it troubles the Lords'
+Congregation, there could therefore be little idea of tolerating their
+nefarious creed and ritual.
+
+Probably Knox, at Dieppe in 1557 and early in 1558, did not know about
+the promising Band made in Scotland. He was composing his "First Blast
+of the Trumpet against the Monstrous Regiment of Women." In England and
+in Scotland were a Catholic Queen, a Catholic Queen Mother, and the Queen
+of Scotland was marrying the idolatrous Dauphin. It is not worth while
+to study Knox's general denunciation of government by ladies: he allowed
+that (as Calvin suggested) miraculous exceptions to their inability might
+occur, as in the case of Deborah. As a rule, a Queen was an "idol," and
+that was enough. England deserved an idol, and an idolatrous idol, for
+Englishmen rejected Kirk discipline; "no man would have his life called
+in trial" by presbyter or preacher. A Queen regnant has, ex officio,
+committed treason against God: the Realm and Estates may have conspired
+with her, but her rule is unlawful. Naturally this skirl on the trumpet
+made Knox odious to Elizabeth, for to impeach her succession might cause
+a renewal of the wars of the Roses. Nothing less could have happened, if
+a large portion of the English people had believed in the Prophet of God,
+John Knox. He could predict vengeance on Mary Tudor, but could not see
+that, as Elizabeth would succeed, his Blast would bring inconvenience to
+his cause; or, seeing it, he stood to his guns.
+
+He presently reprinted and added to his letter to Mary of Guise, arguing
+that civil magistrates have authority in religion, but, of course, he
+must mean only as far as they carry out his ideas, which are the truth.
+In an "Appellation" against the condemnation of himself, in absence, by
+the Scottish clergy, he labours the same idea. Moreover, "no idolater
+can be exempted from punishment by God's law." Now the Queen of Scotland
+happened to be an idolater, and every true believer, as a private
+individual, has a right to punish idolaters. That right and duty are not
+limited to the King, or to "the chief Nobility and Estates," whom Knox
+addresses. "I would your Honours should note for the first, that no
+idolater can be exempted from punishment by God's Law. The second is,
+that the punishment of such crimes as are idolatry, blasphemy, and
+others, that touch the Majesty of God, doth not appertain to kings and
+chief rulers only" (as he had argued that they do, in 1554), "but also to
+the whole body of that people, and to every member of the same, according
+to the vocation of every man, and according to that possibility and
+occasion which God doth minister to revenge the injury done against His
+glory, what time that impiety is manifestly known. . . . _Who dare be so
+impudent as to deny this to be most reasonable and just_?" {83}
+
+Knox's method of argument for his doctrine is to take, among other texts,
+Deuteronomy xiii. 12-18, and apply the sanguinary precepts of Hebrew
+fanatics to the then existing state of affairs in the Church Christian.
+Thus, in Deuteronomy, cities which serve "other gods," or welcome
+missionaries of other religions, are to be burned, and every living thing
+in them is to be destroyed. "To the carnal man, . . . " says Knox, "this
+may rather seem to be pronounced in a rage than in wisdom." God wills,
+however, that "all creatures stoop, cover their faces, _and desist from
+reasoning_, when commandment is given to execute his judgement." Knox,
+then, desists from reasoning so far as to preach that every Protestant,
+with a call that way, has a right to punish any Catholic, if he gets a
+good opportunity. This doctrine he publishes to his own countrymen. Thus
+any fanatic who believed in the prophet Knox, and was conscious of a
+"vocation," might, and should, avenge God's wrongs on Mary of Guise or
+Mary Stuart, "he had a fair opportunity, for both ladies were idolaters.
+This is a plain inference from the passage just cited.
+
+Appealing to the Commonalty of Scotland, Knox next asked that he might
+come and justify his doctrine, and prove Popery "abominable before God."
+Now, could any Government admit a man who published the tidings that any
+member of a State might avenge God on an idolater, the Queen being,
+according to him, an idolater? This doctrine of the right of the
+Protestant individual is merely monstrous. Knox has wandered far from
+his counsel of "passive resistance" in his letter to his Berwick
+congregation; he has even passed beyond his "Admonition," which merely
+prayed for a Phinehas or Jehu: he has now proclaimed the right and duty
+of the private Protestant assassin. The "Appellation" containing these
+ideas was published at Geneva in 1558, with the author's, but without the
+printer's name on the title-page.
+
+"The First Blast" had neither the author's nor printer's name, nor the
+name of the place of publication. Calvin soon found that it had given
+grave offence to Queen Elizabeth. He therefore wrote to Cecil that,
+though the work came from a press in his town, he had not been aware of
+its existence till a year after its publication. He now took no public
+steps against the book, not wishing to draw attention to its origin in
+Geneva, lest, "by reason of the reckless arrogance of one man" ('the
+ravings of others'), "the miserable crowd of exiles should have been
+driven away, not only from this city, but even from almost the whole
+world." {84} As far as I am aware, no one approached Calvin with
+remonstrance about the monstrosities of the "Appellation," nor are the
+passages which I have cited alluded to by more than one biographer of
+Knox, to my knowledge. Professor Hume Brown, however, justly remarks
+that what the Kirk, immediately after Knox's death, called "Erastianism"
+(in ordinary parlance the doctrine that the Civil power may interfere in
+religion) could hardly "be approved in more set terms" than by Knox. He
+avers that "the ordering and reformation of religion . . . doth
+especially appertain to the Civil Magistrate . . . " "The King taketh
+upon him to command the Priests." {85} The opposite doctrine, that it
+appertains to the Church, is an invention of Satan. To that diabolical
+invention, Andrew Melville and the Kirk returned in the generation
+following, while James VI. held to Knox's theory, as stated in the
+"Appellation."
+
+The truth is that Knox contemplates a State in which the civil power
+shall be entirely and absolutely of his own opinions; the King, as
+"Christ's silly vassal," to quote Andrew Melville, being obedient to such
+prophets as himself. The theories of Knox regarding the duty to revenge
+God's feud by the private citizen, and regarding religious massacre by
+the civil power, ideas which would justify the Bartholomew horrors,
+appear to be forgotten in modern times. His address to the Commonalty,
+as citizens with a voice in the State, represents the progressive and
+permanent element in his politics. We have shown, however, that, before
+Knox's time, the individual Scot was a thoroughly independent character.
+"The man hath more words than the master, and will not be content unless
+he knows the master's counsel."
+
+By March 1558, Knox had returned from Dieppe to Geneva. In Scotland,
+since the godly Band of December 1557, events were moving in two
+directions. The Church was continuing in a belated and futile attempt at
+reformation of manners (and wonderfully bad manners they confessedly
+were), and of education from within. The Congregation, the Protestants,
+on the other hand, were preparing openly to defend themselves and their
+adherents from persecution, an honest, manly, and laudable endeavour, so
+long as they did not persecute other Christians. Their preachers--such
+as Harlaw, Methuen, and Douglas--were publicly active. A moment of
+attempted suppression must arrive, greatly against the personal wishes of
+Archbishop Hamilton, who dreaded the conflict.
+
+In March 1558, Hamilton courteously remonstrated with Argyll for
+harbouring Douglas. He himself was "heavily murmured against" for his
+slackness in the case of Argyll, by churchmen and other "well given
+people," and by Mary of Guise, whose daughter, by April 24, 1558, was
+married to the Dauphin of France. Argyll replied that he knew how the
+Archbishop was urged on, but declined to abandon Douglas.
+
+"It is a far cry to Loch Awe"; Argyll, who died soon after, was too
+powerful to be attacked. But, sometime in April 1558 apparently, a poor
+priest of Forfarshire, Walter Myln, who had married and got into trouble
+under Cardinal Beaton, was tried for heresy, and, without sentence of a
+secular judge, it is said, was burned at St. Andrews, displaying serene
+courage, and hoping to be the last martyr in Scotland. Naturally there
+was much indignation; if the Lords and others were to keep their Band
+they must bestir themselves. They did bestir themselves in defence of
+their favourite preachers--Willock, Harlaw, Methuen; a ci-devant friar,
+Christison; and Douglas. Some of these men were summoned several times
+throughout 1558, and Methuen and Harlaw, at least, were "at the horn"
+(outlawed), but were protected--Harlaw at Dumfries, Methuen at Dundee--by
+powerful laymen. At Dundee, as we saw, by 1558, Methuen had erected a
+church of reformed aspect; and "reformed" means that the Kirk had already
+been purged of altars and images. Attempts to bring the ringleaders of
+Protestant riots to law were made in 1558, but the precise order of
+events, and of the protests of the Reformers, appears to be dislocated in
+Knox's narrative. He himself was not present, and he seems never to have
+mastered the sequence of occurrences. Fortunately there exists a
+fragment by a well-informed writer, apparently a contemporary, the
+"Historie of the Estate of Scotland" covering the events from July 1558
+to 1560. {87a} There are also imperfect records of the Parliament of
+November-December 1558, and of the last Provincial Council of the Church,
+in March 1559.
+
+For July 28 {87b} four or five of the brethren were summoned to "a day of
+law," in Edinburgh; their allies assembled to back them, and they were
+released on bail to appear, if called on, within eight days. At this
+time the "idol" of St. Giles, patron of the city, was stolen, and a great
+riot occurred at the saint's fete, September 3. {87c}
+
+Knox describes the discomfiture of his foes in one of his merriest
+passages, frequently cited by admirers of "his vein of humour." The
+event, we know, was at once reported to him in Geneva, by letter.
+
+Some time after October, if we rightly construe Knox, {88a} a petition
+was delivered to the Regent, from the Reformers, by Sandilands of Calder.
+{88b} They asserted that they should have defended the preachers, or
+testified with them. The wisdom of the Regent herself sees the need of
+reform, spiritual and temporal, and has exhorted the clergy and nobles to
+employ care and diligence thereon, a fact corroborated by Mary of Guise
+herself, in a paper, soon to be quoted, of July 1559. {88c} They ask, as
+they have the reading of the Scriptures in the vernacular, for common
+prayers in the same. They wish for freedom to interpret and discuss the
+Bible "in our conventions," and that Baptism and the Communion may be
+done in Scots, and they demand the reform of the detestable lives of the
+prelates. {88d}
+
+Knox's account, in places, appears really to refer to the period of the
+Provincial Council of March 1559, though it does not quite fit that date
+either.
+
+The Regent is said on the occasion of Calder's petition, and after the
+unsatisfactory replies of the clergy (apparently at the Provincial
+Council, March 1559), to have made certain concessions, till Parliament
+established uniform order. But the Parliament was of November-December
+1558. {89a} Before that Parliament, at all events (which was mainly
+concerned with procuring the "Crown Matrimonial" for the Dauphin, husband
+of Mary Stuart), the brethren offered a petition, in the first place
+shown to the Regent, asking for (1) the suspension of persecuting laws
+till after a General Council has "decided all controversies in
+religion"--that is, till the Greek Calends. (2) That prelates shall not
+be judges in cases of heresy, but only accusers before secular tribunals.
+(3) That all lawful defences be granted to persons accused. (4) That the
+accused be permitted to explain "his own mind and meaning." (5) That
+"none be condemned for heretics unless by the manifest Word of God they
+be convicted to have erred from the faith which the Holy Spirit witnesses
+to be necessary to salvation." According to Knox this petition the
+Regent put in her pocket, saying that the Churchmen would oppose it, and
+thwart her plan for getting the "Crown Matrimonial" given to her son-in-
+law, Francis II., and, in short, gave good words, and drove time. {89b}
+
+The Reformers then drew up a long Protestation, which was read in the
+House, but not enrolled in its records. They say that they have had to
+postpone a formal demand for Reformation, but protest that "it be lawful
+to us to use ourselves in matters of religion and conscience as we must
+answer to God," and they are ready to prove their case. They shall not
+be liable, meanwhile, to any penalties for breach of the existing Acts
+against heresy, "nor for violating such rites as man, without God's
+commandment or word, hath commanded." They disclaim all responsibility
+for the ensuing tumults. {90a} In fact, they aver that they will not
+only worship in their own way, but prevent other people from worshipping
+in the legal way, and that the responsibility for the riots will lie on
+the side of those who worship legally. And this was the chief occasion
+of the ensuing troubles. The Regent promised to "put good order" in
+controverted matters, and was praised by the brethren in a letter to
+Calvin, not now to be found.
+
+Another threat had been made by the brethren, in circumstances not very
+obscure. As far as they are known they suggest that in January 1559 the
+zealots deliberately intended to provoke a conflict, and to enlist "the
+rascal multitude" on their side, at Easter, 1559. The obscurity is
+caused by a bookbinder. He has, with the fatal ingenuity of his trade,
+cut off the two top lines from a page in one manuscript copy of Knox's
+"History." {90b} The text now runs thus (in its mutilated condition): "
+. . . Zealous Brether . . . upon the gates and posts of all the Friars'
+places within this realm, in the month of January 1558 (1559), preceding
+that Whitsunday that they dislodged, which is this . . . "
+
+Then follows the Proclamation.
+
+Probably we may supply the words: ". . . Zealous Brethren caused a paper
+to be affixed upon the gates and posts," and so on. The paper so
+promulgated purported to be a warning from the poor of Scotland that,
+before Whitsunday, "we, the lawful proprietors," will eject the Friars
+and residents on the property, unlawfully withheld by the religious--"our
+patrimony." This feat will be performed, "with the help of God, _and
+assistance of his Saints on earth, of whose ready support we doubt not_."
+
+As the Saints, in fact, were the "Zealous Brether . . ." who affixed the
+written menace on "all the Friars' places," they knew what they were
+talking about, and could prophesy safely. To make so many copies of the
+document, and fix them on "all the Friars' places," implies organisation,
+and a deliberate plan--riots and revolution--before Whitsunday. The
+poor, of course, only exchanged better for worse landlords, as they soon
+discovered. The "Zealous Brethren"--as a rule small lairds, probably,
+and burgesses--were the nucleus of the Revolution. When townsfolk and
+yeomen in sufficient number had joined them in arms, then nobles like
+Argyll, Lord James, Glencairn, Ruthven, and the rest, put themselves at
+the head of the movement, and won the prizes which had been offered to
+the "blind, crooked, widows, orphans, and all other poor."
+
+After Parliament was over, at the end of December 1558, the Archbishop of
+St. Andrews again summoned the preachers, Willock, Douglas, Harlaw,
+Methuen, and Friar John Christison to a "day of law" at St. Andrews, on
+February 2, 1559. (This is the statement of the "Historie.") {91} The
+brethren then "caused inform the Queen Mother that the said preachers
+would appear with such multitude of men professing their doctrine, as was
+never seen before in such like cases in this country," and kept their
+promise. The system of overawing justice by such gatherings was usual,
+as we have already seen; Knox, Bothwell, Lethington, and the Lord James
+Stewart all profited by the practice on various occasions.
+
+Mary of Guise, "fearing some uproar or sedition," bade the bishops put
+off the summons, and, in fact, the preachers never were summoned,
+finally, for any offences prior to this date.
+
+On February 9, 1559, the Regent issued proclamations against eating flesh
+in Lent (this rule survived the Reformation by at least seventy years)
+and against such disturbances of religious services as the Protest just
+described declared to be imminent, all such deeds being denounced under
+"pain of death"--as pain of death was used to be threatened against
+poachers of deer and wild fowl. {92a}
+
+Mary, however, had promised, as we saw, that she would summon the nobles
+and Estates, "to advise for some reformation in religion" (March 7,
+1559), and the Archbishop called a Provincial Council to Edinburgh for
+March. At this, or some other juncture, for Knox's narrative is
+bewildering, {92b} the clergy offered free discussion, but refused to
+allow exiles like himself to be present, and insisted on the acceptance
+of the Mass, Purgatory, the invocation of saints, with security for their
+ecclesiastical possessions. In return they would grant prayers and
+baptism in English, if done privately and not in open assembly. The
+terms, he says, were rejected; appeal was made to Mary of Guise, and she
+gave toleration, except for public assemblies in Edinburgh and Leith,
+pending the meeting of Parliament. To the clergy, who, "some say,"
+bribed her, she promised to "put order" to these matters. The Reformers
+were deceived, and forbade Douglas to preach in Leith. So writes Knox.
+
+Now the "Historie" dates all this, bribe and all, _after the end of
+December_ 1558. Knox, however, by some confusion, places the facts,
+bribe and all, _before April_ 28, 1558, Myln's martyrdom! {93a} Yet he
+had before him as he wrote the Chronicle of Bruce of Earlshall, who
+states the bribe, Knox says, at 40,000 pounds; the "Historie" says
+"within 15,000 pounds." {93b}
+
+In any case Knox, who never saw his book in print, has clearly dislocated
+the sequence of events. At this date, namely March 1559, the preaching
+agitators were at liberty, nor were they again put at for any of their
+previous proceedings. But defiances had been exchanged. The Reformers
+in their Protestation (December 1558) had claimed it as lawful, we know,
+that they should enjoy their own services, and put down those of the
+religion by law established, until such time as the Catholic clergy "be
+able to prove themselves the true ministers of Christ's Church" and
+guiltless of all the crimes charged against them by their adversaries.
+{93c} That was the challenge of the Reformers, backed by the menace
+affixed to the doors of all the monasteries. The Regent in turn had
+thrown down her glove by the proclamation of February 9, 1559, against
+disturbing services and "bosting" (bullying) priests. How could she
+possibly do less in the circumstances? If her proclamation was
+disobeyed, could she do less than summon the disobedient to trial? Her
+hand was forced.
+
+It appears to myself, under correction, that all this part of the history
+of the Reformation has been misunderstood by our older historians. Almost
+without exception, they represent the Regent as dissembling with the
+Reformers till, on conclusion of the peace of Cateau Cambresis (which
+left France free to aid her efforts in Scotland), April 2, 1559, and on
+the receipt of a message from the Guises, "she threw off the mask," and
+initiated an organised persecution. But there is no evidence that any
+such message commanding her to persecute at this time came from the
+Guises before the Regent had issued her proclamations of February 9 and
+March 23, {94a} denouncing attacks on priests, disturbance of services,
+administering of sacraments by lay preachers, and tumults at large. Now,
+Sir James Melville of Halhill, the diplomatist, writing in old age, and
+often erroneously, makes the Cardinal of Lorraine send de Bettencourt, or
+Bethencourt, to the Regent with news of the peace of Cateau Cambresis and
+an order to punish heretics with fire and sword, and says that, though
+she was reluctant, she consequently published her proclamation of March
+23. Dates prove part of this to be impossible. {94b}
+
+Obviously the Regent had issued her proclamations of February-March 1559
+in anticipation of the tumults threatened by the Reformers in their
+"Beggar's Warning" and in their Protestation of December, and arranged to
+occur with violence at Easter, as they did. The three or four preachers
+(two of them apparently "at the horn" in 1558) were to preach publicly,
+and riots were certain to ensue, as the Reformers had threatened. Riots
+were part of the evangelical programme. Of Paul Methuen, who first
+"reformed" the Church in Dundee, Pitscottie writes that he "ministered
+the sacraments of the communion at Dundee and Cupar, and caused the
+images thereof to be cast down, and abolished the Pope's religion so far
+as he passed or preached." For this sort of action he was now summoned.
+{95a}
+
+The Regent, therefore, warned in her proclamations men, often challenged
+previously, and as often allowed, under fear of armed resistance, to
+escape. All that followed was but a repetition of the feeble policy of
+outlawing these four or five men. Finally, in May 1559, these preachers
+had a strong armed backing, and seized a central strategic point, so the
+Revolution blazed out on a question which had long been smouldering and
+on an occasion that had been again and again deferred. The Regent, far
+from having foreseen and hardened her heart to carry out an organised
+persecution and "cut the throats" of all Protestants in Scotland, was, in
+fact, intending to go to France, being in the earlier stages of her fatal
+malady. This appears from a letter of Sir Henry Percy, from Norham
+Castle, to Cecil and Parry (April 12, 1559) {95b} Percy says that the
+news in his latest letters (now lost) was erroneous. The Regent, in
+fact, "is not as yet departed." She is very ill, and her life is
+despaired of. She is at Stirling, where the nobles had assembled to
+discuss religious matters. Only her French advisers were on the side of
+the Regent. "The matter is pacified for the time," and in case of the
+Regent's death, Chatelherault, d'Oysel, and de Rubay are to be a
+provisional committee of Government, till the wishes of the King and
+Queen, Francis and Mary, are known. Again, in her letter of May 16 to
+Henri II. of France, she stated that she was in very bad health, {96a}
+and, at about the same date (May 18), the English ambassador in France
+mentions her intention to visit that country at once. {96b} But the
+Revolution of May 11, breaking out in Perth, condemned her to suffer and
+die in Scotland.
+
+This, however, does not amount to proof that no plan of persecution in
+Scotland was intended. Throckmorton writes, on May 18, that the Marquis
+d'Elboeuf is to go thither. "He takes with him both men of conduct and
+some of war; it is thought his stay will not be long." Again (May 23,
+24), Throckmorton reports that Henri II. means to persecute extremely in
+Poitou, Guienne, and Scotland. "Cecil may take occasion to use the
+matter in Scotland as may seem best to serve the turn." {96c} This was
+before the Perth riot had been reported (May 26) by Cecil to
+Throckmorton. Was d'Elboeuf intended to direct the persecution? The
+theory has its attractions, but Henri, just emerged with maimed forces
+from a ruinous war, knew that a persecution which served Cecil's "turn"
+did not serve _his_. To persecute in Scotland would mean renewed war
+with England, and could not be contemplated. If Sir James Melville can
+be trusted for once, the Constable, about June 1, told him, in the
+presence of the French King, that if the Perth revolt were only about
+religion, "we mon commit Scottismen's saules unto God." {97} Melville
+was then despatched with promise of aid to the Regent--if the rising was
+political, not religious.
+
+It is quite certain that the Regent issued her proclamations without any
+commands from France; and her health was inconsistent with an intention
+to put Protestants to fire and sword.
+
+In the records of the Provincial Council of March 1559, the foremost
+place is given to "Articles" presented to the Regent by "some temporal
+Lords and Barons," and by her handed to the clergy. They are the
+proposals of conservative reformers. They ask for moral reformation of
+the lives of the clergy: for sermons on Sundays and holy days: for due
+examination of the doctrine, life, and learning of all who are permitted
+to preach. They demand that no vicar or curate shall be appointed unless
+he can read the catechism (of 1552) plainly and distinctly: that
+expositions of the sacraments should be clearly pronounced in the
+vernacular: that common prayer should be read in the vernacular: that
+certain exactions of gifts and dues should be abolished. Again, no one
+should be allowed to dishonour the sacraments, or the service of the
+Mass: no unqualified person should administer the sacraments: Kirk
+rapine, destruction of religious buildings and works of art, should not
+be permitted.
+
+The Council passed thirty-four statutes on these points. The clergy were
+to live cleanly, and not to keep their bastards at home. They were
+implored, "in the bowels of Christ" to do their duty in the services of
+the Church. No one in future was to be admitted to a living without
+examination by the Ordinary. Ruined churches were to be rebuilt or
+repaired. Breakers of ornaments and violators or burners of churches
+were to be pursued. There was to be preaching as often as the Ordinary
+thought fit: if the Rector could not preach he must find a substitute who
+could. Plain expositions of the sacraments were made out, were to be
+read aloud to the congregations, and were published at twopence ("The
+Twopenny Faith"). Administration of the Eucharist except by priests was
+to be punished by excommunication. {98a} Knox himself desired _death_
+for others than true ministers who celebrated the sacrament. {98b} His
+"true ministers," about half-a-dozen of them at this time, of course came
+under the penalty of the last statute.
+
+He says, with the usual error, that _after_ peace was made between France
+and England, on April 2, 1559 (the treaty of Cateau Cambresis), the
+Regent "began to spew forth and disclose the latent venom of her double
+heart." She looked "frowardly" on Protestants, "commanded her household
+to use all abominations at Easter," she herself communicated, "and it is
+supposed that after that day the devil took more violent and strong
+possession in her than he had before . . . For incontinent she caused
+our preachers to be summoned."
+
+But _why_ did she summon the same set of preachers as before, for no old
+offence? The Regent, says the "Historie," made proclamation, during the
+Council (as the moderate Reformers had asked her to do), "that no manner
+of person should . . . preach or minister the sacraments, except they
+were admitted by the Ordinary or a Bishop on no less pain than death."
+The Council, in fact, made excommunication the penalty. Now it was for
+ministering the sacrament after the proclamation of March 13, for
+preaching heresy, and stirring up "seditions and tumults," that Methuen,
+Brother John Christison, William Harlaw, and John Willock were summoned
+to appear at Stirling on May 10, 1559. {99a}
+
+How could any governor of Scotland abstain from summoning them in the
+circumstances? There seems to be no new suggestion of the devil, no
+outbreak of Guisian fury. The Regent was in a situation whence there was
+no "outgait": she must submit to the seditions and tumults threatened in
+the Protestation of the brethren, the disturbances of services, the
+probable wrecking of churches, or she must use the powers legally
+entrusted to her. She gave insolent answers to remonstrances from the
+brethren, says Knox. She would banish the preachers (not execute them),
+"albeit they preached as truly as ever did St. Paul." Being threatened,
+as before, with the consequent "inconvenients," she said "she would
+advise." However, summon the preachers she did, for breach of her
+proclamations, "tumults and seditions." {99b}
+
+Knox himself was present at the Revolution which ensued, but we must now
+return to his own doings in the autumn and winter of 1558-59. {100}
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX: KNOX ON THE ANABAPTISTS: HIS APPEAL TO ENGLAND: 1558-1559
+
+
+While the inevitable Revolution was impending in Scotland, Knox was
+living at Geneva. He may have been engaged on his "Answer" to the
+"blasphemous cavillations" of an Anabaptist, his treatise on
+Predestination. Laing thought that this work was "chiefly written" at
+Dieppe, in February-April 1559, but as it contains more than 450 pages it
+is probably a work of longer time than two months. In November 1559 the
+English at Geneva asked leave to print the book, which was granted,
+provided that the name of Geneva did not appear as the place of printing;
+the authorities knowing of what Knox was capable from the specimen given
+in his "First Blast." There seem to be several examples of the Genevan
+edition, published by Crispin in 1560; the next edition, less rare, is of
+1591 (London). {101}
+
+The Anabaptist whom Knox is discussing had been personally known to him,
+and had lucid intervals. "Your chief Apollos," he had said, addressing
+the Calvinists, "be persecutors, on whom the blood of Servetus crieth a
+vengeance. . . . They have set forth books affirming it to be lawful to
+persecute and put to death such as dissent from them in controversies of
+religion. . . . Notwithstanding they, before they came to authority,
+were of another judgment, and did both say and write that no man ought to
+be persecuted for his conscience' sake. . . ." {102a} Knox replied that
+Servetus was a blasphemer, and that Moses had been a more wholesale
+persecutor than the Edwardian burners of Joan of Kent, and the Genevan
+Church which roasted Servetus {102b} (October 1553). He incidentally
+proves that he was better than his doctrine. In England an Anabaptist,
+after asking for secrecy, showed him a manuscript of his own full of
+blasphemies. "In me I confess there was great negligence, that neither
+did retain his book nor present him to the magistrate" to burn. Knox
+could not have done that, for the author "earnestly required of me
+closeness and fidelity," which, probably, Knox promised. Indeed, one
+fancies that his opinions and character would have been in conflict if a
+chance of handing an idolater over to death had been offered to him.
+{102c}
+
+The death of Mary Tudor on November 17, 1558, does not appear to have
+been anticipated by him. The tidings reached him before January 12,
+1559, when he wrote from Geneva a singular "Brief Exhortation to England
+for the Spedie Embrasing of Christ's Gospel heretofore by the Tyrannie of
+Marie Suppressed and Banished."
+
+The gospel to be embraced by England is, of course, not nearly so much
+Christ's as John Knox's, in its most acute form and with its most
+absolute, intolerant, and intolerable pretensions. He begins by
+vehemently rebuking England for her "shameful defection" and by
+threatening God's "horrible vengeances which thy monstrous unthankfulness
+hath long deserved," if the country does not become much more puritan
+than it had ever been, or is ever likely to be. Knox "wraps you all in
+idolatry, all in murder, all in one and the same iniquity," except the
+actual Marian martyrs; those who "abstained from idolatry;" and those who
+"avoided the realm" or ran away. He had set one of the earliest examples
+of running away: to do so was easier for him than for family men and
+others who had "a stake in the country," for which Knox had no relish. He
+is hardly generous in blaming all the persons who felt no more "ripe" for
+martyrdom than he did, yet stayed in England, where the majority were,
+and continued to be, Catholics.
+
+Having asserted his very contestable superiority and uttered pages of
+biblical threatenings, Knox says that the repentance of England
+"requireth two things," first, the expulsion of "all dregs of Popery" and
+the treading under foot of all "glistering beauty of vain ceremonies."
+Religious services must be reduced, in short, to his own bare standard.
+Next, the Genevan and Knoxian "kirk discipline" must be introduced. No
+"power or liberty (must) be permitted to any, of what estate, degree, or
+authority they be, either to live without the yoke of discipline by God's
+word commanded," or "to alter . . . one jot in religion which from God's
+mouth thou hast received. . . . If prince, king, or emperor would
+enterprise to change or disannul the same, that he be of thee reputed
+enemy to God," while a prince who erects idolatry . . . "must be adjudged
+to death."
+
+Each bishopric is to be divided into ten. The Founder of the Church and
+the Apostles "all command us to preach, to preach." A brief sketch of
+what The Book of Discipline later set forth for the edification of
+Scotland is recommended to England, and is followed by more threatenings
+in the familiar style.
+
+England did not follow the advice of Knox: her whole population was not
+puritan, many of her martyrs had died for the prayer book which Knox
+would have destroyed. His tract cannot have added to the affection which
+Elizabeth bore to the author of "The First Blast." In after years, as we
+shall see, Knox spoke in a tone much more moderate in addressing the
+early English nonconformist secessionists (1568). Indeed, it is as easy
+almost to prove, by isolated passages in Knox's writings, that he was a
+sensible, moderate man, loathing and condemning active resistance in
+religion, as to prove him to be a senselessly violent man. All depends
+on the occasion and opportunity. He speaks with two voices. He was very
+impetuous; in the death of Mary Tudor he suddenly saw the chance of
+bringing English religion up, or down, to the Genevan level, and so he
+wrote this letter of vehement rebuke and inopportune advice.
+
+Knox must have given his biographers "medicines to make them love him."
+The learned Dr. Lorimer finds in this epistle, one of the most fierce of
+his writings, "a programme of what this Reformation reformed should be--a
+programme which was honourable alike to Knox's zeal and his moderation."
+The "moderation" apparently consists in not abolishing bishoprics, but
+substituting "ten bishops of moderate income for one lordly prelate."
+Despite this moderation of the epistle, "its intolerance is extreme,"
+says Dr. Lorimer, and Knox's advice "cannot but excite astonishment."
+{104} The party which agreed with him in England was the minority of a
+minority; the Catholics, it is usually supposed, though we have no
+statistics, were the majority of the English nation. Yet the only
+chance, according to Knox, that England has of escaping the vengeance of
+an irritable Deity, is for the smaller minority to alter the prayer book,
+resist the Queen, if she wishes to retain it unaltered, and force the
+English people into the "discipline" of a Swiss Protestant town.
+
+Dr. Lorimer, a most industrious and judicious writer, adds that, in these
+matters of "discipline," and of intolerance, Knox "went to a tragical
+extreme of opinion, of which none of the other leading reformers had set
+an example;" also that what he demanded was substantially demanded by the
+Puritans all through the reign of Elizabeth. But Knox averred publicly,
+and in his "History," that for everything he affirmed in Scotland he had
+heard the judgments "of the most godly and learned that be known in
+Europe . . . and for my assurance I have the handwritings of many." Now
+he had affirmed frequently, in Scotland, the very doctrines of discipline
+and persecution "of which none of the other leading Reformers had set an
+example," according to Dr. Lorimer. Therefore, either they agreed with
+Knox, or what Knox told the Lords in June 1564 was not strictly accurate.
+{105} In any case Knox gave to his country the most extreme of
+Reformations.
+
+The death of Mary Tudor, and the course of events at home, were now to
+afford our Reformer the opportunity of promulgating, in Scotland, those
+ideas which we and his learned Presbyterian student alike regret and
+condemn. These persecuting ideas "were only a mistaken theory of
+Christian duty, and nothing worse," says Dr. Lorimer. Nothing could
+possibly be worse than a doctrine contrary in the highest degree to the
+teaching of Our Lord, whether the doctrine was proclaimed by Pope,
+Prelate, or Calvinist.
+
+Here it must be observed that a most important fact in Knox's career, a
+most important element in his methods, has been little remarked upon by
+his biographers. Ever since he failed, in 1554, to obtain the adhesion
+of Bullinger and Calvin to his more extreme ideas, he had been his own
+prophet, and had launched his decrees of the right of the people, of part
+of the people, and of the individual, to avenge the insulted majesty of
+God upon idolaters, not only without warrant from the heads of the
+Calvinistic Church, but to their great annoyance and disgust. Of this an
+example will now be given.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X: KNOX AND THE SCOTTISH REVOLUTION, 1559
+
+
+Knox had learned from letters out of Scotland that Protestants there now
+ran no risks; that "without a shadow of fear they might hear prayers in
+the vernacular, and receive the sacraments in the right way, the impure
+ceremonies of Antichrist being set aside." The image of St. Giles had
+been broken by a mob, and thrown into a sewer; "the impure crowd of
+priests and monks" had fled, throwing away the shafts of the crosses they
+bore, and "hiding the golden heads in their robes." Now the Regent
+thinks of reforming religion, on a given day, at a convention of the
+whole realm. So William Cole wrote to Bishop Bale, then at Basle,
+without date. The riot was of the beginning of September 1558, and is
+humorously described by Knox. {107}
+
+This news, though regarded as "very certain," was quite erroneous except
+as to the riot. One may guess that it was given to Knox in letters from
+the nobles, penned in October 1558, which he received in November 1558;
+there was also a letter to Calvin from the nobles, asking for Knox's
+presence. It seemed that a visit to Scotland was perfectly safe; Knox
+left Geneva in January, he arrived in Dieppe in February, where he
+learned that Elizabeth would not allow him to travel through England. He
+had much that was private to say to Cecil, and was already desirous of
+procuring English aid to Scottish reformers. The tidings of the Queen's
+refusal to admit him to England came through Cecil, and Knox told him
+that he was "worthy of Hell" (for conformity with Mary Tudor); and that
+Turks actually granted such safe conducts as were now refused to him.
+{108a} Perhaps he exaggerated the amenity of the Turks. His "First
+Blast," if acted on, disturbed the succession in England, and might beget
+new wars, a matter which did not trouble the prophet. He also asked
+leave to visit his flock at Berwick. This too was refused.
+
+Doubtless Knox, with his unparalleled activity, employed the period of
+delay in preaching the Word at Dieppe. After his arrival in Scotland, he
+wrote to his Dieppe congregation, upbraiding them for their Laodicean
+laxity in permitting idolatry to co-exist with true religion in their
+town. Why did they not drive out the idolatrous worship? These epistles
+were intercepted by the Governor of Dieppe, and their contents appear to
+have escaped the notice of the Reformer's biographers. A revolt followed
+in Dieppe. {108b} Meanwhile Knox's doings at Dieppe had greatly
+exasperated Francois Morel, the chief pastor of the Genevan congregation
+in Paris, and president of the first Protestant Synod held in that town.
+The affairs of the French Protestants were in a most precarious
+condition; persecution broke into fury early in June 1559. A week
+earlier, Morel wrote to Calvin, "Knox was for some time in Dieppe,
+waiting on a wind for Scotland." "He dared publicly to profess the worst
+and most infamous of doctrines: 'Women are unworthy to reign; Christians
+may protect themselves by arms against tyrants!'" The latter excellent
+doctrine was not then accepted by the Genevan learned. "I fear that Knox
+may fill Scotland with his madness. He is said to have a boon companion
+at Geneva, whom we hear that the people of Dieppe have called to be their
+minister. If he be infected with such opinions, for Christ's sake pray
+that he be not sent; or if he has already departed, warn the Dieppe
+people to beware of him." {109a} A French ex-capuchin, Jacques Trouille,
+was appointed as Knox's successor at Dieppe. {109b}
+
+Knox's ideas, even the idea that Christians may bear the sword against
+tyrants, were all his own, were anti-Genevan; and though Calvin (1559-60)
+knew all about the conspiracy of Amboise to kill the Guises, he ever
+maintained that he had discouraged and preached against it. We must,
+therefore, credit Knox with originality, both in his ideas and in his way
+of giving it to be understood that they had the approval of the learned
+of Switzerland. The reverse was true.
+
+By May 3, Knox was in Edinburgh, "come in the brunt of the battle," as
+the preachers' summons to trial was for May 10. He was at once outlawed,
+"blown loud to the horn," but was not dismayed. On this occasion the
+battle would be a fair fight, the gentry, under their Band, stood by the
+preachers, and, given a chance in open field with the arm of the flesh to
+back him, Knox's courage was tenacious and indomitable. It was only for
+lonely martyrdom that he never thought himself ready, and few historians
+have a right to throw the first stone at him for his backwardness.
+
+As for armed conflict, at this moment Mary of Guise could only reckon
+surely on the small French garrison of Scotland, perhaps 1500 or 2000
+men. She could place no confidence in the feudal levies that gathered
+when the royal standard was raised. The Hamiltons merely looked to their
+own advancement; Lord James Stewart was bound to the Congregation; Huntly
+was a double dealer and was remote; the minor noblesse and the armed
+burghers, with Glencairn representing the south-west, Lollard from of
+old, were attached to Knox's doctrines, while the mob would flock in to
+destroy and plunder.
+
+[Bridal medal of Mary Stuart and the Dauphin, 1558: knox3.jpg]
+
+Meanwhile Mary of Guise was at Stirling, and a multitude of Protestants
+were at Perth, where the Reformation had just made its entry, and had
+secured a walled city, a thing unique in Scotland. The gentry of Angus
+and the people of Dundee, at Perth, were now anxious to make a
+"demonstration" (unarmed, says Knox) at Stirling, if the preachers obeyed
+the summons to go thither, on May 10. Their strategy was excellent,
+whether carefully premeditated or not.
+
+The Regent, according to Knox, amused Erskine of Dun with promises of
+"taking some better order" till the day of May 10 arrived, when, the
+preachers and their backers having been deluded into remaining at Perth
+instead of "demonstrating" at Stirling, she outlawed the preachers and
+fined their sureties ("assisters"). She did not outlaw the sureties. Her
+treachery (alleged only by Knox and others who follow him) is examined in
+Appendix A. Meanwhile it is certain that the preachers were put to the
+horn in absence, and that the brethren, believing themselves (according
+to Knox) to have been disgracefully betrayed, proceeded to revolutionary
+extremes, such as Calvin energetically denounced.
+
+If we ask who executed the task of wrecking the monasteries at Perth,
+Knox provides two different answers.
+
+In the "History" Knox says that after the news came of the Regent's
+perfidy, and after a sermon "vehement against idolatry," a priest began
+to celebrate, and "opened a glorious tabernacle" on the high altar.
+"Certain godly men and a young boy" were standing near; they all, or the
+boy alone (the sentence may be read either way), cried that this was
+intolerable. The priest struck the boy, who "took up a stone" and hit
+the tabernacle, and "the whole multitude" wrecked the monuments of
+idolatry. Neither the exhortation of the preacher nor the command of the
+magistrate could stay them in their work of destruction. {111} Presently
+"the rascal multitude" convened, _without_ the gentry and "earnest
+professors," and broke into the Franciscan and Dominican monasteries.
+They wrecked as usual, and the "common people" robbed, but the godly
+allowed Forman, Prior of the Charter House, to bear away about as much
+gold and silver as he was able to carry. We learn from Mary of Guise and
+Lesley's "History" that the very orchards were cut down.
+
+If, thanks to the preachers, "no honest man was enriched the value of a
+groat," apparently dishonest men must have sacked the gold and silver
+plate of the monasteries; nothing is said by Knox on this head, except as
+to the Charter House.
+
+Writing to Mrs. Locke, on the other hand, on June 23, Knox tells her that
+"the brethren," after "complaint and appeal made" against the Regent,
+levelled with the ground the three monasteries, burned all "monuments of
+idolatry" accessible, "and priests were commanded under pain of death, to
+desist from their blasphemous mass." {112} Nothing is said about a
+spontaneous and uncontrollable popular movement. The professional
+"brethren," earnest professors of course, reap the glory. Which is the
+true version?
+
+If the version given to Mrs. Locke be accurate, Knox had sufficient
+reasons for producing a different account in that portion of his
+"History" (Book ii.) which is a tract written in autumn, 1559, and in
+purpose meant for contemporary foreign as well as domestic readers. The
+performances attributed to the brethren, in the letter to the London
+merchant's wife, were of a kind which Calvin severely rebuked. Similar
+or worse violences were perpetrated by French brethren at Lyons, on April
+30, 1562. The booty of the church of St. Jean had been sold at auction.
+There must be no more robbery and pillage, says Calvin, writing on May
+13, to the Lyons preachers. The ruffians who rob ought rather to be
+abandoned, than associated with to the scandal of the Gospel. "Already
+reckless zeal was shown in the ravages committed in the churches" (altars
+and images had been overthrown), "but those who fear God will not
+rigorously judge what was done in hot blood, from devout emotion, but
+what can be said in defence of looting?"
+
+Calvin spoke even more distinctly to the "consistory" of Nimes, who
+suspended a preacher named Tartas for overthrowing crosses, altars, and
+images in churches (July-August, 1561). The zealot was even threatened
+with excommunication by his fellow religionists. {113a} Calvin heard
+that this fanatic had not only consented to the outrages, but had incited
+them, and had "the insupportable obstinacy" to say that such conduct was,
+with him, "a matter of conscience." "But _we_" says Calvin, "know that
+the reverse is the case, for God never commanded any one to overthrow
+idols, except every man in his own house, and, in public, those whom he
+has armed with authority. Let that fire-brand" (the preacher) "show us
+by what title _he_ is lord of the land where he has been burning things."
+
+Knox must have been aware of Calvin's opinion about such outrages as
+those of Perth, which, in a private letter, he attributes to the
+brethren: in his public "History" to the mob. At St. Andrews, when
+similar acts were committed, he says that "the provost and bailies . . .
+did agree to remove all monuments of idolatry," whether this would or
+would not have satisfied Calvin.
+
+Opponents of my view urge that Knox, though he knew that the brethren had
+nothing to do with the ruin at Perth, yet, in the enthusiasm of six weeks
+later, claimed this honour for them, when writing to Mrs. Locke. Still
+later, when cool, he told, in his "History," "the frozen truth," the mob
+alone was guilty, despite his exhortations and the commandment of the
+magistrate. Neither alternative is very creditable to the prophet.
+
+In the "Historie of the Estate of Scotland," it is "the brethren" who
+break, burn, and destroy. {113b} In Knox's "History" no mention is made
+of the threat of death against the priests. In the letter to Mrs. Locke
+he says, apparently of the threat, perhaps of the whole affair, "which
+thing did so enrage the venom of the serpent's seed," that she decreed
+death against man, woman, and child in Perth, after the fashion of Knox's
+favourite texts in Deuteronomy and Chronicles. This was "beastlie
+crueltie." The "History" gives the same account of the Regent's
+threatening "words which might escape her in choler" (of course we have
+no authority for her speaking them at all), but, in the "History," Knox
+omits the threat by the brethren of death against the priests--a threat
+which none of his biographers mentions!
+
+If the menace against the priests and the ruin of monasteries were not
+seditious, what is sedition? But Knox's business, in Book II. of his
+"History" (much of it written in September-October 1559), is to prove
+that the movement was _not_ rebellious, was purely religious, and all for
+"liberty of conscience"--for Protestants. Therefore, in the "History,"
+he disclaims the destruction by the brethren of the monasteries--the mob
+did that; and he burkes the threat of death to priests: though he told
+the truth, privately, to Mrs. Locke.
+
+Mary did not move at once. The Hamiltons joined her, and she had her
+French soldiers, perhaps 1500 men. On May 22 "The Faithful Congregation
+of Christ Jesus in Scotland," but a few gentlemen being concerned, wrote
+from Perth, which they were fortifying, to the Regent. If she proceeds
+in her "cruelty," they will take up the sword, and inform all Christian
+princes, and their Queen in France, that they have revolted solely
+because of "this cruel, unjust, and most tyrannical murder, intended
+against towns and multitudes." As if they had not revolted already!
+Their pretext seems to mean that they do not want to alter the sovereign
+authority, a quibble which they issued for several months, long after it
+was obviously false. They also wrote to the nobles, to the French
+officers in the Regent's service, and to the clergy.
+
+What really occurred was that many of the brethren left Perth, after they
+had "made a day of it," as they had threatened earlier: that the Regent
+called her nobles to Council, concentrated her French forces, and
+summoned the levies of Clydesdale and Stirlingshire. Meanwhile the
+brethren flocked again into Perth, at that time, it is said, the only
+wall-girt town in Scotland: they strengthened the works, wrote everywhere
+for succour, and loudly maintained that they were not rebellious or
+seditious.
+
+Of these operations Knox was the life and soul. There is no mistaking
+his hand in the letter to Mary of Guise, or in the epistle to the
+Catholic clergy. That letter is courteously addressed "To the Generation
+of Anti-Christ, the Pestilent Prelates and their Shavelings within
+Scotland, the Congregation of Jesus within the same saith."
+
+The gentle Congregation saith that, if the clergy "proceed in their
+cruelty," they shall be "apprehended as murderers." "We shall begin that
+same war which God commanded Israel to execute against the Canaanites . . . "
+This they promise in the names of God, Christ, and the Gospel. Any
+one can recognise the style of Knox in this composition. David Hume
+remarks: "With these outrageous symptoms commenced in Scotland that
+hypocrisy and fanaticism which long infested that kingdom, and which,
+though now mollified by the lenity of the civil power, is still ready to
+break out on all occasions." Hume was wrong, there was no touch of
+hypocrisy in Knox; he believed as firmly in the "message" which he
+delivered as in the reality of the sensible universe.
+
+A passage in the message to the nobility displays the intense ardour of
+the convictions that were to be potent in the later history of the Kirk.
+That priests, by the prescription of fifteen centuries, should have
+persuaded themselves of their own power to damn men's souls to hell, cut
+them off from the Christian community, and hand them over to the devil,
+is a painful circumstance. But Knox, from Perth, asserts that the same
+awful privilege is vested in the six or seven preachers of the nascent
+Kirk with the fire-new doctrine! Addressing the signers of the godly
+Band and other sympathisers who have not yet come in, he (if he wrote
+these fiery appeals) observes, that if they do _not_ come in, "ye shall
+be _excommunicated_ from our Society, and from all participation with us
+in the administration of the Sacraments . . . Doubt we nothing but that
+our church, _and the true ministers of the same_, have the power which
+our Master, Jesus Christ, granted to His apostles in these words, 'Whose
+sins ye shall forgive, shall be forgiven, and whose sins ye shall retain,
+shall be retained' . . . " Men were to be finally judged by Omnipotence
+on the faith of what Willock, Knox, Harlaw, poor Paul Methuen, and the
+apostate Friar Christison, "trew ministeris," thought good to decide!
+With such bugbears did Guthrie and his companions think, a century later,
+to daunt "the clear spirit of Montrose."
+
+While reading the passages just cited, we are enabled to understand the
+true cause of the sorrows of Scotland for a hundred and thirty years. The
+situation is that analysed by Thomas Luber, a Professor of Medicine at
+Heidelberg, well or ill known in Scottish ecclesiastical disputes by his
+Graecised name, Erastus. He argued, about 1568, that excommunication has
+no certain warrant in Holy Writ, under a Christian prince. Erastus
+writes:--
+
+"Some men were seized on by a certain excommunicatory fever, which they
+did adorn with the name of 'ecclesiastical discipline.' . . . They
+affirmed the manner of it to be this: that certain presbyters should sit
+in the name of the whole Church, and should judge who were worthy or
+unworthy to come to the Lord's Supper. I wonder that then they consulted
+about these matters, when we neither had men to be excommunicated, nor
+fit excommunicators; for scarcely a thirtieth part of the people did
+understand or approve of the reformed religion." {117}
+
+"There was," adds Erastus, "another fruit of the same tree, that almost
+every one thought men had the power of opening and shutting heaven to
+whomsoever they would."
+
+What men have this power in Scotland in 1559? Why, some five or six
+persons who, being fluent preachers, have persuaded local sets of
+Protestants to accept them as ministers. These preachers having a
+"call"--it might be from a set of perfidious and profligate murderers--are
+somehow gifted with the apostolic grace of binding on earth what shall be
+bound in heaven. Their successors, down to Mr. Cargill, who, of his own
+fantasy, excommunicated Charles II., were an intolerable danger to
+civilised society. For their edicts of "boycotting" they claimed the
+sanction of the civil magistrate, and while these almost incredibly
+fantastic pretentions lasted, there was not, and could not be, peace in
+Scotland.
+
+The seed of this Upas tree was sown by Knox and his allies in May 1559.
+An Act of 1690 repealed civil penalties for the excommunicated.
+
+To face the supernaturally gifted preachers the Regent had but a slender
+force, composed in great part of sympathisers with Knox. Croft, the
+English commander at Berwick, writing to the English Privy Council, on
+May 22, anticipated that there would be no war. The Hamiltons,
+numerically powerful, and strong in martial gentlemen of the name, were
+with the Regent. But of the Hamiltons it might always be said, as
+Charles I. was to remark of their chief, that "they were very active for
+their own preservation," and for no other cause. For centuries but one
+or two lives stood between them and the throne, the haven where they
+would be. They never produced a great statesman, but their wealth,
+numbers, and almost royal rank made them powerful.
+
+At this moment the eldest son of the house, the Earl of Arran, was in
+France. As a boy, he had been seized by the murderers of Cardinal
+Beaton, and held as a hostage in the Castle of St. Andrews. Was he there
+converted to the Reformers' ideas by the eloquence of Knox? We know not,
+but, as heir to his father's French duchy of Chatelherault, he had been
+some years in France, commanding the Scottish Archer Guard. In France
+too, perhaps, he was more or less a pledge for his father's loyalty in
+Scotland. He was now a Protestant in earnest, had retired from the
+French Court, had refused to return thither when summoned, and fled from
+the troops who were sent to bring him; lurking in woods and living on
+strawberries. Cecil despatched Thomas Randolph to steer him across the
+frontier to Zurich. He was a piece in the game much more valuable than
+his father, whose portrait shows us a weak, feebly cunning, good-natured,
+and puzzled-looking old nobleman.
+
+Till Arran returned to Scotland, the Hamiltons, it was certain, would be
+trusty allies of neither faith and of neither party. When the Perth
+tumult broke out, Lord James rode with the Regent, as did Argyll. But
+both had signed the godly Band of December 3, 1557, and could no more be
+trusted by the Regent than the Hamiltons.
+
+Meanwhile, the gentry of Fife and Forfarshire, with the town of Dundee,
+joined Knox in the walled town of Perth, though Lord Ruthven, provost of
+Perth, deserted, for the moment, to the Regent. On the other hand, the
+courageous Glencairn, with a strong body of the zealots of Renfrewshire
+and Ayrshire, was moving by forced marches to join the brethren. On May
+24, the Regent, instead of attacking, halted at Auchterarder, fourteen
+miles away, and sent Argyll and Lord James to parley. They were told
+that the brethren meant no rebellion (as the Regent said and doubtless
+thought that they did), but only desired security for their religion, and
+were ready to "be tried" (by whom?) "in lawful judgment." Argyll and
+Lord James were satisfied. On May 25, Knox harangued the two lords in
+his wonted way, but the Regent bade the brethren leave Perth on pain of
+treason. By May 28, however, she heard of Glencairn's approach with Lord
+Ochiltree, a Stewart (later Knox's father-in-law); Glencairn, by cross
+roads, had arrived within six miles of Perth, with 1200 horse and 1300
+foot. The western Reformers were thus nearer Perth than her own
+untrustworthy levies at Auchterarder. Not being aware of this, the
+brethren proposed obedience, if the Regent would amnesty the Perth men,
+let their faith "go forward," and leave no garrison of "French soldiers."
+To Mrs. Locke Knox adds that no idolatry should be erected, or alteration
+made within the town. {120} The Regent was now sending Lord James,
+Argyll, and Mr. Gawain Hamilton to treat, when Glencairn and his men
+marched into Perth. Argyll and Lord James then promised to join the
+brethren, if the Regent broke her agreement; Knox and Willock assured
+their hearers that break it she would--and so the agreement was accepted
+(May 28).
+
+It was thus necessary for the brethren to allege that the covenant was
+broken; and it was not easy for Mary to secure order in Perth without
+taking some step that could be seized on as a breach of her promise;
+Argyll and Lord James could then desert her for the party of Knox. The
+very Band which Argyll and Lord James signed with the Congregation
+provided that the godly should go on committing the disorders which it
+was the duty of the Regent to suppress, and they proceeded in that holy
+course, "breaking down the altars and idols in all places where they
+came." {121a} "At their whole powers" the Congregations are "to destroy
+and put away all that does dishonour to God's name"; that is, monasteries
+and works of sacred art. They are all to defend each other against "any
+power whatsoever" that shall trouble them in their pious work. Argyll
+and Lord James signed this new Band, with Glencairn, Lord Boyd, and
+Ochiltree. The Queen's emissaries thus deserted her cause on the last
+day of May 1559, or earlier, for the chronology is perplexing. {121b}
+
+As to the terms of truce with the Regent, Knox gives no document, but
+says that no Perth people should be troubled for their recent destruction
+of idolatry "and for down casting the places of the same; that she would
+suffer the religion begun to go forward, and leave the town at her
+departing free from the garrisons of French soldiers." The "Historie"
+mentions no terms except that "she should leave no men of war behind
+her."
+
+Thus, as it seems, the brethren by their Band were to go on wrecking the
+homes of the Regent's religion, while she was not to enjoy her religious
+privileges in the desecrated churches of Perth, for to do that was to
+prevent "the religion begun" from "going forward." On the Regent's entry
+her men "discharged their volley of hackbuts," probably to clear their
+pieces, a method of unloading which prevailed as late as Waterloo. But
+some aimed, says Knox, at the house of Patrick Murray and hit a son of
+his, a boy of ten or twelve, "who, being slain, was had to the Queen's
+presence." She mocked, and wished it had been his father, "but seeing
+that it so chanced, we cannot be against fortune." It is not very
+probable that Mary of Guise was "merry," in Knox's manner of mirth, over
+the death of a child (to Mrs. Locke Knox says "children"), who, for all
+we know, may have been the victim of accident, like the Jacobite lady who
+was wounded at a window as Prince Charles's men discharged their pieces
+when entering Edinburgh after the victory of Prestonpans. (This brave
+lady said that it was fortunate she was not a Whig, or the accident would
+have been ascribed to design.) This event at Perth was called a breach
+of terms, so was the attendance at Mass, celebrated on any chance table,
+as "the altars were not so easy to be repaired again." The soldiers were
+billeted on citizens, whose houses were "oppressed by" the Frenchmen, and
+the provost, Ruthven (who had anew deserted to the Congregation), and the
+bailies, were deposed.
+
+These magistrates probably had been charged with the execution of priests
+who dared to do their duty; at least in the following year, on June 10,
+1560, we find the provost, bailies, and town council of Edinburgh
+decreeing death for the third offence against idolaters who do not
+instantly profess their conversion. {122} The Edinburgh municipality did
+this before the abolition of Catholicism by the Convention of Estates in
+August 1560. It does not appear that any authority in Perth except that
+of the provost and bailies could sentence priests to death; was their
+removal, then, a breach of truce? At all events it seemed necessary in
+the circumstances, and Mary of Guise when she departed left no _French_
+soldiers to protect the threatened priests, but four companies of Scots
+who had been in French service, under Stewart of Cardonell and Captain
+Cullen, the Captain of Queen Mary's guard after the murder of Riccio. The
+Regent is said by Knox to have remarked that she was not bound to keep
+faith with heretics, and that, with as fair an excuse, she would make
+little scruple to take the lives and goods of "all that sort." We do not
+know Knox's authority for these observations of the Regent.
+
+The Scots soldiers left by Mary of Guise may have been Protestants, they
+certainly were not Frenchmen; and, in a town where death had just been
+threatened to all priests who celebrated the Mass, Mary could not abandon
+her clerics unprotected.
+
+Taking advantage of what they called breach of treaty as regards the
+soldiers left in Perth, Lord James and Argyll, with Ruthven, had joined
+the brethren, accompanied by the Earl of Menteith and Murray of
+Tullibardine, ancestor of the ducal house of Atholl. Argyll and Lord
+James went to St. Andrews, summoning their allies thither for June 3.
+Knox meanwhile preached in Crail and Anstruther, with the usual results.
+On Sunday, June 11, {123a} and for three days more, despising the threats
+of the Archbishop, backed by a hundred spears, and referring to his own
+prophecy made when he was in the galleys, he thundered at St. Andrews.
+The poor ruins of some sacred buildings "are alive to testify" to the
+consequences, and a head of the Redeemer found in the latrines of the
+abbey is another mute witness to the destruction of that day. {123b}
+
+It is not my purpose to dilate on the universal destruction of so much
+that was beautiful, and that to Scots, however godly, should have been
+sacred. The tomb of the Bruce in Dunfermline, for example, was wrecked
+by the mob, as the statue of Jeanne d'Arc on the bridge of Orleans was
+battered to pieces by the Huguenots. Nor need we ask what became of
+church treasures, perhaps of great value and antiquity. In some known
+cases, the magistrates held and sold those of the town churches. Some of
+the plate and vestments at Aberdeen were committed to the charge of
+Huntly, but about 1900 ounces of plate were divided among the
+Prebendaries, who seem to have appropriated them. {124} The Church
+treasures of Glasgow were apparently carried abroad by Archbishop Beaton.
+If Lord James, as Prior, took possession of the gold and silver of St.
+Andrews, he probably used the bullion (he spent some 13,000 crowns) in
+his defence of the approaches to the town, against the French, in
+December 1559. A silver mace of St. Salvator's College escaped the
+robbers.
+
+[Head of Christ. St. Andrews. Excavated from the ruins of the Abbey by
+the late Marquis of Bute: knox4.jpg]
+
+There is no sign of the possession of much specie by the Congregation in
+the months that followed the sack of so many treasuries of pious
+offerings. Lesley says that they wanted to coin the plate in Edinburgh,
+and for that purpose seized, as they certainly did, the dies of the mint.
+In France, when the brethren sacked Tours, they took twelve hundred
+thousand livres d'or; the country was enriched for the moment. Not so
+Scotland. In fact the plate of Aberdeen cathedral, as inventoried in the
+Register, is no great treasure. Monasteries and cathedrals were certain
+to perish sooner or later, for the lead of every such roof except
+Coldingham had been stripped and sold by 1585, while tombs had been
+desecrated for their poor spoils, and the fanes were afterwards used as
+quarries of hewn stone. Lord James had a peculiar aversion to idolatrous
+books, and is known to have ordered the burning of many manuscripts;--the
+loss to art was probably greater than the injury to history or
+literature. The fragments of things beautiful that the Reformers
+overlooked, were destroyed by the Covenanters. An attempt has been made
+to prove that the Border abbeys were not wrecked by Reformers, but by
+English troops in the reign of Henry VIII., who certainly ravaged them.
+Lesley, however, says that the abbeys of Kelso and Melrose were "by them
+(the Reformers) broken down and wasted." {125a} If there was nothing
+left to destroy on the Border, why did the brethren march against Kelso,
+as Cecil reports, on July 9, 1559? {125b}
+
+After the devastation the Regent meant to attack the destroyers,
+intending to occupy Cupar, six miles, by Knox's reckoning, from St.
+Andrews. But, by June 13, the brethren had anticipated her with a large
+force, rapidly recruited, including three thousand men under the Lothian
+professors; Ruthven's horse; the levies of the Earl of Rothes (Leslie),
+and many burgesses. Next day the Regent's French horse found the
+brethren occupying a very strong post; their numbers were dissembled,
+their guns commanded the plains, and the Eden was in their front. A fog
+hung over the field; when it lifted, the French commander, d'Oysel, saw
+that he was outnumbered and outmanoeuvred. He sent on an envoy to
+parley, "which gladly of us being granted, the Queen offered a free
+remission for all crimes past, so that they would no further proceed
+against friars and abbeys, and that no more preaching should be used
+publicly," for _that_ always meant kirk-wrecking. When Wishart preached
+at Mauchline, long before, in 1545, it was deemed necessary to guard the
+church, where there was a tempting tabernacle, "beutyfull to the eie."
+
+The Lords and the whole brethren "refused such appointment" . . . says
+Knox to Mrs. Locke; they would not "suffer idolatrie to be maintained in
+the bounds committed to their charge." {126a} To them liberty of
+conscience from the first meant liberty to control the consciences and
+destroy the religion of all who differed from them. An eight days' truce
+was made for negotiations; during the truce neither party was to
+"enterprize" anything. Knox in his "History" does not mention an attack
+on the monastery of Lindores during the truce. He says that his party
+expected envoys from the Regent, as in the terms of truce, but perceived
+"her craft and deceit." {126b}
+
+In fact, the brethren were the truce-breakers. Knox gives only the
+assurances signed by the Regent's envoys, the Duke of Chatelherault and
+d'Oysel. They include a promise "not to invade, trouble, or disquiet the
+Lords," the reforming party. But, though Knox omits the fact, the
+Reformers made a corresponding and equivalent promise: "That the
+Congregation should enterprise nothing nor make no invasion, for the
+space of six days following, for the Lords and principals of the
+Congregation read the rest on another piece of paper." {126c}
+
+The situation is clear. The two parties exchanged assurances. Knox
+prints that of the Regent's party, not that, "on another piece of paper,"
+of the Congregation. They broke their word; they "made invasion" at
+Lindores, during truce, as Knox tells Mrs. Locke, but does not tell the
+readers of his "History." {127a} It is true that Knox was probably
+preaching at St. Andrews on June 13, and was not present at Cupar Muir.
+But he could easily have ascertained what assurances the Lords of the
+Congregation "read from another piece of paper" on that historic waste.
+{127b}
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI: KNOX'S INTRIGUES, AND HIS ACCOUNT OF THEM, 1559
+
+
+The Reformers, and Knox as their secretary and historian, had now reached
+a very difficult and delicate point in their labours. Their purpose was,
+not by any means to secure toleration and freedom of conscience, but to
+extirpate the religion to which they were opposed. It was the religion
+by law existing, the creed of "Authority," of the Regent and of the King
+and Queen whom she represented. The position of the Congregation was
+therefore essentially that of rebels, and, in the state of opinion at the
+period, to be rebels was to be self-condemned. In the eyes of Calvin and
+the learned of the Genevan Church, kings were the Lord's appointed, and
+the Gospel must not be supported by the sword. "Better that we all
+perish a hundred times," Calvin wrote to Coligny in 1561. Protestants,
+therefore, if they would resist in arms, had to put themselves in order,
+and though Knox had no doubt that to exterminate idolaters was thoroughly
+in order, the leaders of his party were obliged to pay deference to
+European opinion.
+
+By a singular coincidence they adopted precisely the same device as the
+more militant French Protestants laid before Calvin in August 1559-March
+1560. The Scots and the Protestant French represented that they were
+illegally repressed by foreigners: in Scotland by Mary of Guise with her
+French troops; in France by the Cardinal and Duc de Guise, foreigners,
+who had possession of the persons and authority of the "native prince" of
+Scotland, Mary, and the "native prince" of France, Francis II., both
+being minors. The French idea was that, if they secured the aid of a
+native Protestant prince (Conde), they were in order, as against the
+foreign Guises, and might kill these tyrants, seize the King, and call an
+assembly of the Estates. Calvin was consulted by the chief of the
+conspiracy, La Renaudie; he disapproved; the legality lent by one native
+prince was insufficient; the details of the plot were "puerile," and
+Calvin waited to see how the country would take it. The plot failed, at
+Amboise, in March 1560.
+
+In Scotland, as in France, devices about a prince of the native blood
+suggested themselves. The Regent, being of the house of Guise, was a
+foreigner, like her brothers in France. The "native princes" were
+Chatelherault and his eldest son, Arran. The leaders, soon after Lord
+James and Argyll formally joined the zealous brethren, saw that without
+foreign aid their enterprise was desperate. Their levies must break up
+and go home to work; the Regent's nucleus of French troops could not be
+ousted from the sea fortress of Dunbar, and would in all probability be
+joined by the army promised by Henri II. His death, the Huguenot
+risings, the consequent impotence of the Guises to aid the Regent, could
+not be foreseen. Scotland, it seemed, would be reduced to a French
+province; the religion would be overthrown.
+
+There was thus no hope, except in aid from England. But by the recent
+treaty of Cateau Cambresis (April 2, 1559), Elizabeth was bound not to
+help the rebels of the French Dauphin, the husband of the Queen of Scots.
+Moreover, Elizabeth had no stronger passion than a hatred of rebels. If
+she was to be persuaded to help the Reformers, they must produce some
+show of a legitimate "Authority" with whom she could treat. This was as
+easy to find as it was to the Huguenots in the case of Conde.
+Chatelherault and Arran, native princes, next heirs to the crown while
+Mary was childless, could be produced as legitimate "Authority." But to
+do this implied a change of "Authority," an upsetting of "Authority,"
+which was plain rebellion in the opinion of the Genevan doctors. Knox
+was thus obliged, in sermons and in the pamphlet (Book II. of his
+"History"), to maintain that nothing more than freedom of conscience and
+religion was contemplated, while, as a matter of fact, he was foremost in
+the intrigue for changing the "Authority," and even for depriving Mary
+Stuart of "entrance and title" to her rights. He therefore, in Book II.
+(much of which was written in August-October or September-October 1559,
+as an apologetic contemporary tract), conceals the actual facts of the
+case, and, while perpetually accusing the Regent of falsehood and
+perfidy, displays an extreme "economy of truth," and cannot hide the
+pettifogging prevarications of his party. His wiser plan would have been
+to cancel this Book, or much of it, when he set forth later to write a
+history of the Reformation. His party being then triumphant, he could
+have afforded to tell most of the truth, as in great part he does in his
+Book III. But he could not bring himself to throw over the narrative of
+his party pamphlet (Book II.), and it remains much as it was originally
+written, though new touches were added.
+
+The point to be made in public and in the apologetic tract was that the
+Reformers contemplated no alteration of "Authority." This was untrue.
+
+Writing later (probably in 1565-66) in his Third Book, Knox boasts of his
+own initiation of the appeal to England, which included a scheme for the
+marriage of the Earl of Arran, son of the Hamilton chief, Chatelherault,
+to Queen Elizabeth. Failing issue of Queen Mary, Arran was heir to the
+Scottish throne, and if he married the Queen of England, the rightful
+Queen of Scotland would not be likely to wear her crown. The
+contemplated match was apt to involve a change of dynasty. The lure of
+the crown for his descendants was likely to bring Chatelherault, and
+perhaps even his brother the Archbishop, over to the side of the
+Congregation: in short it was an excellent plot. Probably the idea
+occurred to the leaders of the Congregation at or shortly after the time
+when Argyll and Lord James threw in their lot definitely with the
+brethren on May 31. On June 14 Croft, from Berwick, writes to Cecil that
+the leaders, "from what I hear, will likely seek her Majesty's"
+(Elizabeth's) "assistance," and mean to bring Arran home. Some think
+that he is already at Geneva, and he appears to have made the
+acquaintance of Calvin, with whom later he corresponded. "They are
+likely to motion a marriage you know where"; of Arran, that is, with
+Elizabeth. {131} Moreover, one Whitlaw was at this date in France, and
+by June 28, communicated the plan to Throckmorton, the English
+Ambassador. Thus the scheme was of an even earlier date than Knox claims
+for his own suggestion.
+
+He tells us that at St. Andrews, after the truce of Cupar Muir (June 13),
+he "burstit forth," in conversation with Kirkcaldy of Grange, on the
+necessity of seeking support from England. Kirkcaldy long ago had
+watched the secret exit from St. Andrews Castle, while his friends
+butchered the Cardinal. He was taken in the castle when Knox was taken;
+he was a prisoner in France; then he entered the French service, acting,
+while so engaged, as an English spy. Before and during the destruction
+of monasteries he was in the Regent's service, but she justly suspected
+him of intending to desert her at this juncture. Kirkcaldy now wrote to
+Cecil, without date, but probably on June 21, and with the signature
+"Zours as ye knaw." Being in the Regent's party openly, he was secretly
+betraying her; he therefore accuses her of treachery. (He left her
+publicly, after a pension from England had been procured for him.) He
+says that the Regent averred that "favourers of God's word should have
+liberty to live after their consciences," "yet, in the conclusion of the
+peace" (the eight days' truce) "she has uttered her deceitful mind,
+having now declared that she will be enemy to all them that shall not
+live after her religion." _Consequently_, the Protestants are wrecking
+"all the friaries within their bounds." But Knox has told us that they
+declared their intention of thus enjoying liberty of conscience _before_
+"the conclusion of the peace," and wrecked Lindores Abbey during the
+peace! Kirkcaldy adds that the Regent already suspects him.
+
+Kirkcaldy, having made the orthodox charge of treachery against the woman
+whom he was betraying, then asks Cecil whether Elizabeth will accept
+their "friendship," and adds, with an eye to Arran, "I wish likewise her
+Majesty were not too hasty in her marriage." {133a} On June 23, writing
+from his house, Grange, and signing his name, Kirkcaldy renews his
+proposals. In both letters he anticipates the march of the Reformers to
+turn the Regent's garrison out of Perth. On June 25 he announces that
+the Lords are marching thither. They had already the secret aid of
+Lethington, who remained, like the traitor that he was, in the Regent's
+service till the end of October. {133b} Knox also writes at this time to
+Cecil from St. Andrews.
+
+On June 1, Henri II. of France had written to the Regent promising to
+send her strong reinforcements, {133c} but he was presently killed in a
+tourney by the broken lance shaft of Montgomery.
+
+The Reformers now made tryst at Perth for June 25, to restore "religion"
+and expel the Scots in French service. The little garrison surrendered
+(their opponents are reckoned by Kirkcaldy at 10,000 men), idolatry was
+again suppressed, and Perth restored to her municipal constitution. The
+ancient shrines of Scone were treated in the usual way, despite the
+remonstrances of Knox, Lord James, and Argyll. They had threatened
+Hepburn, Bishop of Moray, that if he did not join them "they neither
+could spare nor save his place." This was on June 20, on the same day he
+promised to aid them and vote with them in Parliament. {133d} Knox did
+his best, but the Dundee people began the work of wrecking; and the
+Bishop, in anger, demanded and received the return of his written promise
+of joining the Reformers. On the following day, irritated by some show
+of resistance, the people of Dundee and Perth burned the palace of Scone
+and the abbey, "whereat no small number of us was offended." An old
+woman said that "filthy beasts" dwelt "in that den," to her private
+knowledge, "at whose words many were pacified." The old woman is an
+excellent authority. {134}
+
+The pretext of perfect loyalty was still maintained by the Reformers;
+their honesty we can appreciate. They did not wish, they said, to
+overthrow "authority"; merely to be allowed to worship in their own way
+(and to prevent other people from worshipping in theirs, which was the
+order appointed by the State). That any set of men may rebel and take
+their chances is now recognised, but the Reformers wanted to combine the
+advantages of rebellion with the reputation of loyal subjects. Persons
+who not only band against the sovereign, but invoke foreign aid and seek
+a foreign alliance, are, however noble their motives, rebels. There is
+no other word for them. But that they were _not_ rebels Knox urged in a
+sermon at Edinburgh, which the Reformers, after devastating Stirling,
+reached by June 28-29 (?), and the Second Book of his "History" labours
+mainly to prove this point; no change of "authority" is intended.
+
+What Knox wanted is very obvious. He wanted to prevent Mary Stuart from
+enjoying her hereditary crown. She was a woman, as such under the curse
+of "The First Blast of the Trumpet," and she was an idolatress.
+Presently, as we shall see, he shows his hand to Cecil.
+
+Before the Reformers entered Edinburgh Mary of Guise retired to the
+castle of Dunbar, where she had safe access to the sea. In Edinburgh
+Knox says that the poor sacked the monasteries "before our coming." The
+contemporary Diurnal of Occurrents attributes the feat to Glencairn,
+Ruthven, Argyll, and the Lord James. {135a}
+
+Knox was chosen minister of Edinburgh, and as soon as they arrived the
+Lords, according to the "Historie of the Estate of Scotland," sent envoys
+to the Regent, offering obedience if she would "relax" the preachers,
+summoned on May 10, "from the horn" and allow them to preach. The Regent
+complied, but, of course, peace did not ensue, for, according to Knox, in
+addition to a request "that we might enjoy liberty of conscience," a
+demand for the withdrawal of all French forces out of Scotland was made.
+{135b} This could not be granted.
+
+Presently Mary of Guise issued before July 2, in the name of the King and
+Queen, Francis II. and Mary Stuart, certain charges against the
+Reformers, which Knox in his "History" publishes. {135c} A remark that
+Mary Stuart lies like her mother, seems to be written later than the
+period (September-October 1559) when this Book II. was composed. The
+Regent says that the rising was only under pretence of religion, and that
+she has offered a Parliament for January 1560. "A manifest lie," says
+Knox, "for she never thought of it till we demanded it." He does not
+give a date to the Regent's paper, but on June 25 Kirkcaldy wrote to
+Percy that the Regent "is like to grant the other party" (the Reformers)
+"all they desire, which in part she has offered already." {136a}
+
+Knox seizes on the word "offered" as if it necessarily meant "offered
+though unasked," and so styles the Regent's remark "a manifest lie." But
+Kirkcaldy, we see, uses the words "has in part offered already" when he
+means that the Regent has "offered" to grant some of the wishes of his
+allies.
+
+Meanwhile the Regent will allow freedom of conscience in the country, and
+especially in Edinburgh. But the Reformers, her paper goes on, desire to
+subvert the crown. To prove this she says that they daily receive
+messengers from England and send their own; and they have seized the
+stamps in the Mint (a capital point as regards the crown) and the Palace
+of Holyrood, which Lesley says that they sacked. Knox replies, "there is
+never a sentence in the narrative true," except that his party seized the
+stamps merely to prevent the issue of base coin (not to coin the stolen
+plate of the churches and monasteries for themselves, as Lesley says they
+did). But Knox's own letters, and those of Kirkcaldy of Grange and Sir
+Henry Percy, prove that they _were_ intriguing with England as early as
+June 23-25. Their conduct, with the complicity of Percy, was perfectly
+well known to the Regent's party, and was denounced by d'Oysel to the
+French ambassador in London in letters of July. {136b} Elizabeth, on
+August 7, answered the remonstrances of the Regent, promising to punish
+her officials if guilty. Nobody lied more frankly than "that imperial
+votaress."
+
+When Knox says "there is never a sentence in the narrative true," he is
+very bold. It was not true that the rising was merely under pretext of
+religion. It may have been untrue that messengers went _daily_ to
+England, but five letters were written between June 21 and June 28. To
+stand on the words of the Regent--"_every day_"--would be a babyish
+quibble. All the rest of her narrative was absolutely true.
+
+Knox, on June 28, asked leave to enter England for secret discourse; he
+had already written to the same effect from St. Andrews. {137a} If Henri
+sends French reinforcement, Knox "is uncertain what will follow"; we may
+guess that authority would be in an ill way. Cecil temporised; he wanted
+a better name than Kirkcaldy's--a man in the Regent's service--to the
+negotiations (July 4). "Anywise kindle the fire," he writes to Croft
+(July 8). Croft is to let the Reformers know that Arran has escaped out
+of France. Such a chance will not again "come in our lives." We see
+what the chance is!
+
+On July 19 Knox writes again to Cecil, enclosing what he means to be an
+apology for his "Blast of the Trumpet," to be given to Elizabeth. He
+says, while admitting Elizabeth's right to reign, as "judged godly,"
+though a woman, that they "must be careful not to make entrance and title
+to many, by whom not only shall the truth be impugned, but also shall the
+country be brought to bondage and slavery. God give you eyes to foresee
+and wisdom to avoid the apparent danger." {137b}
+
+The "many" to whom "entrance and title" are not to be given, manifestly
+are Mary Stuart, Queen of France and Scotland.
+
+It is not very clear whether Knox, while thus working against a woman's
+"entrance and title" to the crown on the ground of her sex, is thinking
+of Mary Stuart's prospects of succession to the throne of England or of
+her Scottish rights, or of both. His phrase is cast in a vague way;
+"many" are spoken of, but it is not hard to understand what particular
+female claimant is in his mind.
+
+Thus Knox himself was intriguing with England against his Queen at the
+very moment when in his "History" he denies that communications were
+frequent between his party and England, or that any of the Regent's
+charges are true. As for opposing authority and being rebellious, the
+manifest fundamental idea of the plot is to marry Elizabeth to Arran and
+deny "entrance and title" to the rightful Queen. It was an admirable
+scheme, and had Arran not become a lunatic, had Elizabeth not been "that
+imperial votaress" vowed to eternal maidenhood, their bridal, with the
+consequent loss of the Scottish throne by Mary, would have been the most
+fortunate of all possible events. The brethren had, in short, a perfect
+right to defend their creed in arms; a perfect right to change the
+dynasty; a perfect right to intrigue with England, and to resist a French
+landing, if they could. But for a reformer of the Church to give a dead
+lady the lie in his "History" when the economy of truth lay rather on his
+own side, as he knew, is not so well. We shall see that Knox possibly
+had the facts in his mind during the first interview with Mary Stuart.
+{138}
+
+The Lords, July 2, replied to the proclamation of Mary of Guise, saying
+that she accused them of a purpose "to invade her person." {139a} There
+is not a word of the kind in the Regent's proclamation as given by Knox
+himself. They denied what the Regent in her proclamation had not
+asserted, and what she had asserted about their dealings with England
+they did not venture to deny; "whereby," says Spottiswoode in his
+"History," "it seemed there was some dealing that way for expelling the
+Frenchmen, which they would not deny, and thought not convenient as then
+openly to profess." {139b} The task of giving the lie to the Regent when
+she spoke truth was left to the pen of Knox.
+
+Meanwhile, at Dunbar, Mary of Guise was in evil case. She had sounded
+Erskine, the commander of the Castle, who, she hoped, would stand by her.
+But she had no money to pay her French troops, who were becoming
+mutinous, and d'Oysel "knew not to what Saint to vow himself." The Earl
+of Huntly, before he would serve the Crown, {139c} insisted on a promise
+of the Earldom of Moray; this desire was to be his ruin. Huntly was a
+double dealer; "the gay Gordons" were ever brave, loyal, and bewildered
+by their chiefs. By July 22, the Scots heard of the fatal wound of Henri
+II., to their encouragement. Both parties were in lack of money, and the
+forces of the Congregation were slipping home by hundreds. Mary,
+according to Knox, was exciting the Duke against Argyll and Lord James,
+by the charge that Lord James was aiming at the crown, in which if he
+succeeded, he would deprive not only her daughter of the sovereignty, but
+the Hamiltons of the succession. Young and ambitious as Lord James then
+was, and heavily as he was suspected, even in England, it is most
+improbable that he ever thought of being king.
+
+The Congregation refused to let Argyll and Lord James hold conference
+with the Regent. Other discussions led to no result, except waste of
+time, to the Regent's advantage; and, on July 22, Mary, in council with
+Lord Erskine, Huntly, and the Duke, resolved to march against the
+Reformers at Edinburgh, who had no time to call in their scattered levies
+in the West, Angus, and Fife. Logan of Restalrig, lately an ally of the
+godly, surrendered Leith, over which he was the superior, to d'Oysel; and
+the Congregation decided to accept a truce (July 23-24).
+
+At this point Knox's narrative becomes so embroiled that it reminds one
+of nothing so much as of Claude Nau's attempts to glide past an awkward
+point in the history of his employer, Mary Stuart. I have puzzled over
+Knox's narrative again and again, and hope that I have disentangled the
+knotted and slippery thread.
+
+It is not wonderful that the brethren made terms, for the "Historie"
+states that their force numbered but 1500 men, whereas d'Oysel and the
+Duke led twice that number, horse and foot. They also heard from
+Erskine, in the Castle, that, if they did not accept "such appointment as
+they might have," he "would declare himself their enemy," as he had
+promised the Regent. It seems that she did not want war, for d'Oysel's
+French alone should have been able to rout the depleted ranks of the
+Congregation.
+
+The question is, What were the terms of treaty? for it is Knox's
+endeavour to prove that the Regent broke them, and so justified the later
+proceedings of the Reformers. The terms, in French, are printed by
+Teulet. {141} They run thus:--
+
+1. The Protestants, not being inhabitants of Edinburgh, shall depart
+next day.
+
+2. They shall deliver the stamps for coining to persons appointed by the
+Regent, hand over Holyrood, and Ruthven and Pitarro shall be pledges for
+performance.
+
+3. They shall be dutiful subjects, except in matters of religion.
+
+4. They shall not disturb the clergy in their persons or by withholding
+their rents, &c., before January 10, 1560.
+
+5. They shall not attack churches or monasteries before that date.
+
+6. The town of Edinburgh shall enjoy liberty of conscience, and shall
+choose its form of religion as it pleases till that date.
+
+7. The Regent shall not molest the preachers nor suffer the clergy to
+molest them for cause of religion till that date.
+
+8. Keith, Knox, and Spottiswoode, add that no garrisons, French or
+Scots, shall occupy Edinburgh, but soldiers may repair thither from their
+garrisons for lawful business.
+
+The French soldiers are said to have swaggered in St. Giles's, but no
+complaint is made that they were garrisoned in Edinburgh. In fact, they
+abode in the Canongate and Leith.
+
+Now, these were the terms accepted by the Congregation. This is certain,
+not only because historians, Knox excepted, are unanimous, but because
+the terms were either actually observed, or were evaded, on a stated
+point of construction.
+
+1. The Congregation left Edinburgh.
+
+2. They handed over the stamps of the Mint, Holyrood, and the two
+pledges.
+
+3. 4, 5. We do not hear that they attacked any clerics or monastery
+before they broke off publicly from the treaty, and Knox (i. 381) admits
+that Article 4 was accepted.
+
+6. They would not permit the town of Edinburgh to choose its religion by
+"voting of men." On July 29, when Huntly, Chatelherault, and Erskine,
+the neutral commander of the Castle, asked for a plebiscite, as provided
+in the treaty of July 24, the Truth, said the brethren, was not a matter
+of human votes, and, as the brethren held St. Giles's Church before the
+treaty, under Article 7 they could not be dispossessed. {142a} The
+Regent, to avoid shadow of offence, yielded the point as to Article 6,
+and was accused of breach of treaty because, occupying Holyrood, she had
+her Mass there. Had Edinburgh been polled, the brethren knew that they
+would have been outvoted. {142b}
+
+Now, Knox's object, in that part of Book II. of his "History," which was
+written in September-October 1559 as a tract for contemporary reading, is
+to prove that the Regent was the breaker of treaty. His method is first
+to give "the heads drawn by us, which we desired to be granted." The
+heads are--
+
+1. No member of the Congregation shall be troubled in any respect by any
+authority for the recent "innovation" before the Parliament of January
+10, 1560, decides the controversies.
+
+2. Idolatry shall not be restored where, on the day of treaty, it has
+been suppressed.
+
+3. Preachers may preach wherever they have preached and wherever they
+may chance to come.
+
+4. No soldiers shall be in garrison in Edinburgh.
+
+5. The French shall be sent away on "a reasonable day" and no more
+brought in without assent of the whole Nobility and Parliament. {143a}
+
+These articles make no provision for the safety of Catholic priests and
+churches, and insist on suppression of idolatry where it has been put
+down, and the entire withdrawal of French forces. Knox's party could not
+possibly denounce these terms which they demanded as "things unreasonable
+and ungodly," for they were the very terms which they had been asking
+for, ever since the Regent went to Dunbar. Yet, when the treaty was
+made, the preachers did say "our case is not yet so desperate that we
+need to grant to things unreasonable and ungodly." {143b} Manifestly,
+therefore, the terms actually obtained, as being "unreasonable and
+ungodly," were _not_ those for which the Reformers asked, and which,
+_they publicly proclaimed_, had been conceded.
+
+Knox writes, "These our articles were altered, and another form
+disposeth." And here he translates the terms as given in the French,
+terms which provide for the safety of Catholics, the surrender of
+Holyrood and the Mint, but say nothing about the withdrawal of the French
+troops or the non-restoration of "idolatry" where it has been suppressed.
+
+He adds, "This alteration in words and order was made" (so it actually
+_was_ made) "without the knowledge and consent of those whose counsel we
+had used in all cases before"--clearly meaning the preachers, and also
+implying that the consent of the noble negotiators for the Congregation
+_was_ obtained to the French articles.
+
+Next day the Congregation left Edinburgh, after making solemn
+proclamation of the conditions of truce, in which they omitted all the
+terms of the French version, except those in their own favour, and stated
+(in Knox's version) that all of their own terms, except the most
+important, namely, the removal of the French, and the promise to bring in
+no more, had been granted! It may be by accident, however, that the
+proclamation of the Lords, as given by Knox, omits the article securing
+the departure of the French. {144a} There exist two MS. copies of the
+proclamation, in which the Lords dare to assert "that the Frenchmen
+should be sent away at a reasonable date, and no more brought in except
+by assent of the whole nobility and Parliament." {144b}
+
+Of the terms really settled, except as regards the immunity of their own
+party, the Lords told the public not one word; they suppressed what was
+true, and added what was false.
+
+Against this formal, public, and impudent piece of mendacity, we might
+expect Knox to protest in his "History"; to denounce it as a cause of
+God's wrath. On the other hand he states, with no disapproval, the
+childish quibbles by which his party defended their action.
+
+On reading or hearing the Lords' proclamation, the Catholics, who knew
+the real terms of treaty, said that the Lords "in their proclamation had
+made no mention of anything promised to _them_," and "had proclaimed more
+than was contained in the Appointment;" among other things, doubtless,
+the promise to dismiss the French. {145a}
+
+The brethren replied to these "calumnies of Papists" (as Calderwood
+styles them), that they "proclaimed nothing that was not _finally_ agreed
+upon, _in word and promise_, betwixt us and those with whom the
+Appointment was made, _whatsoever their scribes had after written_,
+{145b} who, in very deed, had altered, both in words and sentences, our
+Articles, _as they were first conceived_; and yet if their own writings
+were diligently examined, the self same thing shall be found _in
+substance_."
+
+This is most complicated quibbling! Knox uses his ink like the cuttle-
+fish, to conceal the facts. The "own writings" of the Regent's party are
+before us, and do not contain the terms proclaimed by the Congregation.
+Next, in drawing up the terms which the Congregation was compelled to
+accept, the "scribes" of the Regent's party necessarily, and with the
+consent of the Protestant negotiators, altered the terms proposed by the
+brethren, but not granted by the Regent's negotiators. Thirdly, the
+Congregation now asserted that "_finally_" an arrangement in conformity
+with their proclamation was "agreed upon _in word and promise_"; that is,
+verbally, which we never find them again alleging. The game was to foist
+false terms on public belief, and then to accuse the Regent of perfidy in
+not keeping them.
+
+These false terms were not only publicly proclaimed by the Congregation
+with sound of trumpets, but they were actually sent, by Knox or
+Kirkcaldy, or both, to Croft at Berwick, for English reading, on July 24.
+In a note I print the letter, signed by Kirkcaldy, but in the holograph
+of Knox, according to Father Stevenson. {146} It will be remarked that
+the genuine articles forbidding attacks on monasteries and ensuring
+priests in their revenues are here omitted, while the false articles on
+suppression of idolatry, and expulsion of the French forces are inserted,
+and nothing is said about Edinburgh's special liberty to choose her
+religion.
+
+The sending of this false intelligence was not the result of a
+misunderstanding. I have shown that the French terms were perfectly well
+understood, and were observed, except Article 6, on which the Regent made
+a concession. How then could men professionally godly venture to
+misreport the terms, and so make them at once seem more favourable to
+themselves and less discouraging to Cecil than they really were, while at
+the same time (as the Regent could not keep terms which she had never
+granted) they were used as a ground of accusation against her?
+
+This is the point that has perplexed me, for Knox, no less than the
+Congregation, seems to have deliberately said good-bye to truth and
+honour, unless the Lords elaborately deceived their secretary and
+diplomatic agent. The only way in which I can suppose that Knox and his
+friends reconciled their consciences to their conduct is this:
+
+Knox tells us that "when all points were communed and agreed upon by mid-
+persons," Chatelherault and Huntly had a private interview with Argyll,
+Glencairn, and others of his party. They promised that they would be
+enemies to the Regent if she broke any one jot of the treaty. "As much
+promised the duke that _he_ would do, if in case that she would not
+remove her French at a reasonable day . . . " the duke being especially
+interested in their removal. But Huntly is not said to have made _this_
+promise--the removal of the French obviously not being part of the
+"Appointment." {148a}
+
+Next, the brethren, in arguing with the Catholics about their own
+mendacious proclamation of the terms, said that "we proclaimed nothing
+which was not _finally_ agreed upon, _in word and promise_, betwixt us
+and those with whom the Appointment was made. . . . " {148b}
+
+I can see no explanation of Knox's conduct, except that he and his
+friends pacified their consciences by persuading themselves that
+non-official words of Huntly and Chatelherault (whatever these words may
+have been), spoken after "all was agreed upon," cancelled the treaty with
+the Regent, became the real treaty, and were binding on the Regent! Thus
+Knox or Kirkcaldy, or both, by letter; and Knox later, orally in
+conversation with Croft, could announce false terms of treaty. So great,
+if I am right, is a good man's power of self-persuasion! I shall welcome
+any more creditable theory of the Reformer's behaviour, but I can see no
+alternative, unless the Lords lied to Knox.
+
+That the French should be driven out was a great point with Cecil, for he
+was always afraid that the Scots might slip back from the English to the
+old French alliance. On July 28, after the treaty of July 24, but before
+he heard of it, he insisted on the necessity of expelling the French, in
+a letter to the Reformers. {149a} He "marvels that they omit such an
+opportunity to help themselves." He sent a letter of vague generalities
+in answer to their petitions for aid. When he received, as he did, a
+copy of the terms of the treaty of July 24, in French, he would
+understand.
+
+As further proof that Cecil was told what Knox and Kirkcaldy should have
+known to be untrue, we note that on August 28 the Regent, weary of the
+perpetual charges of perfidy anew brought against her, "ashamed not,"
+writes Knox, to put forth a proclamation, in which she asserted that
+nothing, in the terms of July 23-24, forbade her to bring in more French
+troops, "as may clearly appear by inspection of the said Appointment,
+which the bearer has presently to show." {149b}
+
+Why should the Regent have been "ashamed" to tell the truth? If the
+bearer showed a false and forged treaty, the Congregation must have
+denounced it, and produced the genuine document with the signatures. Far
+from that, in a reply (from internal evidence written by Knox), they
+admit, "neither do we _here_ {149c} allege the breaking of the
+Appointment made at Leith (which, nevertheless, has manifestly been
+done), but"--and here the writer wanders into quite other questions.
+Moreover, Knox gives another reply to the Regent, "by some men," in which
+they write "we dispute not so much whether the bringing in of more
+Frenchmen be violating of the Appointment, which the Queen and her
+faction cannot deny to be manifestly broken by them in more cases than
+one," in no way connected with the French. One of these cases will
+presently be stated--it is comic enough to deserve record--but, beyond
+denial, the brethren could not, and did not even attempt to make out
+their charge as to the Regent's breach of truce by bringing in new, or
+retaining old, French forces.
+
+Our historians, and the biographers of Knox, have not taken the trouble
+to unravel this question of the treaty of July 24. But the behaviour of
+the Lords and of Knox seems characteristic, and worthy of examination.
+
+It is not argued that Mary of Guise was, or became, incapable of worse
+than dissimulation (a case of forgery by her in the following year is
+investigated in Appendix B). But her practices at this time were such as
+Knox could not throw the first stone at. Her French advisers were in
+fact "perplexed," as Throckmorton wrote to Elizabeth (August 8). They
+made preparations for sending large reinforcements: they advised
+concession in religion: they waited on events, and the Regent could only
+provide, at Leith (which was jealous of Edinburgh and anxious to be made
+a free burgh), a place whither she could fly in peril. Meantime she
+would vainly exert her woman's wit among many dangers.
+
+Knox, too, was exerting his wit in his own way. Busied in preaching and
+in acting as secretary and diplomatic agent to the Congregation as he
+was, he must also have begun in or not much later than August 1559, the
+part of his "History" first written by him, namely Book II. That book,
+as he wrote to a friend named Railton {150} on October 23, 1559 (when
+much of it was already penned), is meant as a defence of his party
+against the charge of sedition, and was clearly intended (we reiterate)
+for contemporary reading at home and abroad, while the strife was still
+unsettled. This being so, Knox continues his policy of blaming the
+Regent for breach of the misreported treaty of July 24: for treachery,
+which would justify the brethren's attack on her before the period of
+truce (January 10, 1559) ran out.
+
+One clause, we know, secured the Reformers from molestation before that
+date. Despite this, Knox records a case of "oppressing" a brother,
+"which had been sufficient to prove the Appointment to be plainly
+violated." Lord Seton, of the Catholic party, {151a} "broke a chair on
+Alexander Whitelaw as he came from Preston (pans) accompanied by William
+Knox . . . and this he did supposing that Alexander Whitelaw had been
+John Knox."
+
+So much Knox states in his Book II., writing probably in September or
+October 1559. But he does not here say what Alexander Whitelaw and
+William Knox had been doing, or inform us how he himself was concerned in
+the matter. He could not reveal the facts when writing in the early
+autumn of 1559, because the brethren were then still taking the line that
+they were loyal, and were suffering from the Regent's breaches of treaty,
+as in the matter of the broken chair.
+
+The sole allusion here made by Knox to the English intrigues, before they
+were manifest to all mankind in September, is this, "Because England was
+of the same religion, and lay next to us, it was judged expedient first
+to prove them, which we did by one or two messengers, as hereafter, in
+its own place, more amply shall be declared." {151b} He later inserted
+in Book III. some account of the intrigues of July-August 1559, "in its
+own place," namely, in a part of his work occupied with the occurrences
+of January 1560. {152a}
+
+Cecil, prior to the compact of July 24, had wished to meet Knox at
+Stamford. On July 30 Knox received his instructions as negotiator with
+England. {152b} His employers say that they hear that Huntly and
+Chatelherault have promised to join the Reformers if the Regent breaks a
+jot of the treaty of July 24, the terms of which Knox can declare. They
+ask money to enable them to take Stirling Castle, and "strength by sea"
+for the capture of Broughty Castle, on Tay. Yet they later complained of
+the Regent when she fortified Leith. They actually _did_ take Broughty
+Castle, and then had the hardihood to aver that they only set about this
+when they heard in mid-September of the fortification of Leith by the
+Regent. They aimed at it six days after their treaty of July 24. They
+asked for soldiers to lie in garrison, for men, ships, and money for
+their Lords.
+
+Bearing these instructions Knox sailed from Fife to Holy Island, near
+Berwick, and there met Croft, the Governor of that town. Croft kept him,
+not with sufficient secrecy, in Berwick, where he was well known, while
+Whitelaw was coming from Cecil with his answers to the petitions of the
+brethren. Meanwhile Croft held converse with Knox, who, as he reports,
+says that, as to the change of "Authority" (that is of sovereignty,
+temporary at least), the choice of the brethren would be subject to
+Elizabeth's wishes. Yet the brethren contemplated no change of
+Authority! Arran ought to be kept secretly in England "till wise men
+considered what was in him; if misliked he put Lord James second." As to
+what Knox told Croft about the terms of treaty of July 24, it is best to
+state the case in Croft's own words. "He (Knox) excusys the
+Protestantes, for that the French as commyng apon them at Edynbrogh when
+theyr popoll were departed to make new provysyon of vytaylles, forcyd
+them to make composycyon wyth the quene. Whereyn (sayeth he) the
+frenchmen ar apoynted to departe out of Scotland by the xth of thys
+monthe, and they truste verely by thys caus to be stronger, for that the
+Duke, apon breche of promys on the quene's part, wyll take playne parte
+withe the Protestantes." {153}
+
+This is quite explicit. Knox, as envoy of the Lords, declares that in
+the treaty it is "appointed" that the French force shall leave Scotland
+on August 10. (The printed calendars are not accurate.) No such matter
+occurred in the treaty "wyth the quene." Knox added, next day, that he
+himself "was unfit to treat of so great matters," and Croft appears to
+have agreed with him, for, by the Reformer's lack of caution, his doings
+in Holy Island were "well known and published." Consequently, when
+Whitelaw returned to Knox with Cecil's reply to the requests of the
+brethren, the performances of Knox and Whitelaw were no secrets, in
+outline at least, to the Regent's party. For this reason, Lord Seton,
+mistaking Whitelaw for Knox (who had set out on August 3 to join the
+brethren at Stirling), pursued and broke a chair on the harmless Brother
+Whitelaw. Such was the Regent's treacherous breach of treaty!
+
+During this episode in his curious adventures as a diplomatist, Knox
+recommended Balnaves, author of a treatise on "Justification by Faith,"
+as a better agent in these courses, and with Balnaves the new envoy of
+Elizabeth, Sadleir, a veteran diplomatist (wheedled in 1543 by Mary of
+Guise), transacted business henceforth. Sadleir was ordered to Berwick
+on August 6. Elizabeth infringed the treaty of Cateau Cambresis, then
+only four months old, by giving Sadleir 3000 pounds in gold, or some such
+sum, for the brethren. "They were tempting the Duke by all means
+possible," {154a} but he will only promise neutrality if it comes to the
+push, and they, Argyll and Lord James say (Glasgow, August 13), are not
+yet ready "to discharge this authority," that is, to depose the Regent.
+Chatelherault's promise was less vigorous than it had been reported!
+
+Knox, who now acted as secretary for the Congregation, was not Sir Henry
+Wotton's ideal ambassador, "an honest man sent to lie abroad for his
+country." When he stooped to statements which seem scarcely candid, to
+put it mildly, he did violence to his nature. He forced himself to
+proclaim the loyalty of his party from the pulpit, when he could not do
+so without some economy of truth. {154b} He inserted things in his
+"History," and spoke things to Croft, which he should have known to be
+false. But he carried his point. He did advance the "union of hearts"
+with England, if in a blundering fashion, and we owe him eternal
+gratitude for his interest in the match, though "we like not the manner
+of the wooing." The reluctant hand of Elizabeth was now inextricably
+caught in the gear of that great machine which broke the ancient league
+of France and Scotland, and saved Scotland from some of the sorrows of
+France.
+
+The papers of Sadleir, Elizabeth's secret agent with the Scots, show the
+godly pursuing their old plan of campaign. To make treaty with the
+Regent; to predict from the pulpit that she would break it; to make false
+statements about the terms of the treaty; to accuse her of their
+infringement; to profess loyalty; to aim at setting up a new sovereign
+power; to tell the populace that Mary of Guise's scanty French
+reinforcements--some 1500 men--came by virtue of a broken treaty; to tell
+Sadleir that they were very glad that the French _had_ come, as they
+would excite popular hatred; to make out that the fortification of Leith
+was breach of treaty;--such, in brief, were the methods of the Reformers.
+{155}
+
+They now took a new method of proving the Regent's breach of treaty, that
+she had "set up the Mass in Holyrood, which they had before suppressed."
+_They_ were allowed to have their sermons in St. Giles's, but _she_ was
+not to have her rites in her own abbey. Balnaves still harped on the non-
+dismissal of the French as a breach of treaty!
+
+Arran, returning from Switzerland, had an interview with Elizabeth in
+England, in mid-September, was smuggled across the Border with the astute
+and unscrupulous Thomas Randolph in his train. With Arran among them,
+Chatelherault might waver as he would. Meanwhile Knox and Willock
+preached up and down the country, doubtless repeating to the people their
+old charges against the Regent. Lethington, the secretary of that lady,
+still betrayed her, telling Sadleir "that he attended upon the Regent no
+longer than he might have a good occasion to revolt unto the Protestants"
+(September 16).
+
+Balnaves got some two to three thousand pounds in gold (the sum is
+variously stated) from Sadleir. "He saith, whatever pretence they make,
+the principal mark they shoot at is to make an alteration of the State
+and authority." This at least is explicit enough. The Reformers were
+actually renewing the civil war on charges so stale and so false. The
+Duke had possibly promised to desert her if she broke the truce, and now
+he seized on the flimsy pretence, because the Congregation, as the
+leaders said, had "tempted him" sufficiently. They had come up to his
+price. Arran, the hoped-for Hamilton king, the hoped-for husband of the
+Queen of England, had arrived, and with Arran the Duke joined the
+Reformers. About September 20 they forbade the Regent to fortify Leith.
+
+The brethren say that they have given no "provocation." Six weeks
+earlier they had requested England to help them to seize and hold
+Broughty Castle, though the Regent may not have known that detail.
+
+The Regent replied as became her, and Glencairn, with Erskine of Dun,
+wrecked the rich abbey of Paisley. The brethren now broke the truce with
+a vengeance.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII: KNOX IN THE WAR OF THE CONGREGATION: THE REGENT ATTACKED:
+HER DEATH: CATHOLICISM ABOLISHED, 1559-1560
+
+
+Though the Regent was now to be deposed and attacked by armed force, Knox
+tells us that there were dissensions among her enemies. Some held "that
+the Queen was heavily done to," and that the leaders "sought another end
+than religion." Consequently, when the Lords with their forces arrived
+at Edinburgh on October 16, the local brethren showed a want of
+enthusiasm. The Congregation nevertheless summoned the Regent to depart
+from Leith, and on October 21 met at the Tolbooth to discuss her formal
+deposition from office. Willock moved that this might lawfully be done.
+Knox added, with more reserve than usual, that their hearts must not be
+withdrawn from their King and Queen, Mary and Francis. The Regent, too,
+ought to be restored when she openly repented and submitted. Willock
+dragged Jehu into his sermon, but Knox does not appear to have remarked
+that Francis and Mary were Ahab and Jezebel, idolaters. He was now in a
+position of less freedom and more responsibility than while he was a
+wandering prophet at large.
+
+On October 24 the Congregation summoned Leith, having deposed the Regent
+_in the name of the King and Queen, Francis and Mary_, and of themselves
+as Privy Council! They did more. They caused one James Cocky, a gold
+worker, to forge the great seal of Francis and Mary, "wherewith they
+sealed their pretended laws and ordinances, tending to constrain the
+subjects of the kingdom to rebel and favour their usurpations." Their
+proclamations with the forged seal they issued at St. Andrews, Glasgow,
+Linlithgow, Perth, and elsewhere; using this seal in their letters to
+noblemen, who were ordered to obey Arran. The gold worker, whose name is
+variously spelled in the French record, says that the device for the
+coins which the Congregation meant to issue and ordered him to execute
+was on one side a cross with a crown of thorns, on the other the words
+VERBUM DEI. The artist, Cocky, was dilatory, and when the brethren were
+driven out of Edinburgh he gave the dies, unfinished, to John Achison,
+the chief official of the Mint, who often executed coins of Queen Mary.
+{158a} As Professor Hume Brown says of the audacious statement of the
+brethren, that they acted in the name of their King and Queen, their use
+of the forged Royal seal, "as covering their action with an appearance of
+law, served its purpose in their appeals to the people." Cocky and
+Kirkcaldy were hanged by Morton in 1573.
+
+The idea of forging the great seal may have arisen in the fertile brain
+of Lethington, who about October 25 had at last deserted the Regent, and
+now took Knox's place as secretary of the Congregation. Henceforth their
+manifestoes say little about religion, and a great deal about the French
+design to conquer Scotland. {158b}
+
+To the wit of Lethington we may plausibly attribute a proposal which, on
+October 25, Knox submitted to Croft. {159} It was that England should
+lend 1000 men for the attack on the Regent in Leith. Peace with France
+need not be broken, for the men may come as private adventurers, and
+England may denounce them as rebels. Croft declined this proposal as
+dishonourable, and as too clearly a breach of treaty. Knox replied that
+he had communicated Croft's letter "to such as partly induced me before
+to write" (October 29). Very probably Lethington suggested the idea,
+leaving the burden of its proposal on Knox. Dr. M'Crie says that it is a
+solitary case of the Reformer's recommending dissimulation; but the
+proceeding was in keeping with Knox's previous statements about the
+nature of the terms made in July; with the protestations of loyalty; with
+the lie given to Mary of Guise when she spoke, on the whole, the plain
+truth; and generally with the entire conduct of the prophet and of the
+Congregation. Dr. M'Crie justly remarks that Knox "found it difficult to
+preserve integrity and Christian simplicity amidst the crooked wiles of
+political intrigue."
+
+On the behaviour of the godly heaven did not smile--for the moment.
+Scaling-ladders had been constructed in St. Giles's church, "so that
+preaching was neglected." "The preachers spared not openly to say that
+they feared the success of that enterprise should not be prosperous," for
+this reason, "God could not suffer such contempt of His word . . . long
+to be unpunished." The Duke lost heart; the waged soldiers mutinied for
+lack of pay; Morton deserted the cause; Bothwell wounded Ormiston as he
+carried money from Croft, and seized the cash {160a}--behaving
+treacherously, if it be true that he was under promise not to act against
+the brethren. The French garrison of Leith made successful sorties; and
+despite the valour of Arran and Lord James and the counsel of Lethington,
+the godly fled from Edinburgh on November 5, under taunts and stones cast
+by the people of the town.
+
+The fugitives never stopped till they reached Stirling, when Knox
+preached to them. He lectured at great length on discomfitures of the
+godly in the Old Testament, and about the Benjamites, and the Levite and
+his wife. Coming to practical politics, he reminded his audience that
+after the accession of the Hamiltons to their party, "there was nothing
+heard but This lord will bring these many hundred spears . . . if this
+Earl be ours, no man in such a district will trouble us." The Duke ought
+to be ashamed of himself. Before Knox came to Scotland we know he had
+warned the brethren against alliance with the Hamiltons. The Duke had
+been on the Regent's side, "yet without his assistance they could not
+have compelled us to appoint with the Queen upon such unequal conditions"
+in the treaty of July. So the terms _were_ in favour of the Regent,
+after all is said and done! {160b}
+
+God had let the brethren fall, Knox said, into their present condition
+because they put their trust in man--in the Duke--a noble whose
+repentance was very dubious.
+
+Then Knox rose to the height of the occasion. "Yea, whatsoever becomes
+of us and our mortal carcases, I doubt not but that this Cause (in
+despite of Satan) shall prevail in the realm of Scotland. For as it is
+the eternal truth of the eternal God, so shall it once prevail . . ."
+Here we have the actual genius of Knox, his tenacity, his courage in an
+uphill game, his faith which might move mountains. He adjured all to
+amendment of life, prayer, and charity. "The minds of men began to be
+wonderfully erected." In Arran and Lord James too, manifestly not
+jealous rivals, Randolph found "more honour, stoutness, and courage than
+in all the rest" (November 3).
+
+Already, before the flight, Lethington was preparing to visit England.
+The conduct of diplomacy with England was thus in capable hands, and
+Lethington was a persona grata to the English Queen. Meanwhile the
+victorious Regent behaved with her wonted moderation. "She pursueth no
+man that hath showed himself against her at this time." She pardoned all
+burgesses of Edinburgh, and was ready to receive the Congregation to her
+grace, if they would put away the traitor Lethington, Balnaves, and some
+others. {161a} Knox, however, says that she gave the houses of the most
+honest men to the French. The Regent was now very ill; graviter
+aegrotat, say Francis and Mary (Dec. 4, 1559). {161b}
+
+The truth is that the Cause of Knox, far from being desperate, as for an
+hour it seemed to the faint-hearted, had never looked so well. Cecil and
+the English Council saw that they were committed; their gift of money was
+known, they must bestir themselves. While they had "nourished the
+garboil" in Scotland, fanned the flame, they professed to believe that
+France was aiming, through Scotland, at England. They arranged for a
+large levy of forces at Berwick; they promised money without stint: and
+Cecil drew up the paper adopted, as I conceive, by the brethren in their
+Latin appeal to all Christian princes. The Scots were to say that they
+originally took arms in defence of their native dynasty (the Hamiltons),
+Mary Stuart having no heirs of her body, and France intending to annex
+Scotland--which was true enough, but was not the cause of the rising at
+Perth. That England is also aimed at is proved by the fact that Mary and
+Francis, on the seal of Scotland, quarter the arms of England. Knox
+himself had seen, and had imparted the fact to Cecil, a jewel on which
+these fatal heraldic pretensions were made. The Queen is governed by
+"the new authority of the House of Guise." In short, Elizabeth must be
+asked to intervene for these political reasons, not in defence of the
+Gospel, and large preparations for armed action in Scotland were
+instantly made. Meanwhile Cecil's sketch of the proper manifesto for the
+Congregation to make, was embodied in Lethington's instructions (November
+24) from the Congregation, as well as adapted in their Latin appeal to
+Christian princes.
+
+We may suppose that a man of Knox's unbending honesty was glad to have
+thrown off his functions as secretary to the brethren. Far from
+disclaiming their idolatrous King and Queen (the ideal policy), they were
+issuing proclamations headed "Francis and Mary," and bearing the forged
+signet. Examples with the seal were, as late as 1652, in the possession
+of the Erskine of Dun of that day. In them Francis and Mary denounce the
+Pope as Antichrist! Keith, who wrote much later, styles these
+proclamations "pretty singular," and Knox must have been of the same
+opinion.
+
+After Lethington took the office of secretary to the Congregation, Knox
+had for some time no great public part in affairs. Fife was invaded by
+"these bloody worms," as he calls the French; and he preached what he
+tells us was a "comfortable sermon" to the brethren at Cupar. But
+Lethington had secured the English alliance: Lord Grey was to lead 4000
+foot and 2000 horse to the Border; Lord Winter with fourteen ship set
+sail, and was incommoded by a storm, in which vessels of d'Elboeuf, with
+French reinforcements for the Regent, were, some lost, some driven back
+to harbour. As in Jacobite times, French aid to the loyal party was
+always unfortunate, and the arrival of Winter's English fleet in the
+Forth caused d'Oysel to retreat out of Fife back to Leith. He had nearly
+reached St. Andrews, where Knox dwelt in great agony of spirit. He had
+"great need of a good horse," probably because, as in October 1559, money
+was offered for his head. But private assassination had no terrors for
+the Reformer. {163}
+
+Knox, as he wrote to a friend on January 29, 1560, had forsaken all
+public assemblies and retired to a life of study, because "I am judged
+among ourselves too extreme." When the Duke of Norfolk, with the English
+army, was moving towards Berwick, where he was to make a league with the
+Protestant nobles of Scotland, Knox summoned Chatelherault, and the
+gentlemen of his party, then in Glasgow. They wished Norfolk to come to
+them by Carlisle, a thing inconvenient to Lord James. Knox chid them
+sharply for sloth, and want of wisdom and discretion, praising highly the
+conduct of Lord James. They had "unreasonable minds." "Wise men do
+wonder what my Lord Duke's friends do mean, that are so slack and
+backward in this Cause." The Duke did not, however, write to France with
+an offer of submission. That story, ben trovato but not vero, rests on a
+forgery by the Regent! {164} The fact is that the Duke was not a true
+Protestant, his advisers, including his brother the Archbishop, were
+Catholics, and the successes of d'Oysel in winter had terrified him; but,
+seeing an English army at hand, he assented to the league with England at
+Berwick, as "second person of the realm of Scotland" (February 27, 1560).
+Elizabeth "accepted the realm of Scotland"--Chatelherault being
+recognised as heir-apparent to the throne thereof--for so long as the
+marriage of Queen Mary and Francis I. endured, and a year later. The
+Scots, however, remain dutiful subjects of Queen Mary, they say, except
+so far as lawless attempts to make Scotland a province of France are
+concerned. Chatelherault did not _sign_ the league till May 10, with
+Arran, Huntly, Morton (at last committed to the Cause), and the usual
+leaders of the Congregation.
+
+With the details of the siege of Leith, and with the attempts at
+negotiation, we are not here concerned. France, in fact, was powerless
+to aid the Regent. Since the arrival of Throckmorton in France, as
+ambassador of England, in the previous summer (1559), the Huguenots had
+been conspiring. They were in touch with Geneva, in the east; on the
+north, in Brittany, they appear to have been stirred up by Tremaine, a
+Cornish gentleman, and emissary of Cecil, who joined Throckmorton at
+Blois, in March 1560. Stories were put about that the young French King
+was a leper, and was kidnapping fair-haired children, in whose blood he
+meant to bathe. The Huguenots had been conspiring ever since September
+1559, when they seem to have sent to Elizabeth for aid in money. {165a}
+More recently they had held a kind of secret convention at Nantes, and
+summoned bands who were to lurk in the woods, concentrate at Amboise,
+attack the chateau, slay the Guises, and probably put the King and Queen
+Mary under the Prince de Conde, who was by the plotters expected to take
+the part which Arran played in Scotland. It is far from certain that
+Conde had accepted the position. In all this we may detect English
+intrigue and the gold of Elizabeth. Calvin had been consulted; he
+disapproved of the method of the plot, still more of the plot itself. But
+he knew all about it. "All turns on killing Antonius," he wrote,
+"Antonius" being either the Cardinal or the Duc de Guise. {165b}
+
+The conspiracy failed at Amboise, on March 17-19, 1560. Throckmorton was
+present, and describes the panic and perplexity of the Court, while he
+eagerly asks to be promptly and secretly recalled, as suspicion has
+fallen on himself. He sent Tremaine home through Brittany, where he
+gathered proposals for betraying French towns to Elizabeth, rather
+prematurely. Surrounded by treachery, and destitute of funds, the Guises
+could not aid the Regent, and Throckmorton kept advising Cecil to "strike
+while the iron was hot," and paralyse French designs. The dying Regent
+of Scotland never lost heart in circumstances so desperate.
+
+Even before the outbreak at Perth, Mary of Guise had been in very bad
+health. When the English crossed the Border to beleaguer Leith, Lord
+Erskine, who had maintained neutrality in Edinburgh Castle, allowed her
+to come there to die (April 1, 1560).
+
+On April 29, from the Castle of Edinburgh, she wrote a letter to d'Oysel,
+commanding in Leith. She told him that she was suffering from dropsy;
+"one of her legs begins to swell. . . . You know there are but three
+days for the dropsy in this country." The letter was intercepted by her
+enemies, and deciphered. {166a} On May 7, the English and Scots made an
+assault, and were beaten back with loss of 1000 men. According to Knox,
+the French stripped the fallen, and allowed the white carcases to lie
+under the wall, as also happened in 1746, after the English defeat at
+Falkirk. The Regent saw them, Knox says, from the Castle, and said they
+were "a fair tapestry." "Her words were heard of some," and carried to
+Knox, who, from the pulpit, predicted "that God should revenge that
+contumely done to his image . . . even in such as rejoiced thereat. And
+the very experience declared that he was not deceived, for within few
+days thereafter (yea, some say that same day) began her belly and
+loathsome legs to swell, and so continued, till that God did execute his
+judgments upon her." {166b}
+
+Knox wrote thus on May 16, 1566. {167a} He was a little irritated at
+that time by Queen Mary's triumph over his friends, the murderers of
+Riccio, and his own hasty flight from Edinburgh to Kyle. This may excuse
+the somewhat unusual and even unbecoming nature of his language
+concerning the dying lady, but his memory was quite wrong about his
+prophecy. The symptoms of the Regent's malady had begun more than a week
+before the Anglo-Scottish defeat at Leith, and the nature of her
+complaint ought to have been known to the prophet's party, as her letter,
+describing her condition, had been intercepted and deciphered. But the
+deciphering may have been done in England, which would cause delay. We
+cannot, of course, prove that Knox was informed as to the Regent's malady
+before he prophesied; if so, he had forgotten the fact before he wrote as
+he did in 1566. But the circumstances fail to demonstrate that he had a
+supernormal premonition, or drew a correct deduction from Scripture, and
+make it certain that the Regent did not fall ill after his prophecy.
+
+The Regent died on June 11, half-an-hour after the midnight of June 10. A
+report was written on June 13, from Edinburgh Castle, to the Cardinal of
+Lorraine, by Captain James Cullen, who some twelve years later was hanged
+by the Regent Morton. He says that since June 7, Lord James and Argyll,
+Marischal, and Glencairn, had assiduously attended on the dying lady. Two
+hours before her death she spoke apart for a whole hour with Lord James.
+Chatelherault had seen her twice, and Arran once. {167b} Knox mentions
+the visits of these lords, and says that d'Oysel was forbidden to speak
+with her, "belike she would have bidden him farewell, for auld
+familiarity was great."
+
+According to Knox, the Regent admitted the errors of her policy,
+attributing it to Huntly, who had deserted her, and to "the wicked
+counsel of her friends," that is, her brothers. At the request of the
+Lords, she saw Willock, and said, as she naturally would, that "there was
+no salvation but in and by the death of Jesus Christ." "She was
+compelled . . . to approve the chief head of our religion, wherein we
+dissent from all papists and popery." Knox had strange ideas about the
+creed which he opposed. "Of any virtue that ever was espied in King
+James V. (_whose daughter she_," Mary Stuart, "_is called_"), "to this
+hour (1566) we have seen no sparkle to appear." {168}
+
+With this final fling at the chastity of Mary of Guise, the Reformer
+takes leave of the woman whom he so bitterly hated. Yet, "Knox was not
+given to the practice so common in his day, of assassinating reputations
+by vile insinuations." Posterity has not accepted, contemporary English
+historians did not accept, Knox's picture of Mary of Guise as the wanton
+widow, the spawn of the serpent, who desired to cut the throat of every
+Protestant in Scotland. She was placed by circumstances in a position
+from which there was no issue. The fatal French marriage of her daughter
+was a natural step, at a moment when Scottish independence could only be
+maintained by help of France. Had she left the Regency in the hands of
+Chatelherault, that is, of Archbishop Hamilton, the prelate was not the
+man to put down Protestantism by persecution, and so save the situation.
+If he had been, Mary of Guise was not the woman to abet him in drastic
+violence. The nobles would have revolted against the feeble Duke. {169}
+
+On July 6, the treaty of Edinburgh was concluded by representatives of
+England (Cecil was one) and of France. The Reformers carried a point of
+essential importance, the very point which Knox told Croft had been
+secured by the Appointment of July 1559. All French forces were to be
+dismissed the country, except one hundred and twenty men occupying Dunbar
+and Inchkeith, in the Firth of Forth. A clause by which Cecil thought he
+had secured "the kernel" for England, and left the shell to France, a
+clause recognising the "rightfulness" of Elizabeth's alliance with the
+rebels, afforded Mary Stuart ground, or excuse, for never ratifying the
+treaty.
+
+It is needless here to discuss the question--was the Convention of
+Estates held after the treaty, in August, a lawful Parliament? There was
+doubt enough, at least, to make Protestants feel uneasy about the
+security of the religious settlement achieved by the Convention.
+Randolph, the English resident, foresaw that the Acts might be rescinded.
+
+Before the Convention of Estates met, a thanksgiving day was held by the
+brethren in St. Giles's, and Knox, if he was the author of the address to
+the Deity, said with scientific precision, "Neither in us, nor yet in our
+confederates was there any cause why thou shouldst have given unto us so
+joyful and sudden a deliverance, for neither of us both ceased to do
+wickedly, even in the midst of our greatest troubles." Elizabeth had
+lied throughout with all her natural and cultivated gift of falsehood: of
+the veracity of the brethren several instances have been furnished.
+
+Ministers were next appointed to churches, Knox taking Edinburgh, while
+Superintendents (who were by no means Bishops) were appointed, one to
+each province. Erskine of Dun, a layman, was Superintendent of Angus. A
+new anti-Catholic Kirk was thus set up on July 20, before the Convention
+met and swept away Catholicism. {170} Knox preached vigorously on "the
+prophet Haggeus" meanwhile, and "some" (namely Lethington, Speaker in the
+Convention) "said in mockage, we must now forget ourselves, and bear the
+barrow to build the houses of God." The unawakened Lethington, and the
+gentry at large, merely dilapidated the houses of God, so that they
+became unsafe, as well as odiously squalid. That such fervent piety
+should grudge repairs of church buildings (many of them in a wretched
+state already) is a fact creditable rather to the thrift than to the
+state of grace of the Reformers. After all their protestations, full of
+texts, the lords and lairds starved their preachers, but provided, by
+roofless aisles and unglazed windows, for the ventilation of the kirks.
+These men so bubbling over with gospel fervour were, in short, when it
+came to practice, traitors and hypocrites; nor did Knox spare their
+unseemly avarice. The cause of the poor, and of the preachers, lay near
+his heart, and no man was more insensible of the temptations of wealth.
+
+Lethington did not address the Parliament as Speaker till August 9. Never
+had such a Parliament met in Scotland. One hundred and six barons, not
+of the higher order, assembled; in 1567, when Mary was a prisoner and the
+Regent Moray held the assembly, not nearly so many came together, nor on
+any later occasion at this period. The newcomers claimed to sit "as of
+old custom"; it was a custom long disused, and not now restored to
+vitality.
+
+A supplication was presented by "the Barons, gentlemen, Burgesses, and
+others" to "the nobility and Estates" (of whom they do not seem to reckon
+themselves part, contrasting _themselves_ with "yourselves"). They
+reminded the Estates how they had asked the Regent "for freedom and
+liberty of conscience with a godly reformation of abuses." They now, by
+way of freedom of conscience, ask that Catholic doctrine "be abolished by
+Act of this Parliament, and punishment appointed for the transgressors."
+The Man of Sin has been distributing the whole patrimony of the Church,
+so that "the trew ministers," the schools, and the poor are kept out of
+their own. The actual clergy are all thieves and murderers and "rebels
+to the lawful authority of Emperors, Kings, and Princes." Against these
+charges (murder, rebellion, profligacy) they must answer now or be so
+reputed. In fact, it was the nobles, rather than the Pope, who had been
+robbing the Kirk, education, and the poor, which they continued to do, as
+Knox attests. But as to doctrine, the barons and ministers were asked to
+lay a Confession before the House. {172}
+
+It will be observed that, in the petition, "Emperors, Kings, and Princes"
+have "lawful authority" over the clergy. But that doctrine assumes,
+tacitly, that such rulers are of Knox's own opinions: the Kirk later
+resolutely stood up against kings like James VI., Charles I., and Charles
+II.
+
+The Confession was drawn up, presented, and ratified in a very few days:
+it was compiled in four. The Huguenots in Paris, in 1559, "established a
+record" by drawing up a Confession containing eighty articles in three
+days. Knox and his coadjutors were relatively deliberate. They aver
+that all points of belief necessary for salvation are contained in the
+canonical books of the Bible. Their interpretation pertains to no man or
+Church, but solely to "the spreit of God." That "spreit" must have
+illuminated the Kirk as it then existed in Scotland, "for we dare not
+receive and admit any interpretation which directly repugns to any
+principal point of our faith, to any other _plain_ text of Scripture, or
+yet unto the rule of charity."
+
+As we, the preachers of the Kirk then extant, were apostate monks or
+priests or artisans, about a dozen of us, in Scotland, mankind could not
+be expected to regard "our" interpretation, "our faith" as infallible.
+The framers of the Confession did not pretend that it was infallible.
+They request that, "if any man will note in this our Confession any
+article or sentence repugning to God's Holy Word," he will favour them
+with his criticism in writing. As Knox had announced six years earlier,
+that, "as touching the chief points of religion, I neither will give
+place to man or angel . . . teaching the contrair to that which ye have
+heard," a controversialist who thought it worth while to criticise the
+Confession must have deemed himself at least an archangel. Two years
+later, written criticism was offered, as we shall see, with a demand for
+a written reply. The critic escaped arrest by a lucky accident.
+
+The Confession, with practically no criticism or opposition, was passed
+en bloc on August 17. The Evangel is candidly stated to be "death to the
+sons of perdition," but the Confession is offered hopefully to "weak and
+infirm brethren." Not to enter into the higher theology, we learn that
+the sacraments can only be administered "by lawful ministers." We learn
+that _they_ are "such as are appointed to the preaching of the Word, or
+into whose mouth God has put some sermon of exhortation" and who are
+"lawfully chosen thereto by some Kirk." Later, we find that rather more
+than this, and rather more than some of the "trew ministeris" then had,
+is required.
+
+As the document reaches us, it appears to have been "mitigated" by
+Lethington and Wynram, the Vicar of Bray of the Reformation. They
+altered, according to the English resident, Randolph, "many words and
+sentences, which sounded to proceed rather of some evil conceived opinion
+than of any sound judgment." As Lethington certainly was not "a lawful
+minister," it is surprising if Knox yielded to his criticism.
+
+Lethington and Wynram also advised that the chapter on obedience to the
+sovereign power should be omitted, as "an unfit matter to be treated at
+this time," when it was not very obvious who the "magistrate" or
+authority might be. In this sense Randolph, Arran's English friend,
+wrote to Cecil. {174a} The chapter, however, was left standing. The
+sovereign, whether in empire, kingdom, duke, prince, or in free cities,
+was accepted as "of God's holy ordinance. To him chiefly pertains the
+reformation of the religion," which includes "the suppression of idolatry
+and superstition"; and Catholicism, we know, is idolatry. Superstition
+is less easily defined, but we cannot doubt that, in Knox's mind, the
+English liturgy was superstitious. {174b} To resist the Supreme Power,
+"doing that which pertains to his charge" (that is, suppressing
+Catholicism and superstition, among other things), is to resist God. It
+thus appears that the sovereign is not so supreme but that he must be
+disobeyed when his mandates clash with the doctrine of the Kirk. Thus
+the "magistrate" or "authority"--the State, in fact--is limited by the
+conscience of the Kirk, which may, if it pleases, detect idolatry or
+superstition in some act of secular policy. From this theory of the Kirk
+arose more than a century of unrest.
+
+On August 24, the practical consequences of the Confession were set forth
+in an Act, by which all hearers or celebrants of the Mass are doomed, for
+the first offence, to mere confiscation of all their goods and to
+corporal punishment: exile rewards a repetition of the offence: the third
+is punished by death. "Freedom from a persecuting spirit is one of the
+noblest features of Knox's character," says Laing; "neither led away by
+enthusiasm nor party feelings nor success, to retaliate the oppressions
+and atrocities that disgraced the adherents of popery." {174c} This is
+an amazing remark! Though we do not know that Knox was ever "accessory
+to the death of a single individual for his religious opinions," we do
+know that he had not the chance; the Government, at most, and years
+later, put one priest to death. But Knox always insisted, vainly, that
+idolaters "must die the death."
+
+To the carnal mind these rules appear to savour of harshness. The carnal
+mind would not gather exactly what the new penal laws were, if it
+confined its study to the learned Dr. M'Crie's Life of Knox. This
+erudite man, a pillar of the early Free Kirk, mildly remarks, "The
+Parliament . . . prohibited, under certain penalties, the celebration of
+the Mass." He leaves his readers to discover, in the Acts of Parliament
+and in Knox, what the "certain penalties" were. {175} The Act seems, as
+Knox says about the decrees of massacre in Deuteronomy, "rather to be
+written in a rage" than in a spirit of wisdom. The majority of the human
+beings then in Scotland probably never had the dispute between the old
+and new faiths placed before them lucidly and impartially. Very many of
+them had never heard the ideas of Geneva stated at all. "So late as
+1596," writes Dr. Hay Fleming, "there were above four hundred parishes,
+not reckoning Argyll and the Isles, which still lacked ministers." "The
+rarity of learned and godly men" of his own persuasion, is regretted by
+Knox in the Book of Discipline. Yet Catholics thus destitute of
+opportunity to know and recognise the Truth, are threatened with
+confiscation, exile, and death, if they cling to the only creed which
+they have been taught--after August 17, 1560. The death penalty was
+threatened often, by Scots Acts, for trifles. In this case the graduated
+scale of punishment shows that the threat is serious.
+
+This Act sounds insane, but the Convention was wise in its generation.
+Had it merely abolished the persecuting laws of the Church, Scotland
+might never have been Protestant. The old faith is infinitely more
+attractive to mankind than the new Presbyterian verity. A thing of slow
+and long evolution, the Church had assimilated and hallowed the world-old
+festivals of the year's changing seasons. She provided for the human
+love of recreation. Her Sundays were holidays, not composed of gloomy
+hours in stuffy or draughty kirks, under the current voice of the
+preacher. Her confessional enabled the burdened soul to lay down its
+weight in sacred privacy; her music, her ceremonies, the dim religious
+light of her fanes, naturally awaken religious emotion. While these
+things, with the native tendency to resist authority of any kind,
+appealed to the multitude, the position of the Church, in later years,
+recommended itself to many educated men in Scotland as more logical than
+that of Knox; and convert after convert, in the noble class, slipped over
+to Rome. The missionaries of the counter-Reformation, but for the
+persecuting Act, would have arrived in a Scotland which did not
+persecute, and the work of the Convention of 1560 might all have been
+undone, had not the stringent Act been passed.
+
+That Act apparently did not go so far as the preachers desired. Thus
+Archbishop Hamilton, writing to Archbishop Beaton in Paris, the day after
+the passing of the Act, says, "All these new preachers openly persuade
+the nobility in the pulpit, to put violent hands, and slay all churchmen
+that will not concur and adopt their opinion. They only reproach my Lord
+Duke" (the Archbishop's brother), "that he will not begin first, and
+either cause me to do as they do, or else to use rigour on me by
+slaughter, sword, or, at least, perpetual prison." {177a} It is probable
+that the Archbishop was well informed as to what the bigots were saying,
+though he is not likely to have "sat under" them; moreover, he would hear
+of their advice from his brother, the Duke, with whom he had just held a
+long conference. {177b} Lesley, Bishop of Ross, in his "History,"
+praises the humanity of the nobles, "for at this time few Catholics were
+banished, fewer were imprisoned, and none were executed." The nobles
+interfering, the threatened capital punishment was not carried out. Mob
+violence, oppression by Protestant landlords, Kirk censure, imprisonment,
+fine, and exile, did their work in suppressing idolatry and promoting
+hypocrisy.
+
+No doubt this grinding ceaseless daily process of enforcing Truth, did
+not go far enough for the great body of the brethren, especially the
+godly burgesses of the towns; indeed, as early as June 10, 1560, the
+Provost, Bailies, and Town Council of Edinburgh proclaimed that idolaters
+must instantly and publicly profess their conversion before the Ministers
+and Elders on the penalty of the pillory for the first offence,
+banishment from the town for the second, and death for the third. {177c}
+
+It must always be remembered that the threat of the death penalty often
+meant, in practice, very little. It was denounced, under Mary of Guise
+(February 9, 1559), against men who bullied priests, disturbed services,
+and ate meat in Lent. It was denounced against shooters of wild fowl,
+and against those, of either religious party, who broke the Proclamation
+of October 1561. Yet "nobody seemed one penny the worse" as regards
+their lives, though the punishments of fining and banishing were, on
+occasions, enforced against Catholics.
+
+We may marvel that, in the beginning, Catholic martyrs did not present
+themselves in crowds to the executioner. But even under the rule of Rome
+it would not be easy to find thirty cases of martyrs burned at the stake
+by "the bloudie Bishops," between the fifteenth century and the martyrdom
+of Myln. By 1560 the old Church was in such a hideous decline--with
+ruffianly men of quality in high spiritual places; with priests who did
+not attend Mass, and in many cases could not read; with churches left to
+go to ruin; with license so notable that, in one foundation, the priest
+is only forbidden to keep a _constant_ concubine--that faith had waxed
+cold, and no Catholic felt "ripe" for martyrdom. The elements of a
+League, as in France, did not exist. There was no fervently Catholic
+town population like that of Paris; no popular noble warriors, like the
+Ducs de Guise, to act as leaders. Thus Scotland, in this age, ran little
+risk of a religious civil war. No organised and armed faction existed to
+face the Congregation. When the counter-Reformation set in, many
+Catholics endured fines and exile with constancy.
+
+The theology of the Confession of Faith is, of course, Calvinistic. No
+"works" are, technically, "good" which are not the work of the Spirit of
+our Lord, dwelling in our hearts by faith. "Idolaters," and wicked
+people, not having that spirit, can do no good works. The blasphemy that
+"men who live according to equity and justice shall be saved, what
+religion soever they have professed," is to be abhorred. "The Kirk is
+invisible," consisting of the Elect, "who are known only to God." This
+gave much cause of controversy to Knox's Catholic opponents. "The notes
+of the true Church" are those of Calvin's. As to the Sacrament, though
+the elements be not the _natural_ body of Christ, yet "the faithful, in
+the right use of the Lord's Table, so do eat the body and drink the blood
+of the Lord Jesus that He remains in them and they in Him . . . in such
+conjunction with Christ Jesus as the natural man cannot comprehend."
+
+This is a highly sacramental and confessedly mystical doctrine, not less
+unintelligible to "the natural man" than the Catholic theory which Knox
+so strongly reprobated. Alas, that men called Christian have shed seas
+of blood over the precise sense of that touching command of our Lord,
+which, though admitted to be incomprehensible, they have yet endeavoured
+to comprehend and define!
+
+A serious task for Knox was to draw up, with others, a "Book of the
+Policy and Discipline of the Kirk," a task entrusted to them in April
+1560. In politics, till January 1561, the Lords hoped that they might
+induce Elizabeth (then entangled with Leicester, as Knox knew) to marry
+Arran, but whether "Glycerium" (as Bishop Jewel calls her) had already
+detected in "the saucy youth" "a half crazy fool," as Mr. Froude says, or
+not, she firmly refused. She much preferred Lord Robert Dudley, whose
+wife had just then broken her neck. The unfortunate Arran had fought
+resolutely, Knox tells us, by the side of Lord James, in the winter of
+1559, but he already, in 1560, showed strange moods, and later fell into
+sheer lunacy. In December died "the young King of France, husband to our
+Jezebel--unhappy Francis . . . he suddenly perished of a rotten ear . . .
+in that deaf ear that never would hear the truth of God" (December 5,
+1560). We have little of Knox's poetry, but he probably composed a
+translation, in verse, of a Latin poem indited by one of "the godly in
+France," whence he borrowed his phrase "a rotten ear" (aure putrefacta
+corruit).
+
+ "Last Francis, that unhappy child,
+ His father's footsteps following plain,
+ To Christ's crying deaf ears did yield,
+ A rotten ear was then his bane."
+
+The version is wonderfully close to the original Latin.
+
+Meanwhile, Francis was hardly cold before Arran wooed his idolatrous
+widow, Queen Mary, "with a gay gold ring." She did not respond
+favourably, and "the Earl bare it heavily in his heart, and more heavily
+than many would have wissed," says Knox, with whom Arran was on very
+confidential terms. Knox does not rebuke his passion for Jezebel. He
+himself "was in no small heaviness by reason of the late death of his
+dear bedfellow, Marjorie Bowes," of whom we know very little, except that
+she worked hard to lighten the labours of Knox's vast correspondence. He
+had, as he says, "great intelligence both with the churches and some of
+the Court of France," and was the first to receive news of the perilous
+illness of the young King. He carried the tidings to the Duke and Lord
+James, at the Hamilton house near Kirk o' Field, but would not name his
+informant. Then came the news of the King's death from Lord Grey de
+Wilton, at Berwick, and a Convention of the Nobles was proclaimed for
+January 15, 1561, to "peruse newly over again" the Book of Discipline.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII: KNOX AND THE BOOK OF DISCIPLINE
+
+
+This Book of Discipline, containing the model of the Kirk, had been seen
+by Randolph in August 1560, and he observed that its framers would not
+come into ecclesiastical conformity with England. They were "severe in
+that they profess, and loth to remit anything of that they have
+received." As the difference between the Genevan and Anglican models
+contributed so greatly to the Civil War under Charles I., the results may
+be regretted; Anglicans, by 1643, were looked on as "Baal worshippers" by
+the precise Scots.
+
+In February 1561, Randolph still thought that the Book of Discipline was
+rather in advance of what fallen human nature could endure. Idolatry, of
+course, was to be removed universally; thus the Queen, when she arrived,
+was constantly insulted about her religion. The Lawful Calling of
+Ministers was explained; we have already seen that a lawful minister is a
+preacher who can get a local set of men to recognise him as such. Knox,
+however, before his return to Scotland, had advised the brethren to be
+very careful in examining preachers before accepting them. The people
+and "every several Congregation" have a right to elect their minister,
+and, if they do not do so in six weeks, the Superintendent (a migratory
+official, in some ways superior to the clergy, but subject to periodical
+"trial" by the Assembly, who very soon became extinct), with his council,
+presents a man who is to be examined by persons of sound judgment, and
+next by the ministers and elders of the Kirk. Nobody is to be "violently
+intrused" on any congregation. Nothing is said about an university
+training; moral character is closely scrutinised. On the admission of a
+new minister, some other ministers should preach "touching the obedience
+which the Kirk owe to their ministers. . . . The people should be
+exhorted to reverence and honour their chosen ministers as the servants
+and ambassadors of the Lord Jesus, obeying the commandments which they
+speak from God's mouth and Book, even as they would obey God himself. . . . "
+{182}
+
+The practical result of this claim on the part of the preachers to
+implicit obedience was more than a century of turmoil, civil war,
+revolution, and reaction. The ministers constantly preached political
+sermons, and the State--the King and his advisers--was perpetually
+arraigned by them. To "reject" them, "and despise their ministry and
+exhortation" (as when Catholics were not put to death on their instance),
+was to "reject and despise" our Lord! If accused of libel, or treasonous
+libel, or "leasing making," in their sermons, they demanded to be judged
+by their brethren. Their brethren acquitting them, where was there any
+other judicature? These pretensions, with the right to inflict
+excommunication (in later practice to be followed by actual outlawry),
+were made, we saw, when there were not a dozen "true ministers" in the
+nascent Kirk, and, of course, the claims became more exorbitant when
+"true ministers" were reckoned by hundreds. No State could submit to
+such a clerical tyranny.
+
+People who only know modern Presbyterianism have no idea of the despotism
+which the Fathers of the Kirk tried, for more than a century, to enforce.
+The preachers sat in the seats of the Apostles; they had the gift of the
+Keys, the power to bind and loose. Yet the Book of Discipline permits no
+other ceremony, at the induction of these mystically gifted men, than
+"the public approbation of the people, and declaration of the chief
+minister"--later there was no "_chief_ minister," there was "parity" of
+ministers. Any other ceremony "we cannot approve"; "for albeit the
+Apostles used the imposition of hands, yet seeing the miracle is ceased,
+the using of the ceremony we judge it not necessary." The miracle had
+_not_ ceased, if it was true that "the commandments" issued in
+sermons--political sermons often--really deserved to be obeyed, as men
+"would obey God himself." C'est la le miracle! There could be no more
+amazing miracle than the infallibility of preachers! "The imposition of
+hands" was, twelve years later, restored; but as far as infallible
+sermons were concerned, the State agreed with Knox that "the miracle had
+ceased."
+
+The political sermons are sometimes justified by the analogy of modern
+discussion in the press. But leading articles do not pretend to be
+infallible, and editors do not assert a right to be obeyed by men, "even
+as they would obey God himself." The preachers were often right, often
+wrong: their sermons were good, or were silly; but what no State could
+endure was the claim of preachers to implicit obedience.
+
+The difficulty in finding really qualified ministers must be met by
+fervent prayer, and by compulsion on the part of the Estates of
+Parliament.
+
+Failing ministers, Readers, capable of reading the Common Prayers
+(presently it was Knox's book of these) and the Bible must be found; they
+may later be promoted to the ministry.
+
+Stationary ministers are to receive less sustenance than the migratory
+Superintendents; the sons of the preachers must be educated, the
+daughters "honestly dowered." The payment is mainly in "bolls" of meal
+and malt. The state of the poor, "fearful and horrible" to say, is one
+of universal contempt. Provision must be made for the aged and weak.
+Superintendents, after election, are to be examined by all the ministers
+of the province, and by three or more Superintendents. Other ceremonies
+"we cannot allow." In 1581, a Scottish Catholic, Burne, averred that
+Willock objected to ceremonies of Ordination, because people would say,
+if these are necessary, what minister ordained _you_? The query was hard
+to answer, so ceremonies of Ordination could not be allowed. The story
+was told to Burne, he says, by an eyewitness, who heard Willock.
+
+Every church must have a schoolmaster, who ought to be able to teach
+grammar and Latin. Education should be universal: poor children of
+ability must be enabled to pass on to the universities, through secondary
+schools. At St. Andrews the three colleges were to have separate
+functions, not clashing, and culminating in Divinity.
+
+Whence are the funds to be obtained? Here the authors bid "your Honours"
+"have respect to your poor brethren, the labourers of the ground, who by
+these cruel beasts, the papists, have been so oppressed . . . " They
+ought only to pay "reasonable teinds, that they may feel some benefit of
+Christ Jesus, now preached unto them. With grief of heart we hear that
+some gentlemen are now as cruel over their tenants as ever were the
+papists, requiring of them whatsoever they paid to the Church, so that
+the papistical tyranny shall only be changed into the tyranny of the
+landlord or laird." Every man should have his own teinds, or tithes;
+whereas, in fact, the great lay holders of tithes took them off other
+men's lands, a practice leading to many blood-feuds. The attempt of
+Charles I. to let "every man have his own tithes," and to provide the
+preachers with a living wage, was one of the causes of the distrust of
+the King which culminated in the great Civil War. But Knox could not
+"recover for the Church her liberty and freedom, and that only for relief
+of the poor." "_We speak not for ourselves_" the Book says, "but in
+favour of the poor, and the labourers defrauded . . . The Church is only
+bound to sustain and nourish her charges . . . to wit the Ministers of
+the Kirk, the Poor, and the teachers of youth." The funds must be taken
+out of the tithes, the chantries, colleges, chaplainries, and the
+temporalities of Bishops, Deans, and cathedrals generally.
+
+The ministers are to have their manses, and glebes of six acres; to this
+many of the Lords assented, except, oddly enough, those redoubtable
+leaders of the Congregation, Glencairn and Morton, with Marischal. All
+the part of the book which most commands our sympathy, the most Christian
+part of the book, regulating the disposition of the revenues of the
+fallen Church for the good of the poor, of education, and of the Kirk,
+remained a dead letter. The Duke, Arran, Lord James, and a few barons,
+including the ruffian Andrew Ker of Faldonside, with Glencairn and
+Ochiltree, signed it, in token of approval, but little came of it all.
+Lethington, probably, was the scoffer who styled these provisions "devout
+imaginations." The nobles and lairds, many of them, were converted, in
+matter of doctrine; in conduct they were the most avaricious, bloody, and
+treacherous of all the generations which had banded, revelled, robbed,
+and betrayed in Scotland.
+
+There is a point in this matter of the Kirk's claim to the patrimony of
+the old Church which perhaps is generally misunderstood. That point is
+luminous as regards the absolute disinterestedness of Knox and his
+companions, both in respect to themselves and their fellow-preachers. The
+Book of Discipline contains a sentence already quoted, conceived in what
+we may justly style a chivalrous contempt of wealth. "Your Honours may
+easily understand _that we speak not now for ourselves_, but in favour of
+the Poor, and the labourers defrauded . . . " Not having observed a
+point which "their Honours" were not the men to "understand easily,"
+Father Pollen writes, "the new preachers were loudly _claiming for
+themselves_ the property of the rivals whom they had displaced." {186}
+For themselves they were claiming a few merks, and a few bolls of meal, a
+decent subsistence. Mr. Taylor Innes points out that when, just before
+Darnley's murder, Mary offered "a considerable sum for the maintenance of
+the ministers," Knox and others said that, for their sustentation, they
+"craved of the auditors the things that were necessary, as of duty the
+pastors might justly crave of their flock. The General Assembly accepted
+the Queen's gift, but only of necessity; it was by their flock that they
+ought to be sustained. To take from others contrary to their will, whom
+they serve not, they judge it not their duty, nor yet reasonable."
+
+Among other things the preachers, who were left with a hard struggle for
+bare existence, introduced a rule of honour scarcely known to the barons
+and nobles, except to the bold Buccleuch who rejected an English pension
+from Henry VIII., with a sympathetic explosion of strong language. The
+preachers would not take gifts from England, even when offered by the
+supporters of their own line of policy.
+
+Knox's failure in his admirable attempt to secure the wealth of the old
+Church for national purposes was, as it happened, the secular salvation
+of the Kirk. Neither Catholicism nor Anglicanism could be fully
+introduced while the barons and nobles held the tithes and lands of the
+ancient Church. Possessing the wealth necessary to a Catholic or
+Anglican establishment, they were resolutely determined to cling to it,
+and oppose any Church except that which they starved. The bishops of
+James I., Charles I., and Charles II. were detested by the nobles. Rarely
+from them came any lordly gifts to learning and the Universities, while
+from the honourably poor ministers such gifts could not come. The
+Universities were founded by prelates of the old Church, doing their duty
+with their wealth.
+
+The arrangements for discipline were of the drastic nature which lingered
+into the days of Burns and later. The results may be studied in the
+records of Kirk Sessions; we have no reason to suppose that sexual
+morality was at all improved, on the whole, by "discipline," though it
+was easier to enforce "Sabbath observance." A graduated scale of
+admonitions led up to excommunication, if the subject was refractory, and
+to boycotting with civil penalties. The processes had no effect, or none
+that is visible, in checking lawlessness, robbery, feuds, and
+manslayings; and, after the Reformation, witchcraft increased to
+monstrous proportions, at least executions of people accused of
+witchcraft became very numerous, in spite of provision for sermons thrice
+a week, and for weekly discussions of the Word.
+
+The Book of Discipline, modelled on the Genevan scheme, and on that of
+A'Lasco for his London congregation, rather reminds us of the "Laws" of
+Plato. It was a well meant but impracticable ideal set before the
+country, and was least successful where it best deserved success. It
+certainly secured a thoroughly moral clergy, till, some twelve years
+later, the nobles again thrust licentious and murderous cadets into the
+best livings and the bastard bishoprics, before and during the Regency of
+Morton. Their example did not affect the genuine ministers, frugal God-
+fearing men.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV: KNOX AND QUEEN MARY, 1561
+
+
+In discussing the Book of Discipline, that great constructive effort
+towards the remaking of Scotland, we left Knox at the time of the death
+of his first wife. On December 20, 1560, he was one of some six
+ministers who, with more numerous lay representatives of districts, sat
+in the first General Assembly. They selected some new preachers, and
+decided that the church of Restalrig should be destroyed as a monument of
+idolatry. A fragment of it is standing yet, enclosing tombs of the wild
+Logans of Restalrig.
+
+The Assembly passed an Act against lawless love, and invited the Estates
+and Privy Council to "use sharp punishment" against some "idolaters,"
+including Eglintoun, Cassilis, and Quentin Kennedy, Abbot of Crosraguel,
+who disputed later against Knox, the Laird of Gala (a Scott) and others.
+
+In January 1561 a Convention of nobles and lairds at Edinburgh perused
+the Book of Discipline, and some signed it, platonically, while there was
+a dispute between the preachers and certain Catholics, including Lesley,
+later Bishop of Ross, an historian, but no better than a shifty and
+dangerous partisan of Mary Stuart. The Lord James was selected as an
+envoy to Mary, in France. He was bidden to refuse her even the private
+performance of the rites of her faith, but declined to go to that
+extremity; the question smouldered through five years. Randolph expected
+"a mad world" on Mary's return; he was not disappointed.
+
+Meanwhile the Catholic Earls of the North, of whom Huntly was the fickle
+leader, with Bothwell, "come to work what mischief he can," are accused
+by Knox of a design to seize Edinburgh, before the Parliament in May
+1561. Nothing was done, but there was a very violent Robin Hood riot;
+the magistrates were besieged and bullied, Knox declined to ask for the
+pardon of the brawlers, and, after excursions and alarms, "the whole
+multitude was excommunicate" until they appeased the Kirk. They may have
+borne the spiritual censure very unconcernedly.
+
+The Catholic Earls now sent Lesley to get Mary's ear before the Lord
+James could reach her. Lesley arrived on April 14, with the offer to
+raise 20,000 men, if Mary would land in Huntly's region. They would
+restore the Mass in their bounds, and Mary would be convoyed by Captain
+Cullen, a kinsman of Huntly, and already mentioned as the Captain of the
+Guards after Riccio's murder.
+
+It is said by Lesley that Mary had received, from the Regent, her mother,
+a description of the nobles of Scotland. If so, she knew Huntly for the
+ambitious traitor he was, a man peculiarly perfidious and self-seeking,
+with a son who might be thrust on her as a husband, if once she were in
+Huntly's hands. The Queen knew that he had forsaken her mother's cause;
+knew, perhaps, of his old attempt to betray Scotland to England, and she
+was aware that no northern Earl had raised his banner to defend the
+Church. She, therefore, came to no agreement with Lesley, but confided
+more in the Lord James, who arrived on the following day. Mary knew her
+brother's character fairly well, and, if Lesley says with truth that he
+now asked for, and was promised, the earldom of Moray, the omen was evil
+for Huntly, who practically held the lands. {191a} A bargain, on this
+showing, was initiated. Lord James was to have the earldom, and he got
+it; Mary was to have his support.
+
+Much has been said about Lord James's betrayal to Throckmorton of Mary's
+intentions, as revealed by her to himself. But what Lord James said to
+Throckmorton amounts to very little. I am not certain that, both in
+Paris with Throckmorton, and in London with Elizabeth and Cecil, he did
+not moot his plan for friendship between Mary and Elizabeth, and
+Elizabeth's recognition of Mary's rights as her heir. {191b} Lord James
+proposed all this to Elizabeth in a letter of August 6, 1561. {191c} He
+had certainly discussed this admirable scheme with Lord Robert Dudley at
+Court, in May 1561, on his return from France. {191d} Nothing could be
+more statesmanlike and less treacherous.
+
+Meanwhile (May 27, 1561) the brethren presented a supplication to the
+Parliament, with clauses, which, if conceded, would have secured the
+stipends of the preachers. The prayers were granted, in promise, and a
+great deal of church wrecking was conscientiously done; the Lord James,
+on his return, paid particular attention to idolatry in his hoped for
+earldom, but the preachers were not better paid.
+
+Meanwhile the Protestants looked forward to the Queen's arrival with
+great searchings of heart. She had not ratified the treaty of Leith, but
+already Cardinal Guise hoped that she and Elizabeth would live in
+concord, and heard that Mary ceded all claims to the English throne in
+return for Elizabeth's promise to declare her the heir, if she herself
+died childless (August 21). {192}
+
+Knox, who had not loved Mary of Guise, was not likely to think well of
+her daughter. Mary, again, knew Knox as the chief agitator in the
+tumults that embittered her mother's last year, and shortened her life.
+In France she had threatened to deal with him severely, ignorant of his
+power and her own weakness. She could not be aware that Knox had
+suggested to Cecil opposition to her succession to the throne on the
+ground of her sex. Knox uttered his forebodings of the Queen's future:
+they were as veracious as if he had really been a prophet. But he was,
+to an extent which can only be guessed, one of the causes of the
+fulfilment of his own predictions. To attack publicly, from the pulpit,
+the creed and conduct of a girl of spirit; to provoke cruel insults to
+her priests whom she could not defend; was apt to cause, at last, in
+great measure that wild revolt of temper which drove Mary to her doom.
+Her health suffered frequently from the attempt to bear with a smiling
+face such insults as no European princess, least of all Elizabeth, would
+have endured for an hour. There is a limit to patience, and before Mary
+passed that limit, Randolph and Lethington saw, and feebly deplored, the
+amenities of the preacher whom men permitted to "rule the roast." "Ten
+thousand swords" do not leap from their scabbards to protect either the
+girl Mary Stuart or the woman Marie Antoinette.
+
+Not that natural indignation was dead, but it ended in words. People
+said, "The Queen's Mass and her priests will we maintain; this hand and
+this rapier will fight in their defence." So men bragged, as Knox
+reports, {193a} but when after Mary's arrival priests were beaten or
+pilloried, not a hand stirred to defend them, not a rapier was drawn. The
+Queen might be as safely as she was deeply insulted through her faith.
+She was not at this time devoutly ardent in her creed, though she often
+professed her resolution to abide in it. Gentleness might conceivably
+have led her even to adopt the Anglican faith, or so it was deemed by
+some observers, but insolence and outrage had another effect on her
+temper.
+
+Mary landed at Leith in a thick fog on August 19, 1561. She was now in a
+country where she lay under sentence of death as an idolater. Her
+continued existence was illegal. With her came Mary Seton, Mary Beaton,
+Mary Livingstone, and Mary Fleming, the comrades of her childhood; and
+her uncles, the Duc d'Aumale, Francis de Lorraine, and the noisy Marquis
+d'Elboeuf. She was not very welcome. As late as August 9, Randolph
+reports that her brother, Lord James, Lethington, and Morton "wish, as
+you do, she might be stayed yet for a space, and if it were not for their
+obedience sake, some of them care not though they never see her face."
+{193b} None the less, on June 8 Lord James tells Mary that he had given
+orders for her palace to be prepared by the end of July. He informs her
+that "many" hope that she will never come home. Nothing is "so necessary
+. . . as your Majesty's own presence"; and he hopes she will arrive
+punctually. If she cannot come she should send her commission to some of
+her Protestant advisers, by no means including the Archbishop of St.
+Andrews (Hamilton), with whom he will never work. It is not easy to see
+why Lord James should have wished that Mary "might be stayed," unless he
+merely dreaded her arrival while Elizabeth was in a bad temper. His
+letter to Elizabeth of August 6 is incompatible with treachery on his
+part. "Mr. Knox is determined to abide the uttermost, and others will
+not leave him till God have taken his life and theirs together." Of what
+were these heroes afraid? A "familiar," a witch, of Lady Huntly's
+predicted that the Queen would never arrive. "If false, I would she were
+burned for a witch," adds honest Randolph. Lethington deemed his "own
+danger not least." Two galleys full of ladies are not so alarming; did
+these men, practically hinting that English ships should stop their
+Queen, think that the Catholics in Scotland were too strong for them?
+
+Not a noble was present to meet Mary when in the fog and filth of Leith
+she touched Scottish soil, except her natural brother, Lord Robert. {194}
+The rest soon gathered with faces of welcome. She met some Robin Hood
+rioters who lay under the law, and pardoned these roisterers (with their
+excommunication could she interfere?), because, says Knox, she was
+instructed that they had acted "in despite of the religion." Their
+festival had been forbidden under the older religion, as it happens, in
+1555, and was again forbidden later by Mary herself.
+
+All was mirth till Sunday, when the Queen's French priest celebrated Mass
+in her own chapel before herself, her three uncles, and Montrose. The
+godly called for the priest's blood, but Lord James kept the door, and
+his brothers protected the priest. Disappointed of blood, "the godly
+departed with great grief of heart," collecting in crowds round Holyrood
+in the afternoon. Next day the Council proclaimed that, till the Estates
+assembled and deliberated, no innovation should be made in the religion
+"publicly and universally standing." The Queen's servants and others
+from France must not be molested--on pain of death, the usual empty
+threat. They were assaulted, and nobody was punished for the offence.
+Arran alone made a protest, probably written by Knox. Who but Knox could
+have written that the Mass is "much more abominable and odious in the
+sight of God" than murder! Many an honest brother was conspicuously of
+the opinion which Arran's protest assigned to Omnipotence. Next Sunday
+Knox "thundered," and later regretted that "I did not that I might have
+done" (caused an armed struggle?), . . . "for God had given unto me
+credit with many, who would have put into execution God's judgments if I
+would only have consented thereto." Mary might have gone the way of
+Jezebel and Athaliah but for the mistaken lenity of Knox, who later
+"asked God's mercy" for not being more vehement. In fact, he rather
+worked "to slokin that fervency." {195} Let us hope that he is forgiven,
+especially as Randolph reports him extremely vehement in the pulpit. His
+repentance was publicly expressed shortly before the murder of Riccio.
+(In December 1565, probably, when the Kirk ordered the week's fast that,
+as it chanced, heralded Riccio's doom.) Privately to Cecil, on October
+7, 1561, he uttered his regret that he had been so deficient in zeal.
+Cecil had been recommending moderation. {196}
+
+On August 26, Randolph, after describing the intimidation of the priest,
+says "John Knox thundereth out of the pulpit, so that I fear nothing so
+much as that one day he will mar all. He ruleth the roast, and of him
+all men stand in fear." In public at least he did not allay the wrath of
+the brethren.
+
+On August 26, or on September 2, Knox had an interview with the Queen,
+and made her weep. Randolph doubted whether this was from anger or from
+grief. Knox gives Mary's observations in the briefest summary; his own
+at great length, so that it is not easy to know how their reasoning
+really sped. Her charges were his authorship of the "Monstrous Regiment
+of Women"; that he caused great sedition and slaughter in England; and
+that he was accused of doing what he did by necromancy. The rest is
+summed up in "&c."
+
+He stood to his guns about the "Monstrous Regiment," and generally took
+the line that he merely preached against "the vanity of the papistical
+religion" and the deceit, pride, and tyranny of "that Roman Antichrist."
+If one wishes to convert a young princess, bred in the Catholic faith, it
+is not judicious to begin by abusing the Pope. This too much resembles
+the arbitrary and violent method of Peter in The Tale of a Tub (by Dr.
+Jonathan Swift); such, however, was the method of Knox.
+
+Mary asking if he denied her "just authority," Knox said that he was as
+well content to live under her as Paul under Nero. This, again, can
+hardly be called an agreeable historical parallel! Knox hoped that he
+would not hurt her or her authority "so long as ye defile not your hands
+with the blood of the saints of God," as if Mary was panting to
+distinguish herself in that way. His hope was unfulfilled. No "saints"
+suffered, but he ceased not to trouble.
+
+Knox also said that if he had wanted "to trouble your estate because you
+are a woman, I might have chosen a time more convenient for that purpose
+than I can do now, when your own presence is in the realm." He _had_, in
+fact, chosen the convenient time in his letter to Cecil, already quoted
+(July 19, 1559), but he had not succeeded in his plan. He said that
+nobody could _prove_ that the question of discarding Mary, on the ground
+of her sex, "was at any time moved in public or in secret." Nobody could
+_prove_ it, for nobody could publish his letter to Cecil. Probably he
+had this in his mind. He did not say that the thing had not happened,
+only that "he was assured that neither Protestant nor papist shall be
+able to prove that any such question was at any time moved, either in
+public or in secret." {197}
+
+He denied that he had caused sedition in England, nor do we know what
+Mary meant by this charge. His appeals, from abroad, to a Phinehas or
+Jehu had not been answered. As to magic, he always preached against the
+practice.
+
+Mary then said that Knox persuaded the people to use religion not allowed
+by their princes. He justified himself by biblical precedents, to which
+she replied that Daniel and Abraham did not resort to the sword. They
+had not the chance, he answered, adding that subjects might resist a
+prince who exceeded his bounds, as sons may confine a maniac father.
+
+The Queen was long silent, and then said, "I perceive my subjects shall
+obey you and not me." Knox said that all should be subject unto God and
+His Church; and Mary frankly replied, "I will defend the Church of Rome,
+for I think that it is the true Church of God." She could not defend it!
+Knox answered with his wonted urbanity, that the Church of Rome was a
+harlot, addicted to "all kinds of fornication."
+
+He was so accustomed to this sort of rhetoric that he did not deem it out
+of place on this occasion. His admirers, familiar with his style, forget
+its necessary effect on "a young princess unpersuaded," as Lethington put
+it. Mary said that her conscience was otherwise minded, but Knox knew
+that all consciences of "man or angel" were wrong which did not agree
+with his own. The Queen had to confess that in argument as to the
+unscriptural character of the Mass, he was "owre sair" for her. He said
+that he wished she would "hear the matter reasoned to the end." She may
+have desired that very thing: "Ye may get that sooner than ye believe,"
+she said; but Knox expressed his disbelief that he would ever get it.
+Papists would never argue except when "they were both judge and party."
+Knox himself never answered Ninian Winzet, who, while printing his
+polemic, was sought for by the police of the period, and just managed to
+escape.
+
+There was, however, a champion who, on November 19, challenged Knox and
+the other preachers to a discussion, either orally or by interchange of
+letters. This was Mary's own chaplain, Rene Benoit. Mary probably knew
+that he was about to offer to meet "the most learned John Knox and other
+most erudite men, called ministers"; it is thus that Rene addresses them
+in his "Epistle" of November 19.
+
+He implores them not to be led into heresy by love of popularity or of
+wealth; neither of which advantages the preachers enjoyed, for they were
+detested by loose livers, and were nearly starved. Benoit's little
+challenge, or rather request for discussion, is a model of courtesy. Knox
+did not meet him in argument, as far as we are aware; but in 1562,
+Fergusson, minister of Dunfermline, replied in a tract full of
+scurrility. One quite unmentionable word occurs, and "impudent lie,"
+"impudent and shameless shavelings," "Baal's chaplains that eat at
+Jezebel's table," "pestilent papistry," "abominable mass," "idol
+Bishops," "we Christians and you Papists," and parallels between Benoit
+and "an idolatrous priest of Bethel," between Mary and Jezebel are among
+the amenities of this meek servant of Christ in Dunfermline.
+
+Benoit presently returned to France, and later was confessor to Henri IV.
+The discussion which Mary anticipated never occurred, though her champion
+was ready. Knox does not refer to this affair in his "History," as far
+as I am aware. {199} Was Rene the priest whom the brethren menaced and
+occasionally assaulted?
+
+Considering her chaplain's offer, it seems not unlikely that Mary was
+ready to listen to reasoning, but to call the Pope "Antichrist," and the
+Church "a harlot," is not argument. Knox ended his discourse by wishing
+the Queen as blessed in Scotland as Deborah was in Israel. The mere fact
+that Mary spoke with him "makes the Papists doubt what shall come of the
+world," {200a} says Randolph; and indeed nobody knows what possibly might
+have come, had Knox been sweetly reasonable. But he told his friends
+that, if he was not mistaken, she had "a proud mind, a crafty wit, and an
+indurate heart against God and His truth." She showed none of these
+qualities in the conversation as described by himself; but her part in it
+is mainly that of a listener who returns not railing with railing.
+
+Knox was going about to destroy the scheme of les politiques, Randolph,
+Lethington, and the Lord James. They desired peace and amity with
+England, and the two Scots, at least, hoped to secure these as the
+Cardinal Guise did, by Mary's renouncing all present claim to the English
+throne, in return for recognition as heir, if Elizabeth died without
+issue. Elizabeth, as we know her, would never have granted these terms,
+but Mary's ministers, Lethington then in England, Lord James at home,
+tried to hope. {200b} Lord James had heard Mary's outburst to Knox about
+defending her own insulted Church, but he was not nervously afraid that
+she would take to dipping her hands in the blood of the saints. Neither
+he nor Lethington could revert to the old faith; they had pecuniary
+reasons, as well as convictions, which made that impossible.
+
+Lethington, returned to Edinburgh (October 25), spoke his mind to Cecil.
+"The Queen behaves herself . . . as reasonably as we can require: if
+anything be amiss the fault is rather in ourselves. You know the
+vehemency of Mr. Knox's spirit which cannot be bridled, and yet doth
+utter sometimes such sentences as cannot easily be digested by a weak
+stomach. I would wish he should deal with her more gently, being a young
+princess unpersuaded. . . . Surely in her comporting with him she
+declares a wisdom far exceeding her age." {201a} Vituperation is not
+argument, and gentleness is not unchristian. St. Paul did not revile the
+gods of Felix and Festus.
+
+But, prior to these utterances of October, the brethren had been baiting
+Mary. On her public entry (which Knox misdates by a month) her idolatry
+was rebuked by a pageant of Korah, Dathan, and Abiram. Huntly managed to
+stop a burning in effigy of a priest at the Mass. They never could cease
+from insulting the Queen in the tenderest point. The magistrates next
+coupled "mess-mongers" with notorious drunkards and adulterers, "and such
+filthy persons," in a proclamation, so the Provost and Bailies were
+"warded" (Knox says) in the Tolbooth. Knox blamed Lethington and Lord
+James, in a letter to Cecil; {201b} in his "History" he says, "God be
+merciful to some of our own." {201c}
+
+The Queen herself, as a Papist, was clearly insulted in the proclamation.
+Moray and Lethington, the latter touched by her "readiness to hear," and
+her gentleness in the face of Protestant brutalities; the former,
+perhaps, lured by the hope of obtaining, as the price of his alliance,
+the earldom of Moray, were by the end of October still attempting to
+secure amity between her and Elizabeth, and to hope for the best, rather
+than drive the Queen wild by eternal taunts and menaces. The preachers
+denounced her rites at Hallowmass (All Saints), and a servant of her
+brother, Lord Robert, beat a priest; but men actually doubted whether
+subjects might interfere between the Queen and her religion. There was a
+discussion on this point between the preachers and the nobles, and the
+Church in Geneva (Calvin) was to be consulted. Knox offered to write,
+but Lethington said that he would write, as much stood on the
+"information"; that is, on the manner of stating the question. Lethington
+did not know, and Knox does not tell us in his "History" that he had
+himself, a week earlier, put the matter before Calvin in his own way.
+Even Lord James, he says to Calvin, though the Abdiel of godliness, "is
+afraid to overthrow that idol by violence"--idolum illud missalicum.
+{202}
+
+Knox's letter to Calvin represents the Queen as alleging that he has
+already answered the question, declaring that Knox's party has no right
+to interfere with the Royal mass. This rumour Knox disbelieves. He adds
+that Arran would have written, but was absent.
+
+Apparently Arran did write to Calvin, anonymously, and dating from
+London, November 18, 1561. The letter, really from Scotland, is in
+French. The writer acknowledges the receipt, about August 20, of an
+encouraging epistle from Calvin. He repeats Knox's statements, in the
+main, and presses for a speedy reply. He says that he goes seldom to
+Court, both on account of "that idol," and because "sobriety and virtue"
+have been exiled. {203a} As Arran himself "is known to have had company
+of a good handsome wench, a merchant's daughter," which led to a riot
+with Bothwell, described by Randolph (December 27, 1561), his own "virtue
+and sobriety" are not conspicuous. {203b} He was in Edinburgh on
+November 15-19, and the London date of his anonymous letter is a blind.
+{203c}
+
+It does not appear that Calvin replied to Knox, and to the anonymous
+correspondent, in whom I venture to detect Arran; or, if he answered, his
+letter was probably unfavourable to Knox, as we shall argue when the
+subject later presents itself.
+
+Finally--"the votes of the Lords prevailed against the ministers"; the
+Queen was allowed her Mass, but Lethington, a minister of the Queen, did
+not consult a foreigner as to the rights of her subjects against her
+creed.
+
+The lenity of Lord James was of sudden growth. At Stirling he and Argyll
+had gallantly caused the priests to leave the choir "with broken heads
+and bloody ears," the Queen weeping. So Randolph reported to Cecil
+(September 24).
+
+Why her brother, foremost to insult Mary and her faith, unless Randolph
+errs, in September, took her part in a few weeks, we do not know. At
+Perth, Mary was again offended, and suffered in health by reason of the
+pageants; "they did too plainly condemn the errors of the world. . . . I
+hear she is troubled with such sudden passions after any great unkindness
+or grief of mind," says Randolph. She was seldom free from such godly
+chastisements. At Perth, however, some one gave her a cross of five
+diamonds with pendant pearls.
+
+Meanwhile the statesmen did not obey the Ministers as men ought to obey
+God: a claim not easily granted by carnal politicians.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV: KNOX AND QUEEN MARY (continued), 1561-1564
+
+
+Had Mary been a mere high-tempered and high-spirited girl, easily harmed
+in health by insults to herself and her creed, she might now have turned
+for support to Huntly, Cassilis, Montrose, and the other Earls who were
+Catholic or "unpersuaded." Her great-grandson, Charles II., when as
+young as she now was, did make the "Start"--the schoolboy attempt to run
+away from the Presbyterians to the loyalists of the North. But Mary had
+more self-control.
+
+The artful Randolph found himself as hardly put to it now, in diplomacy,
+as the Cardinal's murderers had done, in war, when they met the
+scientific soldier, Strozzi. "The trade is now clean cut off from me,"
+wrote Randolph (October 27); "I have to traffic now with other merchants
+than before. They know the value of their wares, and in all places how
+the market goeth. . . . Whatsoever policy is in all the chief and best
+practised heads of France; whatsoever craft, falsehood, or deceit is in
+all the subtle brains of Scotland," said the unscrupulous agent, "is
+either fresh in this woman's memory, or she can bring it out with a wet
+finger." {205}
+
+Mary, in fact, was in the hands of Lethington (a pensioner of Elizabeth)
+and of Lord James: "subtle brains" enough. _She_ was the "merchandise,"
+and Lethington and Lord James wished to make Elizabeth acknowledge the
+Scottish Queen as her successor, the alternative being to seek her price
+as a wife for an European prince. An "union of hearts" with England
+might conceivably mean Mary's acceptance of the Anglican faith. It is
+not a kind thing to say about Mary, but I suspect that, if assured of the
+English succession, she might have gone over to the Prayer Book. In the
+first months of her English captivity (July 1568) Mary again dallied with
+the idea of conversion, for the sake of freedom. She told the Spanish
+Ambassador that "she would sooner be murdered," but if she could have
+struck her bargain with Elizabeth, I doubt that she would have chosen the
+Prayer Book rather than the dagger or the bowl. {206a} Her conversion
+would have been bitterness as of wormwood to Knox. In his eyes
+Anglicanism was "a bastard religion," "a mingle-mangle now commanded in
+your kirks." "Peculiar services appointed for Saints' days, diverse
+Collects as they falsely call them in remembrance of this or that Saint .
+. . are in my conscience no small portion of papistical superstition."
+{206b} "Crossing in Baptism is a diabolical invention; kneeling at the
+Lord's table, mummelling," (uttering the responses, apparently), "or
+singing of the Litany." All these practices are "diabolical inventions,"
+in Knox's candid opinion, "with Mr. Parson's pattering of his constrained
+prayers, and with the mass-munging of Mr. Vicar, and of his wicked
+companions . . ." (A blank in the MS.) "Your Ministers, before for the
+most part, were none of Christ's ministers, but mass-mumming priests." He
+appears to speak of the Anglican Church as it was under Edward VI. (To
+Mrs. Locke, Dieppe, April 6, 1559.) {207a} As Elizabeth brought in
+"cross and candle," her Church must have been odious to our Reformer.
+Calvin had regarded the "silly things" in our Prayer Book as "endurable,"
+not so Knox. Before he came back to Scotland, the Reformers were content
+with the English Prayer Book. By rejecting it, Knox and his allies
+disunited Scotland and England.
+
+Knox's friend Arran was threatening to stir up the Congregation for the
+purpose of securing him in the revenues of three abbeys, including St.
+Andrews, of which Lord James was Prior. The extremists raised the
+question, "whether the Queen, being an idolater, may be obeyed in all
+civil and political actions." {207b}
+
+Knox later made Chatelherault promise this obedience; what his views were
+in November 1561 we know not. Lord James was already distrusted by his
+old godly friends; it was thought he would receive what he had long
+desired, the Earldom of Moray (November 11, 1561), and the precise
+professors meditated a fresh revolution. "It must yet come to a new
+day," they said. {207c} Those about Arran were discontented, and nobody
+was more in his confidence than Knox, but at this time Arran was absent
+from Edinburgh; was at St. Andrews.
+
+Meanwhile, at Court, "the ladies are merry, dancing, lusty, and fair,"
+wrote Randolph, who flirted with Mary Beaton (November 18); and long
+afterwards, in 1578, when she was Lady Boyne, spoke of her as "a very
+dear friend." Knox complains that the girls danced when they "got the
+house alone"; not a public offence! He had his intelligencers in the
+palace.
+
+There was, on November 16, a panic in the unguarded palace: {208a} "the
+poor damsels were left alone," while men hid in fear of nobody knew what,
+except a rumour that Arran was coming, with his congregational friends,
+"to take away the Queen." The story was perhaps a fable, but Arran had
+been uttering threats. Mary, however, expected to be secured by an
+alliance with Elizabeth. "The accord between the two Queens will quite
+overthrow them" (the Bishops), "and they say plainly that she cannot
+return a true Christian woman," writes Randolph. {208b}
+
+Lethington and Randolph both suspected that if Mary abandoned idolatry,
+it would be after conference with Elizabeth, and rather as being
+converted by that fair theologian than as compelled by her subjects.
+Unhappily Elizabeth never would meet Mary, who, for all that we know,
+might at this hour have adopted the Anglican via media, despite her
+protests to Knox and to the Pope of her fidelity to Rome. Like Henri
+IV., she may at this time have been capable of preferring a crown--that
+of England--to a dogma. Her Mass, Randolph wrote, "is rather for despite
+than devotion, for those that use it care not a straw for it, and jest
+sometimes against it." {208c}
+
+Randolph, at this juncture, reminded Mary that advisers of the Catholic
+party had prevented James V. from meeting Henry VIII. She answered,
+"Something is reserved for us that was not then," possibly hinting at her
+conversion. Lord James shared the hopes of Lethington and Randolph. "The
+Papists storm, thinking the meeting of the queens will overthrow Mass and
+all."
+
+The Ministers of Mary, les politiques, indulged in dreams equally
+distasteful to the Catholics and to the more precise of the godly; dreams
+that came through the Ivory Gate; with pictures of the island united, and
+free from the despotism of Giant Pope and Giant Presbyter. {209} A
+schism between the brethren and their old leaders and advisers, Lord
+James and Lethington, was the result. At the General Assembly of
+December 1561, the split was manifest. The parties exchanged
+recriminations, and there was even question of the legality of such
+conventions as the General Assembly. Lethington asked whether the Queen
+"allowed" the gathering. Knox (apparently) replied, "Take from us the
+freedom of Assemblies, and take from us the Evangel . . ." He defended
+them as necessary for order among the preachers; but the objection, of
+course, was to their political interferences. The question was to be
+settled for Cromwell in his usual way, with a handful of hussars. It was
+now determined that the Queen might send Commissioners to the Assembly to
+represent her interests.
+
+The plea of the godly that Mary should ratify the Book of Discipline was
+countered by the scoffs of Lethington. He and his brothers ever
+tormented Knox by persiflage. Still the preachers must be supported, and
+to that end, by a singular compromise, the Crown assumed dominion over
+the property of the old Church, a proceeding which Mary, if a good
+Catholic, could not have sanctioned. The higher clergy retained
+two-thirds of their benefices, and the other third was to be divided
+between the preachers and the Queen. Vested rights, those of the
+prelates, and the interests of the nobles to whom, in the troubles, they
+had feued parts of their property, were thus secured; while the preachers
+were put off with a humble portion. Among the abbeys, that of St.
+Andrews, held by the good Lord James, was one of the richest. He appears
+to have retained all the wealth, for, as Bishop Keith says, "the grand
+gulf that swallowed up the whole extent of the thirds were pensions given
+gratis by the Queen to those about the Court . . . of which last the Earl
+of Moray was always sure to obtain the thirds of his priories of St.
+Andrews and Pittenweem." In all, the whole reformed clergy received
+annually (but not in 1565-66) 24,231 pounds, 17s. 7d. Scots, while Knox
+and four superintendents got a few chalders of wheat and "bear." In
+1568, when Mary had fallen, a gift of 333 pounds, 6s. 8d. was made to
+Knox from the fund, about a seventh of the money revenue of the Abbey of
+St. Andrews. {210} Nobody can accuse Knox of enriching himself by the
+Revolution. "In the stool of Edinburgh," he declared that two parts were
+being given to the devil, "and the third must be divided between God and
+the devil," between the preachers and the Queen, and the Earl of Moray,
+among others. The eminently godly Laird of Pitarro had the office of
+paying the preachers, in which he was so niggardly that the proverb ran,
+"The good Laird of Pitarro was an earnest professor of Christ, but the
+great devil receive the Comptroller."
+
+It was argued that "many Lords have not so much to spend" as the
+preachers; and this was not denied (if the preachers were paid), but it
+was said the Lords had other industries whereby they might eke out their
+revenues. Many preachers, then or later, were driven also to other
+industries, such as keeping public-houses. {211a} Knox, at this period,
+gracefully writes of Mary, "we call her not a hoore." When she scattered
+his party after Riccio's murder, he went the full length of the
+expression, in his "History."
+
+"Simplicity," says Thucydides, "is no small part of a noble nature," and
+Knox was now to show simplicity in conduct, and in his narrative of a
+very curious adventure.
+
+The Hamiltons had taken little but loss by joining the Congregation.
+Arran could not recover his claims, on whatever they were founded, over
+the wealth of St. Andrews and Dunfermline. Chatelherault feared that
+Mary would deprive him of his place of refuge, the castle of Dumbarton,
+to which he confessed that his right was "none," beyond a verbal promise
+of a nineteen years "farm" (when given we know not), from Mary of Guise.
+{211b} Randolph began to believe that Arran really had contemplated a
+raid on Mary at Holyrood, where she had no guards. {211c} "Why," asked
+Arran, "was it not as easy to take her out of the Abbey, as once it had
+been intended to do with her mother?"
+
+Here were elements of trouble, and Knox adds that, according to the
+servants of Chatelherault, Huntly and the Hamiltons devised to slay Lord
+James, who in January received the Earldom of Moray, but bore the title
+of Earl of Mar, which earldom he held for a brief space. {212a} Huntly
+had claims on Moray, and hence hated Lord James. Arran was openly
+sending messengers to France; "his councils are too patent." Randolph at
+the same time found Knox and the preachers "as wilfull as learned, which
+heartily I lament" (January 30). The rumour that Mary had been persuaded
+by the Cardinal to turn Anglican "makes them run almost wild" (February
+12). {212b} If the Queen were an Anglican the new Kirk would be in an
+ill way. Arran still sent retainers to France, and was reported to speak
+ill of Mary (February 21), but the Duke tried to win Randolph to a
+marriage between Arran and the Queen. The intended bridegroom lay abed
+for a week, "tormented by imaginations," but was contented, not to be
+reconciled with Bothwell, but to pass his misdeeds in "oblivion," {212c}
+as he declared to the Privy Council (February 20).
+
+In these threatening circumstances Bothwell made Knox's friend, Barron, a
+rich burgess who "financed" the Earl, introduce him to our Reformer. The
+Earl explained that his feud with Arran was very expensive; he had for
+his safety to keep "a number of wicked and unprofitable men about
+him"--his "Lambs," the Ormistouns, {213} young Hay of Tala, probably, and
+the rest. He therefore repented, and wished to be reconciled to Arran.
+Knox, pleased at being a reconciler where nobler men had failed, and
+moved, after long refusal, by the entreaties of the godly, as he tells
+Mrs. Locke, advised Bothwell first to be reconciled to God. So Bothwell
+presently was, going to sermon for that very purpose. Knox promised to
+approach Arran, and Bothwell, with his usual impudence, chose that moment
+to seize an old pupil of Knox's, the young Laird of Ormiston (Cockburn).
+The young laird, to be sure, had fired a pistol at his enemy. However,
+Bothwell repented of this lapse, and at the Hamilton's great house of
+Kirk-of-Field, Knox made him and Arran friends. Next day they went to
+sermon together; on the following day they visited Chatelherault at
+Kinneil, some twelve miles from Edinburgh. But on the ensuing day (March
+26) came the wild end of the reconciliation.
+
+Knox had delivered his daily sermon, and was engaged with his vast
+correspondence, when Arran was announced, with an advocate and the town
+clerk. Arran began a conference with tears, said that he was betrayed,
+and told his tale. Bothwell had informed him that he would seize the
+Queen, put her in Dumbarton, kill her misguiders, the "Earl of Moray"
+(Mar, Lord James), Lethington, and others, "and so shall he and I rule
+all."
+
+But Arran believed Bothwell really intended to accuse him of treason, or
+knowledge of treason, so he meant to write to Mary and Mar. Knox asked
+whether he had assented to the plot, and advised him to be silent.
+Probably he saw that Arran was distraught, and did not credit his story.
+But Arran said that Bothwell (as he had once done before, in 1559) would
+challenge him to a judicial combat--such challenges were still common,
+but never led to a fight. He then walked off with his legal advisers,
+and wrote to Mary at Falkland. {214a} If Arran went mad, he went mad
+"with advice of counsel." There had come the chance of "a new day,"
+which the extremists desired, but its dawn was inauspicious.
+
+Arran rode to his father's house of Kinneil, where, either because he was
+insane, or because there really was a Bothwell-Hamilton plot, he was
+locked up in a room high above the ground. He let himself down from the
+window, reached Halyards (a place of Kirkcaldy of Grange), and was thence
+taken by Mar (whom Knox appears to have warned) to the Queen at Falkland.
+Bothwell and Gawain Hamilton were also put in ward there. Randolph gives
+(March 31) a similar account, but believed that there really was a plot,
+which Arran denied even before he arrived at Falkland. Bothwell came to
+purge himself, but "was found guilty on his own confession on some
+points." {214b}
+
+The Queen now went to St. Andrews, where the suspects were placed in the
+Castle. Arran wavered, accusing Mar's mother of witchcraft. Mary was
+"not a little offended with Bothwell to whom she has been so good."
+Randolph (April 7) continued to think that Arran should be decapitated.
+He and Bothwell were kept in ward, and his father, the Duke, was advised
+to give up Dumbarton to the Crown, which he did. {215a} This was about
+April 23. Knox makes a grievance of the surrender; the Castle, he says,
+was by treaty to be in the Duke's hands till the Queen had lawful issue.
+{215b} Chatelherault himself, as we said, told Randolph that he had no
+right in the place, beyond a verbal and undated promise of the late
+Regent.
+
+Knox now again illustrates his own historical methods. Mary, riding
+between Falkland and Lochleven, fell, was hurt, and when Randolph wrote
+from Edinburgh on May 11, was not expected there for two or three days.
+But Knox reports that, on her return from Fife to Edinburgh, she danced
+excessively till after midnight, because she had received letters "that
+persecution was begun again in France," by the Guises. {215c} Now as,
+according to Knox elsewhere, "Satan stirreth his terrible tail," so did
+one of Mary's uncles, the Duc de Guise, "stir his tail" against one of
+the towns appointed to pay Mary's jointure, namely Vassy, in Champagne.
+Here, on March 1, 1562, a massacre of Huguenots, by the Guise's
+retainers, began the war of religion afresh. {215d}
+
+Now, in the first place, this could not be joyful news to set Mary
+dancing; as it was apt to prevent what she had most at heart, her
+personal interview with Elizabeth. She understood this perfectly well,
+and, in conversation with Randolph, after her return to Edinburgh,
+lamented the deeds of her uncles, as calculated "to bring them in hate
+and disdain of many princes," and also to chill Elizabeth's amity for
+herself--on which her whole policy now depended (May 29). {216a} She
+wept when Randolph said that, in the state of France, Elizabeth was not
+likely to move far from London for their interview. In this mood how
+could Mary give a dance to celebrate an event which threatened ruin to
+her hopes?
+
+Moreover, if Knox, when he speaks of "persecution begun again," refers to
+the slaughter of Huguenots by Guise's retinue, at Vassy, that untoward
+event occurred on March 1, and Mary cannot have been celebrating it by a
+ball at Holyrood as late as May 14, at earliest. {216b} Knox, however,
+preached against her dancing, if she danced "for pleasure at the
+displeasure of God's people"; so he states the case. Her reward, in that
+case, would he "drink in hell." In his "History" he declares that Mary
+did dance for the evil reason attributed to her, a reason which must have
+been mere matter of inference on his part, and that inference wrong,
+judging by dates, if the reference is to the affair of Vassy. In April
+both French parties were committing brutalities, but these were all
+contrary to Mary's policy and hopes.
+
+If Knox heard a rumour against any one, his business, according to the
+"Book of Discipline," was not to go and preach against that person, even
+by way of insinuation. {216c} Mary's offence, if any existed, was not
+"public," and was based on mere suspicion, or on tattle. Dr. M'Crie,
+indeed, says that on hearing of the affair of Vassy, the Queen
+"immediately after gave a splendid ball to her foreign servants." Ten
+weeks after the Vassy affair is not "immediately"; and Knox mentions
+neither foreign servants nor Vassy. {216d}
+
+The Queen sent for Knox, and made "a long harangue," of which he does not
+report one word. He gives his own oration. Mary then said that she
+could not expect him to like her uncles, as they differed in religion.
+But if he heard anything of herself that he disapproved of, "come to
+myself and tell me, and I shall hear you." He answered that he was not
+bound to come "to every man in particular," but she _could_ come to his
+sermons! If she would name a day and hour, he would give her a doctrinal
+lecture. At this very moment he "was absent from his book"; his studies
+were interrupted.
+
+"You will not always be at your book," she said, and turned her back. To
+some papists in the antechamber he remarked, "Why should the pleasing
+face of a gentlewoman affray me? I have looked in the faces of many
+angry men, and yet have not been afraid above measure."
+
+He was later to flee before that pleasing face.
+
+Mary can hardly be said to have had the worse, as far as manners and
+logic went, of this encounter, at which Morton, Mar, and Lethington were
+present, and seem to have been silent. {217a}
+
+Meanwhile, Randolph dates this affair, the dancing, the sermon, the
+interview, not in May, but about December 13-15, 1562, {217b} and
+connects the dancing with no event in France, {217c} nor can I find any
+such event in late November which might make Mary glad at heart. Knox,
+Randolph writes, mistrusts all that the Queen does or says, "as if he
+were of God's Privy Council, that knew how he had determined of her in
+the beginning, or that he knew the secrets of her heart so well that she
+neither did nor could have one good thought of God or of his true
+religion." His doings could not increase her respect for his religion.
+
+The affair of Arran had been a sensible sorrow to Knox. "God hath
+further humbled me since that day which men call Good Friday," he wrote
+to Mrs. Locke (May 6), "than ever I have been in my life. . . ." He had
+rejoiced in his task of peace-making, in which the Privy Council had
+practically failed, and had shown great naivete in trusting Bothwell. The
+best he could say to Mrs. Locke was that he felt no certainty about the
+fact that Bothwell had tempted Arran to conspire. {218}
+
+The probability is that the reckless and impoverished Bothwell did intend
+to bring in the desirable "new day," and to make the Hamiltons his tools.
+Meanwhile he was kept out of mischief and behind stone walls for a
+season. Knox had another source of annoyance which was put down with a
+high hand.
+
+The dominie of the school at Linlithgow, Ninian Winzet by name, had lost
+his place for being an idolater. In February he had brought to the
+notice of our Reformer and of the Queen the question, "Is John Knox a
+lawful minister?" If he was called by God, where were his miracles? If
+by men, by what manner of men? On March 3, Winzet asked Knox for "your
+answer in writing." He kept launching letters at Knox in March; on March
+24 he addressed the general public; and, on March 31, issued an appeal to
+the magistrates, who appear to have been molesting people who kept
+Easter. The practice was forbidden in a proclamation by the Queen on May
+31. {219a} "The pain is death," writes Randolph. {219b} If Mary was
+ready to die for her faith, as she informed a nuncio who now secretly
+visited her, she seems to have been equally resolved that her subjects
+should not live in it.
+
+Receiving no satisfactory _written_ answer from Knox, Winzet began to
+print his tract, and then he got his reply from "soldiers and the
+magistrates," for the book was seized, and he himself narrowly escaped to
+the Continent. {219c} Knox was not to be brought to a written reply,
+save so far as he likened his calling to that of Amos and John the
+Baptist. In September he referred to his "Answer to Winzet's Questions"
+as forthcoming, but it never appeared. {219d} Winzet was Mary's chaplain
+in her Sheffield prison in 1570-72; she had him made Abbot of Ratisbon,
+and he is said, by Lethington's son, to have helped Lesley in writing his
+"History."
+
+On June 29 the General Assembly, through Knox probably, drew up the
+address to the Queen, threatening her and the country with the wrath of
+God on her Mass, which, she is assured, is peculiarly distasteful to the
+Deity. The brethren are deeply disappointed that she does not attend
+their sermons, and ventures to prefer "your ain preconceived vain
+opinion." They insist that adulterers must be punished with death, and
+they return to their demands for the poor and the preachers. A new
+rising is threatened if wicked men trouble the ministers and disobey the
+Superintendents.
+
+Lethington and Knox had one of their usual disputes over this manifesto;
+the Secretary drew up another. "Here be many fair words," said the Queen
+on reading it; "I cannot tell what the hearts are." {220a} She later
+found out the nature of Lethington's heart, a pretty black one. The
+excesses of the Guises in France were now the excuse or cause of the
+postponement of Elizabeth's meeting with Mary. The Queen therefore now
+undertook a northern progress, which had been arranged for in January,
+about the time when Lord James was made Earl of Moray. {220b}
+
+He could not "brook" the Earldom of Moray before the Earl of Huntly was
+put down, Huntly being a kind of petty king in the east and north. There
+is every reason to suppose that Mary understood and utterly distrusted
+Huntly, who, though the chief Catholic in the country, had been a traitor
+whenever occasion served for many a year. One of his sons, John, in
+July, wounded an Ogilvy in Edinburgh in a quarrel over property. This
+affair was so managed as to drive Huntly into open rebellion, neither
+Mary nor her brother being sorry to take the opportunity.
+
+The business of the ruin of Huntly has seemed more of a mystery to
+historians than it was, though an attack by a Catholic princess on her
+most powerful Catholic subject does need explanation. But Randolph was
+with Mary during the whole expedition, and his despatches are better
+evidence than the fables of Buchanan and the surmises of Knox and Mr.
+Froude. Huntly had been out of favour ever since Lord James obtained the
+coveted Earldom of Moray in January, and he was thought to be opposed to
+Mary's visit to Elizabeth. Since January, the Queen had been bent on a
+northern progress. Probably the Archbishop of St. Andrews, as reported
+by Knox, rightly guessed the motives. At table he said, "The Queen has
+gone into the north, belike to seek disobedience; she may perhaps find
+the thing that she seeks." {221a} She wanted a quarrel with Huntly, and
+a quarrel she found. Her northward expedition, says Randolph, "is rather
+devised by herself than greatly approved by her Council." She would not
+visit Huntly at Strathbogie, contrary to the advice of her Council; his
+son, who wounded Ogilvy, had broken prison, and refused to enter himself
+at Stirling Castle. Huntly then supported his sons in rebellion, while
+Bothwell broke prison and fortified himself in Hermitage Castle. Lord
+James's Earldom of Moray was now publicly announced (September 18), and
+Huntly was accused of a desire to murder him and Lethington, while his
+son John was to seize the Queen. {221b} Mary was "utterly determined to
+bring him to utter confusion." Huntly was put to the horn on October 18;
+his sons took up arms. Huntly, old and corpulent, died during a defeat
+at Corrichie without stroke of sword; his mischievous son John was taken
+and executed, Mary being pleased with her success, and declaring that
+Huntly thought "to have married her where he would," {221c} and to have
+slain her brother. John Gordon confessed to the murder plot. {221d} His
+eldest brother, Lord Gordon, who had tried to enlist Bothwell and the
+Hamiltons, lay long in prison (his sister married Bothwell just before
+Riccio's murder). The Queen had punished the disobedience which she
+"went to seek," and Moray was safe in his rich earldom, while a heavy
+blow was dealt at the Catholicism which Huntly had protected. {222a}
+Cardinal Guise reports her success to de Rennes, in Austria, with
+triumph, and refers to an autograph letter of hers, of which Lethington's
+draft has lately perished by fire, unread by historians. As the Cardinal
+reports that she says she is trying to win her subjects back to the
+Church, "in which she wishes to live and die" (January 30, 1562-63),
+Lethington cannot be the author of that part of her lost letter. {222b}
+
+Knox meanwhile, much puzzled by the news from the north, was in the
+western counties. He induced the lairds of Ayrshire to sign a Protestant
+band, and he had a controversy with the Abbot of Crosraguel. In
+misapplication of texts the abbot was even more eccentric than Knox,
+though he only followed St. Jerome. In his "History" Knox "cannot
+certainly say whether there was any secret paction and confederacy
+between the Queen herself and Huntly." {222c} Knox decides that though
+Mary executed John Gordon and other rebels, yet "it was the destruction
+of others that she sought," namely, of her brother, whom she hated "for
+his godliness and upright plainness." {222d} His upright simplicity had
+won him an earldom and the destruction of his rival! He and Lethington
+may have exaggerated Huntly's iniquities in council with Mary, but the
+rumours reported against her by Knox could only be inspired by the
+credulity of extreme ill-will. He flattered himself that he kept the
+Hamiltons quiet, and, at a supper with Randolph in November, made
+Chatelherault promise to be a good subject in civil matters, and a good
+Protestant in religion.
+
+Knox says that preaching was done with even unusual vehemence in winter,
+when his sermon against the Queen's dancing for joy over some unknown
+Protestant misfortune was actually delivered, and the good seed fell on
+ground not wholly barren. The Queen's French and Scots musicians would
+not play or sing at the Queen's Christmas-day Mass, whether pricked in
+heart by conscience, or afraid for their lives. "Her poor soul is so
+troubled for the preservation of her silly Mass that she knoweth not
+where to turn for defence of it," says Randolph. {223a} These
+persecutions may have gone far to embitter the character of the victim.
+
+Mr. Froude is certainly not an advocate of Mary Stuart, rather he is
+conspicuously the reverse. But he remarks that when she determined to
+marry Darnley, "divide Scotland," and trust to her Catholic party, she
+did so because she was "weary of the mask which she had so long worn, and
+unable to endure any longer these wild insults to her creed and herself."
+{223b} She had, in fact, given the policy of submission to "wild
+insults" rather more than a fair chance; she had, for a spirited girl,
+been almost incredibly long-suffering, when "barbarously baited," as
+Charles I. described his own treatment by the preachers and the
+Covenanters.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI: KNOX AND QUEEN MARY (continued): 1563-1564
+
+
+The new year, 1563, found Knox purging the Kirk from that fallen brother,
+Paul Methuen. This preacher had borne the burden and heat of the day in
+1557-58, erecting, as we have seen, the first "reformed" Kirk, that of
+the Holy Virgin, in Dundee, and suffering some inconvenience, if no great
+danger, from the clergy of the religion whose sacred things he overthrew.
+He does not appear to have been one of the more furious of the new
+apostles. Contrasted with John Brabner, "a vehement man inculcating the
+law and pain thereof," Paul is described as "a milder man, preaching the
+evangel of grace and remission of sins in the blood of Christ." {224a}
+
+Paul was at this time minister of Jedburgh. He had "an ancient matron"
+to wife, recommended, perhaps, by her property, and she left him for two
+months with a servant maid. Paul fell, but behaved not ill to the mother
+of his child, sending her "money and clothes at various times." Knox
+tried the case at Jedburgh; Paul was excommunicated, and fled the realm,
+sinking so low, it seems, as to take orders in the Church of England.
+Later he returned--probably he was now penniless--"and prostrated himself
+before the whole brethren with weeping and howling." He was put to such
+shameful and continued acts of public penance up and down the country
+that any spirit which he had left awoke in him, and the Kirk knew him no
+more. Thus "the world might see what difference there is between
+darkness and light." {225a}
+
+Knox presently had to record a scandal in a higher place, the capture and
+execution of the French minor poet, Chastelard, who, armed with sword and
+dagger, hid under the Queen's bed in Holyrood; and invaded her room with
+great insolence at Burntisland as she was on her way to St. Andrews.
+There he was tried, condemned, and executed in the market-place. It
+seems fairly certain that Chastelard, who had joined the Queen with
+despatches during the expedition against Huntly, was a Huguenot. The
+Catholic version, and Lethington's version, of his adventure was that
+some intriguing Huguenot lady had set him on to sully Queen Mary's
+character; other tales ran that he was to assassinate her, as part of a
+great Protestant conspiracy. {225b}
+
+Randolph, who knew as much as any one, thought the Queen far too familiar
+with the poet, but did not deem that her virtue was in fault. {225c} Knox
+dilates on Mary's familiarities, kisses given in a vulgar dance, dear to
+the French society of the period, and concludes that the fatuous poet
+"lacked his head, that his tongue should not utter the secrets of our
+Queen." {225d}
+
+There had been a bad harvest, and a dearth, because the Queen's luxury
+"provoked God" (who is represented as very irritable) "to strike the
+staff of bread," and to "give His malediction upon the fruits of the
+earth. But oh, alas, who looked, or yet looks, to the very cause of all
+our calamities!" {226a}
+
+Some savage peoples are said to sacrifice their kings when the weather is
+unpropitious. Knox's theology was of the same kind. The preachers, says
+Randolph (February 28), "pray daily . . . that God will either turn the
+Queen's heart or grant her short life. Of what charity or spirit this
+proceeds, I leave to be discussed by great divines." {226b} The prayers
+sound like encouragement to Jehus.
+
+At this date Ruthven was placed, "by Lethington's means only," on the
+Privy Council. Moray especially hated Ruthven "for his sorcery"; the
+superstitious Moray affected the Queen with this ill opinion of one of
+the elect--in the affair of Riccio's murder so useful to the cause of
+Knox. "There is not an unworthier in Scotland" than Ruthven, writes
+Randolph. {226c} Meanwhile Lethington was in England to negotiate for
+peace in France; if he could, to keep an eye on Mary's chances for the
+succession, and (says Knox) to obtain leave for Lennox, the chief of the
+Stuarts and the deadly foe of the Hamiltons, to visit Scotland, whence,
+in the time of Henry VIII., he had been driven as a traitor. But
+Lethington was at that time confuting Lennox's argument that the Hamilton
+chief, Chatelherault, was illegitimate. Knox is not positive, he only
+reports rumours. {226d} Lethington's serious business was to negotiate a
+marriage for the Queen.
+
+Despite the recent threats of death against priests who celebrated Mass,
+the Archbishop Hamilton and Knox's opponent, the Abbot of Crossraguel,
+with many others, did so at Easter. The Ayrshire brethren "determined to
+put to their own hands," captured some priests, and threatened others
+with "the punishment that God has appointed to idolaters by His law."
+{227a} The Queen commanded Knox to meet her at Lochleven in
+mid-April--Lochleven, where she was later to be a prisoner. In that
+state lay the priests of her religion, who had been ministering to the
+people, "some in secret houses, some in barns, some in woods and hills,"
+writes Randolph, "all are in prison." {227b}
+
+Mary, for two hours before supper, implored Knox to mediate with the
+western fanatics. He replied, that if princes would not use the sword
+against idolaters, there was the leading case of Samuel's slaughter of
+Agag; and he adduced another biblical instance, of a nature not usually
+cited before young ladies. He was on safer ground in quoting the Scots
+law as it stood. Judges within their bounds were to seek out and punish
+"mass-mongers"--that was his courteous term.
+
+The Queen, rather hurt, went off to supper, but next morning did her best
+to make friends with Knox over other matters. She complained of Ruthven,
+who had given her a ring for some magical purpose, later explained by
+Ruthven, who seems to have despised the superstition of his age. The
+Queen, says Ruthven, was afraid of poison; he gave her the ring, saying
+that it acted as an antidote. Moray was at Lochleven with the Queen, and
+Moray believed, or pretended to believe, in Ruthven's "sossery," as
+Randolph spells "sorcery." She, rather putting herself at our Reformer's
+mercy, complained that Lethington alone placed Ruthven in the Privy
+Council.
+
+"That man is absent," said Knox, "and therefore I will speak nothing on
+that behalf." Mary then warned him against "the man who was at time most
+familiar with the said John, in his house and at table," the despicable
+Bishop of Galloway, and Knox later found out that the warning was wise.
+Lastly, she asked him to reconcile the Earl and Countess of Argyll--"do
+this much for my sake"; and she promised to summon the offending priests
+who had done their duty. {228a}
+
+Knox, with his usual tact, wrote to Argyll thus: "Your behaviour toward
+your wife is very offensive unto many godly." He added that, if all that
+was said of Argyll was true, and if he did not look out, he would be
+damned.
+
+"This bill was not well accepted of the said Earl," but, like the rest of
+them, he went on truckling to Knox, "most familiar with the said John."
+{228b}
+
+Nearly fifty priests were tried, but no one was hanged. They were put in
+ward; "the like of this was never heard within the realm," said pleased
+Protestants, not "smelling the craft." Neither the Queen nor her Council
+had the slightest desire to put priests to death. Six other priests "as
+wicked as" the Archbishop were imprisoned, and the Abbot of Crossraguel
+was put to the horn in his absence, just as the preachers had been. The
+Catholic clergy "know not where to hide their heads," says Randolph. Many
+fled to the more tender mercies of England; "it will be the common refuge
+of papists that cannot live here . . ." {228c} The tassels on the trains
+of the ladies, it was declared by the preachers, "would provoke God's
+vengeance . . . against the whole realm . . " {229a}
+
+The state of things led to a breach between Knox and Moray, which lasted
+till the Earl found him likely to be useful, some eighteen months later.
+
+The Reformer relieved his mind in the pulpit at the end of May or early
+in June, rebuking backsliders, and denouncing the Queen's rumoured
+marriage with any infidel, "and all Papists are infidels." Papists and
+Protestants were both offended. There was a scene with Mary, in which
+she wept profusely, an infirmity of hers; we constantly hear of her
+weeping in public. She wished the Lords of the Articles to see whether
+Knox's "manner of speaking" was not punishable, but nothing could be
+done. Elizabeth would have found out a way. {229b}
+
+The fact that while Knox was conducting himself thus, nobody ventured to
+put a dirk or a bullet into him--despite the obvious strength of the
+temptation in many quarters--proves that he was by far the most potent
+human being in Scotland. Darnley, Moray, Lennox were all assassinated,
+when their day came, though the feeblest of the three, Darnley, had a
+powerful clan to take up his feud. We cannot suppose that any moral
+considerations prevented the many people whom Knox had offended from
+doing unto him as the Elect did to Riccio. Manifestly, nobody had the
+courage. No clan was so strong as the warlike brethren who would have
+avenged the Reformer, and who probably would have been backed by
+Elizabeth.
+
+Again, though he was estranged from Moray, that leader was also, in some
+degree, estranged from Lethington, who did not allow him to know the
+details of his intrigues, in France and England, for the Queen's
+marriage. The marriage question was certain to reunite Moray and Knox.
+When Knox told Mary that, as "a subject of this realm," he had a right to
+oppose her marriage with any infidel, he spoke the modern constitutional
+truth. For Mary to wed a Royal Catholic would certainly have meant peril
+for Protestantism, war with England, and a tragic end. But what
+Protestant could she marry? If a Scot, he would not long have escaped
+the daggers of the Hamiltons; indeed, all the nobles would have borne the
+fiercest jealousy against such an one as, say, Glencairn, who, we learn,
+could say anything to Mary without offence. She admired a strong brave
+man, and Glencairn, though an opponent, was gallant and resolute. England
+chose only to offer the infamous and treacherous Leicester, whose
+character was ruined by the mysterious death of his wife (Amy Robsart),
+and who had offered to sell England and himself to idolatrous Spain.
+Mary's only faint chance of safety lay in perpetual widowhood, or in
+marrying Knox, by far the most powerful of her subjects, and the best
+able to protect her and himself.
+
+This idea does not seem to have been entertained by the subtle brain of
+Lethington. Between February and May 1563, the Cardinal of Lorraine had
+reopened an old negotiation for wedding the Queen to the Archduke, and
+Mary had given an evasive reply; she must consult Parliament. In March,
+with the Spanish Ambassador in London, Lethington had proposed for Don
+Carlos. Philip II., as usual, wavered, consented (in August),
+considered, and reconsidered. Lethington, in France, had told the Queen-
+Mother that the Spanish plan was only intended to wring concessions from
+Elizabeth; and, on his return to England, had persuaded the Spanish
+Ambassador that Charles IX. was anxious to succeed to his brother's
+widow. This moved Philip to be favourable to the Don Carlos marriage,
+but he waited; there was no sign from France, and Philip withdrew,
+wavering so much that both the Austrian and Spanish matches became
+impossible. On October 6, Knox, who suspected more than he knew, told
+Cecil that out of twelve Privy Councillors, nine would consent to a
+Catholic marriage. The only hope was in Moray, and Knox "daily thirsted"
+for death. {231a} He appealed to Leicester (about whose relations with
+Elizabeth he was, of course, informed) as to a man who "may greatly
+advance the purity of religion." {231b}
+
+These letters to Cecil and Leicester are deeply pious in tone, and reveal
+a cruel anxiety. On June 20, three weeks after Knox's famous sermon,
+Lethington told de Quadra, the Spanish Ambassador, that Elizabeth
+threatened to be Mary's enemy if she married Don Carlos or any of the
+house of Austria. {231c} On August 26, 1563, Randolph received
+instructions from Elizabeth, in which the tone of menace was unconcealed.
+Elizabeth would offer an English noble: "we and our country cannot think
+any mighty prince a meet husband for her." {231d}
+
+Knox was now engaged in a contest wherein he was triumphant; an affair
+which, in later years, was to have sequels of high importance. During
+the summer vacation of 1563, while Mary was moving about the country,
+Catholics in Edinburgh habitually attended at Mass in her chapel. This
+was contrary to the arrangement which permitted no Mass in the whole
+realm, except that of the Queen, when her priests were not terrorised.
+The godly brawled in the Chapel Royal, and two of them were arrested, two
+very dear brethren, named Cranstoun and Armstrong; they were to be tried
+on October 24. Knox had a kind of Dictator's commission from the
+Congregation, "to see that the Kirk took no harm," and to the
+Congregation he appealed by letter. The accused brethren had only "noted
+what persons repaired to the Mass," but they were charged with divers
+crimes, especially invading her Majesty's palace. Knox therefore
+convoked the Congregation to meet in Edinburgh on the day of trial, in
+the good old way of overawing justice. {232a} Of course we do not know
+to what lengths the dear brethren went in their pious indignation. The
+legal record mentions that they were armed with pistols, in the town and
+Court suburb; and it was no very unusual thing, later, for people to
+practise pistol shooting at each other even in their own Kirk of St.
+Giles's. {232b}
+
+Still, pistols, if worn in the palace chapel have not a pacific air. The
+brethren are also charged with assaulting some of the Queen's domestic
+servants. {232c}
+
+Archbishop Spottiswoode, son of one of the Knoxian Superintendents, says
+that the brethren "forced the gates, and that some of the worshippers
+were taken and carried to prison. . . . " {232d} Knox admits in his
+"History" that "some of the brethren _burst in_" to the chapel. In his
+letter to stir up the godly, he says that the brethren "passed" (in),
+"and that _in most quiet manner_."
+
+On receiving Knox's summons the Congregation prepared its levies in every
+town and province. {233a} The Privy Council received a copy of Knox's
+circular, and concluded that it "imported treason."
+
+To ourselves it does seem that for a preacher to call levies out of every
+town and province, to meet in the capital on a day when a trial was to be
+held, is a thing that no Government can tolerate. The administration of
+justice is impossible in the circumstances. But it was the usual course
+in Scotland, and any member of the Privy Council might, at any time, find
+it desirable to call a similar convocation of his allies. Mary herself,
+fretted by the perfidies of Elizabeth, had just been consoled by that
+symbolic jewel, a diamond shaped like a rock, and by promises in which
+she fondly trusted when she at last sought an asylum in England, and
+found a prison. For two months she had often been in deep melancholy,
+weeping for no known cause, and she was afflicted by the "pain in her
+side" which ever haunted her (December 13-21). {233b}
+
+Accused by the Master of Maxwell of unbecoming conduct, Knox said that
+such things had been done before, and he had the warrant "of God,
+speaking plainly in his Word." The Master (later Lord Herries), not
+taking this view of the case, was never friendly with Knox again; the
+Reformer added this comment as late as December 1571. {233c}
+
+Lethington and Moray, like Maxwell, remonstrated vainly with our
+Reformer. Randolph (December 21) reports that the Lords assembled "to
+take order with Knox and his faction, who intended by a mutinous assembly
+made by his letter before, to have rescued two of their brethren from
+course of law. . . . " {234a} Knox was accompanied to Holyrood by a
+force of brethren who crowded "the inner close and all the stairs, even
+to the chamber door where the Queen and Council sat." {234b} Probably
+these "slashing communicants" had their effect on the minds of the
+councillors. Not till after Riccio's murder was Mary permitted to have a
+strong guard.
+
+According to Knox, Mary laughed a horse laugh when he entered, saying,
+"Yon man gart me greit, and grat never tear himself. I will see gif I
+can gar him greit." Her Scots, textually reported, was certainly
+idiomatic.
+
+Knox acknowledged his letter to the Congregation, and Lethington
+suggested that he might apologise. Ruthven said that Knox made
+convocation of people daily to hear him preach; what harm was there in
+his letter merely calling people to convocation. This was characteristic
+pettifogging. Knox said that he convened the people to meet on the day
+of trial according to the order "that the brethren has appointed . . . at
+the commandment of the general Kirk of the Realm."
+
+Mary seems, strangely enough, to have thought that this was a valid
+reply. Perhaps it was, and the Kirk's action in that sense, directed
+against the State, finally enabled Cromwell to conquer the Kirk-ridden
+country. Mary appears to have admitted the Kirk's imperium in imperio,
+for she diverted the discussion from the momentous point really at
+issue--the right of the Kirk to call up an armed multitude to thwart
+justice. She now fell on Knox's employment of the word "cruelty." He
+instantly started on a harangue about "pestilent Papists," when the Queen
+once more introduced a personal question; he had caused her to weep, and
+he recounted all their interview after he attacked her marriage from the
+pulpit.
+
+He was allowed to go home--it might not have been safe to arrest him, and
+the Lords, unanimously, voted that he had done no offence. They repeated
+their votes in the Queen's presence, and thus a precedent for "mutinous
+convocation" by Kirkmen was established, till James VI. took order in
+1596. We have no full narrative of this affair except that of Knox. It
+is to be guessed that the nobles wished to maintain the old habit of
+mutinous convocation which, probably, saved the life of Lethington, and
+helped to secure Bothwell's acquittal from the guilt of Darnley's murder.
+Perhaps, too, the brethren who filled the whole inner Court and
+overflowed up the stairs of the palace, may have had their influence.
+
+This was a notable triumph of our Reformer, and of the Kirk; to which, on
+his showing, the Queen contributed, by feebly wandering from the real
+point at issue. She was no dialectician. Knox's conduct was, of course,
+approved of and sanctioned by the General Assembly. {235} He had, in his
+circular, averred that Cranstoun and Armstrong were summoned "that a door
+may be opened to execute cruelty upon a greater multitude." To put it
+mildly, the General Assembly sanctioned contempt of Court. Unluckily for
+Scotland contempt of Court was, and long remained, universal, the country
+being desperately lawless, and reeking with blood shed in public and
+private quarrels. When a Prophet followed the secular example of
+summoning crowds to overawe justice, the secular sinners had warrant for
+thwarting the course of law.
+
+As to the brethren and the idolaters who caused these troubles, we know
+not what befell them. The penalty, both for the attendants at Mass and
+for the disturbers thereof, should have been death! The dear brethren,
+if they attacked the Queen's servants, came under the Proclamation of
+October 1561; so did the Catholics, for _they_ "openly made alteration
+and innovation of the state of religion. . . . " They ought "to be
+punished to the death with all rigour." Three were outlawed, and their
+sureties "unlawed." Twenty-one others were probably not hanged; the
+records are lost. For the same reason we know not what became of the
+brethren Armstrong, Cranstoun, and George Rynd, summoned with the other
+malefactors for November 13. {236}
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII: KNOX AND QUEEN MARY (continued), 1564-1567
+
+
+During the session of the General Assembly in December 1563, Knox was
+compelled to chronicle domestic enormities. The Lord Treasurer,
+Richardson, having, like Captain Booth, "offended the law of Dian," had
+to do penance before the whole congregation, and the sermon
+(unfortunately it is lost, probably it never was written out) was
+preached by Knox. A French apothecary of the Queen's, and his mistress,
+were hanged on a charge of murdering their child. {237a} On January 9,
+1564-65, Randolph noted that one of the Queen's Maries, Mary Livingstone,
+is to marry John Sempill, son of Robert, third Lord Sempill, by an
+English wife. Knox assures us that "it is well known that shame hastened
+marriage between John Sempill, called 'the Dancer,' and Mary Livingstone,
+surnamed 'the Lusty.'" The young people appear, however, to have been in
+no pressing hurry, as Randolph, on January 9, did not expect their
+marriage till the very end of February; they wished the Earl of Bedford,
+who was coming on a diplomatic mission, to be present. {237b} Mary, on
+March 9, 1565, made them a grant of lands, since "it has pleased God to
+move their hearts to join together in the state of matrimony." {237c} She
+had ever since January been making the bride presents of feminine finery.
+
+These proceedings indicating no precipitate haste, we may think that Mary
+Livingstone, like Mary of Guise, is only a victim of the Reformer's taste
+for "society journalism." Randolph, though an egregious gossip, says of
+the Four Maries, "they are all good," but Knox writes that "the ballads
+of that age" did witness to the "bruit" or reputation of these maidens.
+As is well known the old ballad of "Mary Hamilton," which exists in more
+than a dozen very diverse variants, in some specimens confuses one of the
+Maries, an imaginary "Mary Hamilton," with the French maid who was hanged
+at the end of 1563. The balladist is thus responsible for a scandal
+against the fair sisterhood; there was no "Mary Hamilton," and no "Mary
+Carmichael," in their number--Beaton, Seton, Fleming, and Livingstone.
+
+An offended Deity now sent frost in January 1564, and an aurora borealis
+in February, Knox tells us, and "the threatenings of the preachers were
+fearful," in face of these unusual meteorological phenomena. {238}
+
+Vice rose to such a pitch that men doubted if the Mass really was
+idolatry! Knox said, from the pulpit, that if the sceptics were right,
+_he_ was "miserably deceived." "Believe me, brethren, in the bowels of
+Christ, it is possible that you may be mistaken," Cromwell was to tell
+the Commissioners of the General Assembly, on a day that still was in the
+womb of the future; the dawn of common sense rose in the south.
+
+On March 20, much to the indignation of the Queen, the banns were read
+twice between Knox and a lady of the Royal blood and name, Margaret
+Stewart, daughter of Lord Ochiltree, a girl not above sixteen, in January
+1563, when Randolph first speaks of the wooing. {239} The good Dr.
+M'Crie does not mention the age of the bride! The lady was a very near
+kinswoman of Chatelherault. She had plenty of time for reflection, and
+as nobody says that she was coerced into the marriage, while Nicol Burne
+attributes her passion to sorcery, we may suppose that she was in love
+with our Reformer. She bore him several daughters, and it is to be
+presumed that the marriage, though in every way _bizarre_, was happy.
+Burne says that Knox wished to marry a Lady Fleming, akin to
+Chatelherault, but was declined; if so, he soon consoled himself.
+
+At this time Riccio--a valet de chambre of the Queen in 1561-62--"began
+to grow great in Court," becoming French Secretary at the end of the
+year. By June 3, 1565, Randolph is found styling Riccio "only governor"
+to Darnley. His career might have rivalled that of the equally low-born
+Cardinal Alberoni, but for the daggers of Moray's party.
+
+In the General Assembly of June 1564, Moray, Morton, Glencairn, Pitarro,
+Lethington, and other Lords of the Congregation held aloof from the
+brethren, but met the Superintendents and others to discuss the recent
+conduct of our Reformer, who was present. He was invited, by Lethington,
+to "moderate himself" in his references to the Queen, as others might
+imitate him, "albeit not with the same modesty and foresight," for
+Lethington could not help bantering Knox. Knox, of course, rushed to his
+doctrine of "idolatry" as provocative of the wrath of God--we have heard
+of the bad harvest, and the frost in January. It is not worth while to
+pursue in detail the discourses, in which Knox said that the Queen
+rebelled against God "in all the actions of her life." Ahab and Jezebel
+were again brought on the scene. It profited not Lethington to say that
+all these old biblical "vengeances" were "singular motions of the Spirit
+of God, and appertain nothing to our age." If Knox could have understood
+_that_, he would not have been Knox. The point was intelligible;
+Lethington perceived it, but Knox never chose to do so. He went on with
+his isolated texts, Lethington vainly replying "the cases are nothing
+alike." Knox came to his old stand, "the idolater must die the death,"
+and the executioners must be "the people of God." Lethington quoted many
+opinions against Knox's, to no purpose, opinions of Luther, Melanchthon,
+Bucer, Musculus, and Calvin, but our Reformer brought out the case of
+"Amasiath, King of Judah," and "The Apology of Magdeburg." As to the
+opinion of Calvin and the rest he drew a distinction. They had only
+spoken of the godly who were suffering under oppression, not of the godly
+triumphant in a commonwealth. He forgot, or did not choose to remember,
+a previous decision of his own, as we shall see.
+
+When the rest of the party were discussing the question, Makgill, Clerk
+Register, reminded them of their previous debate in November 1561, when
+{240} Knox, after secretly writing to Calvin, had proposed to write to
+him for his opinion about the Queen's Mass, and Lethington had promised
+to do so himself. But Lethington now said that, on later reflection, as
+Secretary of the Queen, he had scrupled, without her consent, to ask a
+foreigner whether her subjects might prevent her from enjoying the rites
+of her own religion--for that was what the "controversies" between her
+Highness and her subjects really and confessedly meant. {241a}
+
+Knox was now requested to consult Calvin, "and the learned in other
+Kirks, to know their judgment in that question." The question, judging
+from Makgill's interpellation, was "whether subjects might lawfully take
+her Mass from the Queen." {241b} As we know, Knox had already put the
+question to Calvin by a letter of October 24, 1561, and so had the
+anonymous writer of November 18, 1561, whom I identify with Arran. Knox
+now refused to write to "Mr. Calvin, and the learned of other Kirks,"
+saying (I must quote him textually, or be accused of misrepresentation),
+"I myself am not only fully resolved in conscience, but also I have heard
+the judgments in this, and all other things that I have affirmed in this
+Realm, of the most godly and most learned that be known in Europe. I
+come not to this Realm without their resolution; and for my assurance I
+have the handwritings of many; and therefore if I should move the same
+question again, what else should I do but either show my own ignorance
+and forgetfulness, or else inconstancy?" {241c} He therefore said that
+his opponents might themselves "write and complain upon him," and so
+learn "the plain minds" of the learned--but nobody took the trouble.
+Knox's defence was worded with the skill of a notary. He said that he
+had "heard the judgments" of "the learned and godly"; he did not say what
+these judgments were. Calvin, Morel, Bullinger, and such men, we know,
+entirely differed from his extreme ideas. He "came not without their
+resolution," or approval, to Scotland, but that was not the question at
+issue.
+
+If Knox had received from Calvin favourable replies to his own letter,
+and Arran's, of October 24, November 18, 1561, can any one doubt that he
+would now have produced them, unless he did not wish the brethren to find
+out that he himself had written without their knowledge? We know what
+manner of answers he received, in 1554, orally from Calvin, in writing
+from Bullinger, to his questions about resistance to the civil power.
+{242a} I am sceptical enough to suppose that, if Knox had now possessed
+letters from Calvin, justifying the propositions which he was
+maintaining, such as that "the people, yea, _or ane pairt of the people_,
+may execute God's jugementis against their King, being ane offender,"
+{242b} he would have exhibited them. I do not believe that he had any
+such letters from such men as Bullinger and Calvin. Indeed, we may ask
+whether the question of the Queen's Mass had arisen in any realm of
+Europe except Scotland. Where was there a Catholic prince ruling over a
+Calvinistic state? If nowhere, then the question would not be raised,
+except by Knox in his letter to Calvin of October 24, 1561. And where
+was Calvin's answer, and to what effect?
+
+Knox may have forgotten, and Lethington did not know, that, about 1558-
+59, in a tract, already noticed (pp. 101-103 supra), of 450 pages against
+the Anabaptists, Knox had expressed the reverse of his present opinion
+about religious Regicide. He is addressing the persecuting Catholic
+princes of Europe: " . . . Ye shall perish, both temporally and for ever.
+And by whom doth it most appear that temporally ye shall be punished? By
+_us_, whom ye banish, whom ye spoil and rob, whom cruelly ye persecute,
+and whose blood ye daily shed? {243a} There is no doubt, but as the
+victory which overcometh the world is our faith, so it behoveth us to
+possess our souls in our patience. We neither privily nor openly deny
+the power of the Civil Magistrate. . . . "
+
+The chosen saints and people of God, even when under oppression, lift not
+the hand, but possess their souls in patience, says Knox, in 1558-59. But
+the idolatrous shall be temporally punished--by other hands. "And what
+instruments can God find in this life more apt to punish you than those"
+(the Anabaptists), "that hate and detest all lawful powers? . . . God
+will not use his saints and chosen people to punish you. _For with them
+there is always mercy_, yea, even although God have pronounced a curse
+and malediction, as in the history of Joshua is plain." {243b}
+
+In this passage Knox is speaking for the English exiles in Geneva. He
+asserts that we "neither publicly nor privately deny the power of the
+Civil Magistrate," in face of his own published tracts of appeal to a
+Jehu or a Phinehas, and of his own claim that the Prophet may preach
+treason, and that his instruments may commit treason. To be sure all the
+English in Geneva were not necessarily of Knox's mind.
+
+It is altogether a curious passage. God's people are more merciful than
+God! Israel was bidden to exterminate all idolaters in the Promised
+Land, but, as the Book of Joshua shows, they did not always do it: "for
+with them is always mercy"; despite the massacres, such as that of Agag,
+which Knox was wont to cite as examples to the backward brethren! Yet,
+relying on another set of texts, not in Joshua, Knox now informed
+Lethington that the executors of death on idolatrous princes were "the
+people of God"--"the people, or a part of the people." {244a}
+
+Mercy! Happily the policy of carnal men never allowed Knox's "people of
+God" to show whether, given a chance to destroy idolaters, they would
+display the mercy on which he insists in his reply to the Anabaptist.
+
+It was always useless to argue with Knox; for whatever opinion happened
+to suit him at the moment (and at different moments contradictory
+opinions happened to suit him), he had ever a Bible text to back him. On
+this occasion, if Lethington had been able to quote Knox's own statement,
+that with the people of God "there is always mercy" (as in the case of
+Cardinal Beaton), he could hardly have escaped by saying that there was
+always mercy, _when the people of God had not the upper hand in the
+State_, {244b} when unto them God has _not_ "given sufficient force." For
+in the chosen people of God "there is _always_ mercy, yea even although
+God have pronounced a curse and malediction."
+
+In writing against Anabaptists (1558-59), Knox wanted to make _them_, not
+merciful Calvinists, the objects of the fear and revenge of Catholic
+rulers. He even hazarded one of his unfulfilled prophecies: Anabaptists,
+wicked men, will execute those divine judgments for which Protestants of
+his species are too tender-hearted; though, somehow, they make exceptions
+in the cases of Beaton and Riccio, and ought to do so in the case of Mary
+Stuart!
+
+Lethington did not use this passage of our Reformer's works against him,
+though it was published in 1560. Probably the secretary had not worked
+his way through the long essay on Predestination. But we have, in the
+book against the Anabaptists and in the controversy with Lethington, an
+example of Knox's fatal intellectual faults. As an individual man, he
+would not have hurt a fly. As a prophet, he deliberately tried to
+restore, by a pestilent anachronism, in a Christian age and country, the
+ferocities attributed to ancient Israel. This he did not even do
+consistently, and when he is inconsistent with his prevailing mood, his
+biographers applaud his "moderation"! If he saw a chance against an
+Anabaptist, or if he wanted to conciliate Mary of Guise, he took up a
+Christian line, backing it by texts appropriate to the occasion.
+
+His influence lasted, and the massacre of Dunavertie (1647), and the
+slaying of women in cold blood, months after the battle of Philiphaugh,
+and the "rouping" of covenanted "ravens" for the blood of cavaliers taken
+under quarter, are the direct result of Knox's intellectual error, of his
+appeals to Jehu, Phinehas, and so forth.
+
+At this point the Fourth Book of Knox's "History" ends with a remark on
+the total estrangement between himself and Moray. The Reformer continued
+to revise and interpolate his work, up to 1571, the year before his
+death, and made collections of materials, and notes for the continuation.
+An uncertain hand has put these together in Book V. But we now miss the
+frequent references to "John Knox," and his doings, which must have been
+vigorous during the troubles of 1565, after the arrival in Scotland of
+Darnley (February 1565), and his courtship and marriage of the Queen.
+These events brought together Moray, Chatelherault, and many of the Lords
+in the armed party of the Congregation. They rebelled; they were driven
+by Mary into England, by October 1565, and Bothwell came at her call from
+France. The Queen had new advisers--Riccio, Balfour, Bothwell, the
+eldest son of the late Huntly, and Lennox, till the wretched Darnley in a
+few weeks proved his incapacity. Lethington, rather neglected, hung
+about the Court, as he remained with Mary of Guise long after he had
+intended to desert her.
+
+Mary, whose only chance lay in outstaying Elizabeth in the policy of
+celibacy, had been driven, or led, by her rival Queen into a marriage
+which would have been the best possible, had Darnley been a man of
+character and a Protestant. He was the typical "young fool," indolent,
+incapable, fierce, cowardly, and profligate. His religion was dubious.
+After his arrival (on February 26, 1565) he went with Moray to hear Knox
+preach, but he had been bred by a Catholic mother, and, on occasion,
+posed as an ardent Catholic. {246} It is unfortunate that Randolph is
+silent about Knox during all the period of the broils which preceded and
+followed Mary's marriage.
+
+On August 19, 1565, Darnley, now Mary's husband, went to hear Knox preach
+in St. Giles's, on the text, "O Lord our God, other lords than Thou have
+ruled over us." "God," he said, "sets in that room (for the offences and
+ingratitude of the people) boys and women." Ahab also appeared, as
+usual. Ahab "had not taken order with that harlot, Jezebel." So Book V.
+says, and "harlot" would be a hit at Mary's alleged misconduct with
+Riccio. A hint in a letter of Randolph's of August 24, may point to
+nascent scandal about the pair. But the printed sermon, from Knox's
+written copy, reads, not "harlot" but "idolatrous wife." At all events,
+Darnley was so moved by this sermon that he would not dine. {247a} Knox
+was called "from his bed" to the Council chamber, where were Atholl,
+Ruthven, Lethington, the Justice Clerk, and the Queen's Advocate. He was
+attended by a great crowd of notable citizens, but Lethington forbade him
+to preach for a fortnight or three weeks. He said that, "If the Church
+would command him to preach or abstain he would obey, so far as the Word
+of God would permit him."
+
+It seems that he would only obey even the Church as far as he chose.
+
+The Town Council protested against the deprivation, and we do not know
+how long Knox desisted from preaching. Laing thinks that, till Mary
+fell, he preached only "at occasional intervals." {247b} But we shall
+see that he did presently go on preaching, with Lethington for a
+listener. He published his sermon, without name of place or printer. The
+preacher informs his audience that "in the Hebrew there is no conjunction
+copulative" in a certain sentence; probably he knew more Hebrew than most
+of our pastors.
+
+The sermon is very long, and, wanting the voice and gesture of the
+preacher, is no great proof of eloquence; in fact, is tedious. Probably
+Darnley was mainly vexed by the length, though he may have had
+intelligence enough to see that he and Mary were subjects of allusions.
+Knox wrote the piece from memory, on the last of August, in "the terrible
+roaring of guns, and the noise of armour." The banded Lords, Moray and
+the rest, had entered Edinburgh, looking for supporters, and finding
+none. Erskine, commanding the Castle, fired six or seven shots as a
+protest, and the noise of these disturbed the prophet at his task. As a
+marginal note says, "The Castle of Edinburgh was shooting against the
+exiled for Christ Jesus' sake" {248a}--namely, at Moray and his company.
+Knox prayed for them in public, and was accused of so doing, but
+Lethington testified that he had heard "the sermons," and found in them
+no ground of offence. {248b}
+
+[Mary Stuart. From the portrait in the collection of the Earl of Morton:
+knox5.jpg]
+
+Moray, Ochiltree, Pitarro, and many others being now exiles in England,
+whose Queen had subsidised and repudiated them and their revolution,
+things went hard with the preachers. For a whole year at least (December
+1565-66) their stipends were not paid, the treasury being exhausted by
+military and other expenses, and Pitarro being absent. At the end of
+December, Knox and his colleague, Craig, were ordered by the General
+Assembly to draw up and print a service for a general Fast, to endure
+from the last Sunday in February to the first in March, 1566. One cause
+alleged is that the Queen's conversion had been hoped for, but now she
+said that she would "maintain and defend" {248c} her own faith. She had
+said no less to Knox at their first interview, but now she had really
+written, when invited to abolish her Mass, that her subjects may worship
+as they will, but that she will not desert her religion. {249a} It was
+also alleged that the godly were to be destroyed all over Europe, in
+accordance with decrees of the Council of Trent. Moreover, vice,
+manslaughter, and oppression of the poor continued, prices of commodities
+rose, and work was scamped. The date of the Fast was fixed, not to
+coincide with Lent, but because it preceded an intended meeting of
+Parliament, {249b} a Parliament interrupted by the murder of Riccio, and
+the capture of the Queen. No games were to be played during the two
+Sundays of the Fast, which looks as if they were still permitted on other
+Sundays. The appointed lessons were from Judges, Esther, Chronicles,
+Isaiah, and Esdras; the New Testament, apparently, supplied nothing
+appropriate. It seldom did. The lay attendants of the Assembly of
+Christmas Day which decreed the Fast, were Morton, Mar, Lindsay,
+Lethington, with some lairds.
+
+The Protestants must have been alarmed, in February 1566, by a report, to
+which Randolph gave circulation, that Mary had joined a Catholic League,
+with the Pope, the Emperor, the King of Spain, the Duke of Savoy, and
+others. Lethington may have believed this; at all events he saw no hope
+of pardon for Moray and his abettors--"no certain way, unless we chop at
+the very root, you know where it lieth" (February 9). {249c} Probably he
+means the murder of Riccio, not of the Queen. Bedford said that Mary had
+not yet signed the League. {249d} We are aware of no proof that there
+was any League to sign, and though Mary was begging money both from Spain
+and the Pope, she probably did not expect to procure more than tolerance
+for her own religion. {250a} The rumours, however, must have had their
+effect in causing apprehension. Moreover, Darnley, from personal
+jealousy; Morton, from fear of losing the Seals; the Douglases, kinsmen
+of Morton and Darnley; and the friends of the exiled nobles, seeing that
+they were likely to be forfeited, conspired with Moray in England to be
+Darnley's men, to slay Riccio, and to make the Queen subordinate to
+Darnley, and "to fortify and maintain" the Protestant faith. Mary,
+indeed, had meant to reintroduce the Spiritual Estate into Parliament, as
+a means of assisting her Church; so she writes to Archbishop Beaton in
+Paris. {250b}
+
+Twelve wooden altars, to be erected in St. Giles's, are said by Knox's
+continuator to have been found in Holyrood. {250c}
+
+Mary's schemes, whatever they extended to, were broken by the murder of
+Riccio in the evening of March 9. He was seized in her presence, and
+dirked by fifty daggers outside of her room. Ruthven, who in June 1564
+had come into Mary's good graces, and Morton were, with Darnley, the
+leaders of the Douglas feud, and of the brethren.
+
+The nobles might easily have taken, tried, and hanged Riccio, but they
+yielded to Darnley and to their own excited passions, when once they had
+torn him from the Queen. The personal pleasure of dirking the wretch
+could not be resisted, and the danger of causing the Queen's miscarriage
+and death may have entered into the plans of Darnley. Knox does not tell
+the story himself; his "History" ends in June 1564. But "in plain terms"
+he "lets the world understand what we mean," namely, that Riccio "was
+justly punished," and that "the act" (of the murderers) was "most just
+and most worthy of _all_ praise." {251a} This Knox wrote just after the
+event, while the murderers were still in exile in England, where Ruthven
+died--seeing a vision of angels! Knox makes no drawback to the entirely
+and absolutely laudable character of the deed. He goes out of his way to
+tell us "in plain terms what we mean," in a digression from his account
+of affairs sixteen years earlier. Thus one fails to understand the
+remark, that "of the manner in which the deed was done we may be certain
+that Knox would disapprove as vehemently as any of his contemporaries."
+{251b} The words may be ironical, for vehement disapproval was not
+conspicuous among Protestant contemporaries. Knox himself, after Mary
+scattered the party of the murderers and recovered power, prayed that
+heaven would "put it into the heart of a multitude" to treat Mary like
+Athaliah.
+
+Mary made her escape from Holyrood to Dunbar, to safety, in the night of
+March 11. March 12 found Knox on his knees; the game was up, the blood
+had been shed in vain. The Queen had not died, but was well, and
+surrounded by friends; and the country was rather for her than against
+her. The Reformer composed a prayer, repenting that "in quiet I am
+negligent, in trouble impatient, tending to desperation," which shows
+insight. He speaks of his pride and ambition, also of his covetousness
+and malice. That he was really covetous we cannot believe, nor does he
+show malice except against idolaters. He "does not doubt himself to be
+elected to eternal salvation," of which he has "assured signs." He has
+"knowledge above the common sort of my brethren" (pride has crept in
+again!), and has been compelled to "forespeak," or prophesy. He implores
+mercy for his "desolate bedfellow," for her children, and for his sons by
+his first wife. "Now, Lord, put end to my misery!" (Edinburgh, March 12,
+1566). Knox fled from Edinburgh, "with a great mourning of the godly of
+religion," says a Diarist, on the same day as the chief murderers took
+flight, March 17; his place of refuge was Kyle in Ayrshire (March 21,
+1566). {252a}
+
+In Randolph's letter, recording the flight of these nobles, he mentions
+eight of their accomplices, and another list is pinned to the letter,
+giving names of men "all at the death of Davy and privy thereunto." This
+applies to about a dozen men, being a marginal note opposite their names.
+A line lower is added, "John Knox, John Craig, preachers." {252b} There
+is no other evidence that Knox, who fled, or Craig, who stood to his
+pulpit, were made privy to the plot. When idolaters thought it best not
+to let the Pope into a scheme for slaying Elizabeth, it is hardly
+probable that Protestants would apprise their leading preachers. On the
+other hand, Calvin was consulted by the would-be assassins of the Duc de
+Guise, in 1559-60, and he prevented the deed, as he assures the Duchesse
+de Ferrare, the mother-in-law of the Duc, after that noble was murdered
+in good earnest. {252c} Calvin, we have shown, knew beforehand of the
+conspiracy of Amboise, which aimed at the death of "Antonius," obviously
+Guise. He disapproved of but did not reveal the plot. Knox, whether
+privy to the murder or not, did not, when he ran away, take the best
+means of disarming suspicion. Neither his name nor that of Craig occurs
+in two lists containing those of between seventy and eighty persons
+"delated," and it is to be presumed that he fled because he did not feel
+sure of protection against Mary's frequently expressed dislike.
+
+In earlier days, with a strong backing, he had not feared "the pleasing
+face of a gentlewoman," as he said, but now he did fear it. Kyle suited
+him well, because the Earl of Cassilis, who had been an idolater, was
+converted by a faithful bride, in August. Dr. M'Crie {253a} says that
+Mary "wrote to a nobleman in the west country with whom Knox resided, to
+banish him from his house." The evidence for this is a letter of
+Parkhurst to Bullinger, in December 1567. Parkhurst tells Bullinger,
+among other novelties, that Riccio was a necromancer, who happened to be
+dirked; by whom he does not say. He adds that Mary commanded "a certain
+pious earl" not to keep Knox in his house. {253b}
+
+In Kyle Knox worked at his "History." On September 4 he signed a letter
+sent from the General Assembly at St. Andrews to Beza, approving of a
+Swiss confession of faith, except so far as the keeping of Christmas,
+Easter, and other Christian festivals is concerned. Knox himself wrote
+to Beza, about this time, an account of the condition of Scotland. It
+would be invaluable, as the career of Mary was rushing to the falls, but
+it is lost. {253c}
+
+On December 24, Mary pardoned all the murderers of Riccio; and Knox
+appears to have been present, though it is not certain, at the Christmas
+General Assembly in Edinburgh. He received permission to visit his sons
+in England, and he wrote two letters: one to the Protestant nobles on
+Mary's attempt to revive the consistorial jurisdiction of the Primate;
+the other to the brethren. To England he carried a remonstrance from the
+Kirk against the treatment of Puritans who had conscientious objections
+to the apparel--"Romish rags"--of the Church Anglican. Men ought to
+oppose themselves boldly to Authority; that is, to Queen Elizabeth, if
+urged further than their consciences can bear. {254a}
+
+Being in England, Knox, of course, did not witness the events associated
+with the Catholic baptism of the baby prince (James VI.); the murder of
+Darnley, in February 1567; the abduction of Mary by Bothwell, and her
+disgraceful marriage to her husband's murderer, in May 1567. If Knox
+excommunicated the Queen, it was probably about this date. Long
+afterwards, on April 25, 1584, Mary was discussing the various churches
+with Waad, an envoy of Cecil. Waad said that the Pope stirred up peoples
+not to obey their sovereigns. "Yet," said the Queen, "a Pope shall
+excommunicate _you_, but _I_ was excommunicated by a pore minister,
+Knokes. In fayth I feare nothinge else but that they will use my sonne
+as they have done the mother." {254b}
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII: THE LAST YEARS OF KNOX: 1567-1572
+
+
+The Royal quarry, so long in the toils of Fate, was dragged down at last,
+and the doom forespoken by the prophet was fulfilled. A multitude had
+their opportunity with this fair Athaliah; and Mary had ridden from
+Carberry Hill, a draggled prisoner, into her own town, among the yells of
+"burn the harlot." But one out of all her friends was faithful to her.
+Mary Seton, to her immortal honour, rode close by the side of her fallen
+mistress and friend.
+
+For six years insulted and thwarted; her smiles and her tears alike
+wasted on greedy, faithless courtiers and iron fanatics; perplexed and
+driven desperate by the wiles of Cecil and Elizabeth; in bodily pain and
+constant sorrow--the sorrow wrought by the miscreant whom she had
+married; without one honest friend; Mary had wildly turned to the man
+who, it is to be supposed, she thought could protect her, and her passion
+had dragged her into unplumbed deeps of crime and shame.
+
+The fall of Mary, the triumph of Protestantism, appear to have, in some
+degree, rather diminished the prominence of Knox. He would never make
+Mary weep again. He had lost the protagonist against whom, for a while,
+he had stood almost alone, and soon we find him complaining of neglect.
+He appeared at the General Assembly of June 25, 1567--a scanty gathering.
+George Buchanan, a layman, was Moderator: the Assembly was adjourned to
+July 21, and the brethren met in arms; wherefore Argyll, who had signed
+the band for Darnley's murder, declined to come. {256a} The few nobles,
+the barons, and others present, vowed to punish the murder of Darnley and
+to defend the child prince; and it was decided that henceforth all
+Scottish princes should swear to "set forward the true religion of Jesus
+Christ, as at present professed and established in this realm"--as they
+are bound to do--"by Deuteronomy and the second chapter of the Book of
+Kings," which, in fact, do not speak of establishing Calvinism.
+
+Among those who sign are Morton, who had guilty foreknowledge of the
+murder; while his kinsman, Archibald Douglas, was present at the doing;
+Sir James Balfour, who was equally involved; Lethington, who signed the
+murder covenant; and Douglas of Whittingham, and Ker of Faldonside, two
+of Riccio's assassins. Most of the nobles stood aloof.
+
+Presently Throckmorton arrived, sent by Elizabeth with the pretence, at
+least, of desiring to save Mary's life, which, but for his exertions, he
+thought would have been taken. He "feared Knox's austerity as much as
+any man's" (July 14). {256b}
+
+On July 17 Knox arrived from the west, where he had been trying to unite
+the Protestants. {256c} Throckmorton found Craig and Knox "very
+austere," well provided with arguments from the Bible, history, the laws
+of Scotland, and the Coronation Oath. {257a} Knox in his sermons
+"threatened the great plague of God to this whole nation and country if
+the Queen be spared from her condign punishment." {257b}
+
+Murderers were in the habit of being lightly let off, in Scotland, and,
+as to Mary, she could easily have been burned for husband-murder, but not
+so easily convicted thereof with any show of justice. The only direct
+evidence of her complicity lay in the Casket Letters, and several of her
+lordly accusers were (if she were guilty) her accomplices. Her prayer to
+be heard in self-defence at the ensuing Parliament of December was
+refused, for excellent reasons; and her opponents had the same good
+reasons for not bringing her to trial. Knox was perfectly justified if
+he desired her to be tried, but several lay members of the General
+Assembly could not have faced that ordeal, and Randolph later accused
+Lethington, in a letter to him, of advising her assassination. {257c}
+
+On July 29 Knox preached at the Coronation of James VI. at Stirling,
+protesting against the rite of anointing. True, it was Jewish, but it
+had passed through the impure hands of Rome, as, by the way, had Baptism.
+Knox also preached at the opening of Parliament, on December 15. We know
+little of him at this time. He had sent his sons to Cambridge, into
+danger of acquiring Anglican opinions, which they did; but now he seems
+to have taken a less truculent view of Anglicanism than in 1559-60. He
+had been drawing a prophetic historical parallel between Chatelherault
+(more or less of the Queen's party) and Judas Iscariot, and was not loved
+by the Hamiltons. The Duke was returning from France, "to restore Satan
+to his kingdom," with the assistance of the Guises. Knox mentions an
+attempt to assassinate Moray, now Regent, which is obscure. "I live as a
+man already dead from all civil things." Thus he wrote to Wood, Moray's
+agent, then in England on the affair of the Casket Letters (September 10,
+1568).
+
+He had already (February 14) declined to gratify Wood by publishing his
+"History." He would not permit it to appear during his life, as "it will
+rather hurt me than profit them" (his readers). He was, very naturally,
+grieved that the conduct of men was not conformable to "the truth of God,
+now of some years manifest." He was not concerned to revenge his own
+injuries "by word or writ," and he foresaw schism in England over
+questions of dress and rites. {258a}
+
+He was neglected. "Have not thine oldest and stoutest acquaintance"
+(Moray, or Kirkcaldy of Grange?) "buried thee in present oblivion, and
+art thou not in that estate, by age, {258b} that nature itself calleth
+thee from the pleasure of things temporal?" (August 19, 1569).
+
+"_In trouble impatient, tending to desperation_," Knox had said of
+himself. He was still unhappy. "Foolish Scotland" had "disobeyed God by
+sparing the Queen's life," and now the proposed Norfolk marriage of Mary
+and her intended restoration were needlessly dreaded. A month later,
+Lethington, thrown back on Mary by his own peril for his share in
+Darnley's murder, writes to the Queen that some ministers are
+reconcilable, "but Nox I think be inflexible." {259a}
+
+A year before Knox wrote his melancholy letter, just cited, he had some
+curious dealings with the English Puritans. In 1566 many of them had
+been ejected from their livings, and, like the Scottish Catholics, they
+"assembled in woods and private houses to worship God." {259b} The
+edifying controversies between these precisians and Grindal, the Bishop
+of London, are recorded by Strype. The bishop was no zealot for
+surplices and the other momentous trifles which agitate the human
+conscience, but Elizabeth insisted on them; and "Her Majesty's Government
+must be carried on." The precisians had deserted the English Liturgy for
+the Genevan Book of Common Order; both sides were appealing to Beza, in
+Geneva, and were wrangling about the interpretation of that Pontiff's
+words. {259c}
+
+Calvin had died in 1564, but the Genevan Church and Beza were still
+umpires, whose decision was eagerly sought, quibbled over, and disputed.
+The French Puritans, in fact, extremely detested the Anglican Book of
+Common Prayer. Thus, in 1562, De la Vigne, a preacher at St. Lo,
+consulted Calvin about the excesses of certain Flemish brethren, who
+adhered to "a certain bobulary (bobulaire) of prayers, compiled, or
+brewed, in the days of Edward VI." The Calvinists of St. Lo decided that
+these Flemings must not approach their holy table, and called our
+communion service "a disguised Mass." The Synod (Calvinistic) of
+Poictiers decided that our Liturgy contains "impieties," and that Satan
+was the real author of the work! There are saints' days, "with epistles,
+lessons, or gospels, as under the papacy." They have heard that the
+Prayer Book has been condemned by Geneva. {260a}
+
+The English sufferers from our Satanic Prayer Book appealed to Geneva,
+and were answered by Beza (October 24, 1567). He observed, "Who are we
+to give any judgment of these things, which, as it seems to us, can be
+healed only by prayers and patience." Geneva has not heard both sides,
+and does not pretend to judge. The English brethren complain that
+ministers are appointed "without any lawful consent of the Presbytery,"
+the English Church not being Presbyterian, and not intending to be. Beza
+hopes that it will become Presbyterian. He most dreads that any should
+"execute their ministry contrary to the will of her Majesty and the
+Bishops," which is exactly what the seceders did. Beza then speaks out
+about the question of costume, which ought not to be forced on the
+ministers. But he does not think that the vestments justify schism. In
+other points the brethren should, in the long run, "give way to manifest
+violence," and "live as private men." "Other defilements" (kneeling,
+&c.) Beza hopes that the Queen and Bishops will remove. Men must
+"patiently bear with one another, and heartily obey the Queen's Majesty
+and all their Bishops." {260b}
+
+As far as this epistle goes, Beza and his colleagues certainly do not
+advise the Puritan seceders to secede.
+
+Bullinger and Gualterus in particular were outworn by the pertinacious
+English Puritans who visited them. One Sampson had, when in exile, made
+the life of Peter Martyr a burden to him by his "clamours," doubts, and
+restless dissatisfaction. "England," wrote Bullinger to Beza (March 15,
+1567), "has many characters of this sort, who cannot be at rest, who can
+never be satisfied, and who have always something or other to complain
+about." Bullinger and Gualterus "were unwilling to contend with these
+men like fencing-masters," tired of their argufying; unable to "withdraw
+our entire confidence from the Bishops." "If any others think of coming
+hither, let them know that they will come to no purpose." {261a}
+
+Knox may have been less unsympathetic, but his advice agreed with the
+advice of the Genevans. Some of the seceders were imprisoned; Cecil and
+the Queen's commissioners encouraged others "to go and preach the Gospel
+in Scotland," sending with them, as it seems, letters commendatory to the
+ruling men there. They went, but they were not long away. "They liked
+not that northern climate, but in May returned again," and fell to their
+old practices. One of them reported that, at Dunbar, "he saw men going
+to the church, on Good Friday, barefooted and bare-kneed, and creeping to
+the cross!" "If this be so," said Grindal, "the Church of Scotland will
+not be pure enough for our men." {261b}
+
+These English brethren, when in Scotland, consulted Knox on the dispute
+which they made a ground of schism. One brother, who was uncertain in
+his mind, visited Knox in Scotland at this time. The result appears in a
+letter to Knox from a seceder, written just after Queen Mary escaped from
+Lochleven in May 1568. The dubiously seceding brother "told the Bishop"
+(Grindal) "that you are flat against and condemn all our doings . . .
+whereupon the Church" (the seceders) "did excommunicate him"! He had
+reviled "the Church," and they at once caught "the excommunicatory
+fever." Meanwhile the earnestly seceding brother thought that he had won
+Knox to _his_ side. But a letter from our Reformer proved his error, and
+the letter, as the brother writes, "is not in all points liked." They
+would not "go back again to the wafer-cake and kneelings" (the Knoxian
+Black Rubric had been deleted from Elizabeth's prayer book), "and to
+other knackles of Popery."
+
+In fact they obeyed Knox's epistle to England of January 1559. "Mingle-
+mangle ministry, Popish order, and Popish apparel," they will not bear.
+Knox's arguments in favour of their conforming, for the time at all
+events, are quoted and refuted: "And also concerning Paul his purifying
+at Jerusalem." The analogy of Paul's conformity had been rejected by
+Knox, at the supper party with Lethington in 1556. He had "doubted
+whether either James's commandment or Paul's obedience proceeded from the
+Holy Ghost." {262a} Yet now Knox had used the very same argument from
+Paul's conformity which, in 1556, he had scouted! The Mass was not in
+question in 1568; still, if Paul was wrong (and he did get into peril
+from a mob!), how could Knox now bid the English brethren follow his
+example? {262b} (See pp. 65-67 supra.)
+
+To be sure Mary was probably at large, when Knox wrote, with 4000 spears
+at her back. The Reformer may have rightly thought it an ill moment to
+irritate Elizabeth, or he may have grown milder than he was in 1559, and
+come into harmony with Bullinger. In February of the year of this
+correspondence he had written, "God comfort that dispersed little flock,"
+apparently the Puritans of his old Genevan congregation, now in England,
+and in trouble, "amongst whom I would be content to end my days. . . . "
+{263a}
+
+In January 1570, Knox, "with his one foot in the grave," as he says, did
+not despair of seeing his desire upon his enemy. Moray was asking
+Elizabeth to hand over to him Queen Mary, giving hostages for the safety
+of her life. Moray sent his messenger to Cecil, on January 2, 1570, and
+Knox added a brief note. "If ye strike not at the root," he said, "the
+branches that appear to be broken will bud again. . . . More days than
+one would not suffice to express what I think." {263b} What he thought
+is obvious; "stone dead hath no fellow." But Mary's day of doom had not
+yet come; Moray was not to receive her as a prisoner, for the Regent was
+shot dead, in Linlithgow, on January 23, by Hamilton of Bothwellhaugh, to
+the unconcealed delight of his sister, for whom his death was opportune.
+
+The assassin, Bothwellhaugh, in May 1568, had been pardoned for his
+partisanship of Mary, at Knox's intercession. "Thy image, O Lord, did so
+clearly shine on that personage" (Moray)--he said in his public prayer at
+the Regent's funeral {263c}--"that the devil, and the people to whom he
+is Prince, could not abide it." We know too much of Moray to acquiesce,
+without reserve, in this eulogium.
+
+Knox was sorely disturbed, at this time, by the publication of a jeu
+d'esprit, in which the author professed to have been hidden in a bed, in
+the cabinet of a room, while the late Regent held a council of his
+friends. {264a} The tone and manner of Lindsay, Wood, Knox and others
+were admirably imitated; in their various ways, and with appropriate
+arguments, some of them urged Moray to take the crown for his life. By
+no people but the Scots, perhaps, could this jape have been taken
+seriously, but, with a gravity that would have delighted Charles Lamb,
+Knox denounced the skit from the pulpit as a fabrication by the Father of
+Lies. The author, the human penman, he said (according to Calderwood),
+was fated to die friendless in a strange land. The galling shaft came
+out of the Lethington quiver; it may have been composed by several of the
+family, but Thomas Maitland, who later died in Italy, was regarded as the
+author, {264b} perhaps because he did die alone in a strange country.
+
+At this time the Castle of Edinburgh was held in the Queen's interest by
+Kirkcaldy of Grange, who seems to have been won over by the guile of
+Lethington. That politician needed a shelter from the danger of the
+Lennox feud, and the charge of having been guilty of Darnley's murder. To
+take the place was beyond the power of the Protestant party, and it did
+not fall under the guns of their English allies during the life of the
+Reformer.
+
+He had a tedious quarrel with Kirkcaldy in December 1570-January 1571. A
+retainer of Kirkcaldy's had helped to kill a man whom his master only
+wanted to be beaten. The retainer was put into the Tolbooth; Kirkcaldy
+set him free, and Knox preached against Kirkcaldy. Hearing that Knox had
+styled him a murderer, Kirkcaldy bade Craig read from the pulpit a note
+in which he denied the charge. He prayed God to decide whether he or
+Knox "has been most desirous of innocent blood." Craig would not read
+the note: Kirkcaldy appealed in a letter to the kirk-session. He
+explained the origin of the trouble: the slain man had beaten his
+brother; he bade his agents beat the insulter, who drew his sword, and
+got a stab. On this Knox preached against him, he was told, as a cut-
+throat.
+
+Next Sunday Knox reminded his hearers that he had not called Kirkcaldy a
+murderer (though in the case of the Cardinal, he was), but had said that
+the lawless proceedings shocked him more than if they had been done by
+common cut-throats. Knox then wrote a letter to the kirk-session, saying
+that Kirkcaldy's defence proved him "to be a murderer at heart," for St.
+John says that "whoso loveth not his brother is a man-slayer"; and
+Kirkcaldy did not love the man who was killed. All this was apart from
+the question: had Knox called Kirkcaldy a common cut-throat? Kirkcaldy
+then asked that Knox's explanation of what he said in the pulpit might be
+given in writing, as his words had been misreported, and Knox, "creeping
+upon his club," went personally to the kirk-session, and requested the
+Superintendent to admonish Kirkcaldy of his offences. Next Sunday he
+preached about his eternal Ahab, and Kirkcaldy was offended by the
+historical parallel. When he next was in church Knox went at him again;
+it was believed that Kirkcaldy would avenge himself, but the western
+brethren wrote to remind him of their "great care" for Knox's person. So
+the quarrel, which made sermons lively, died out. {266}
+
+There was little goodwill to Knox in the Queen's party, and as the
+conflict was plainly to be decided by the sword, Robert Melville, from
+the Castle, advised that the prophet should leave the town, in May 1571.
+The "Castilian" chiefs wished him no harm, they would even shelter him in
+their hold, but they could not be responsible for his "safety from the
+multitude and rascal," in the town, for the craftsmen preferred the party
+of Kirkcaldy. Knox had a curious interview in the Castle with
+Lethington, now stricken by a mortal malady. The two old foes met
+courteously, and parted even in merriment; Lethington did not mock, and
+Knox did not threaten. They were never again to see each other's faces,
+though the dying Knox was still to threaten, and the dying Lethington was
+still to mock.
+
+July found Knox and his family at St. Andrews, in the New Hospice, a pre-
+Reformation ecclesiastical building, west of the Cathedral, and adjoining
+the gardens of St. Leonard's College. At this time James Melville,
+brother of the more celebrated scholar and divine, Andrew Melville, was a
+golf-playing young student of St. Leonard's College. He tells us how
+Knox would walk about the College gardens, exhorting the St. Leonard's
+lads to be staunch Protestants; for St. Salvator's and St. Mary's were
+not devoted to the Reformer and his party. The smitten preacher (he had
+suffered a touch of apoplexy) walked slowly, a fur tippet round his neck
+in summer, leaning on his staff, and on the shoulder of his secretary,
+Bannatyne. He returned, at St. Andrews, in his sermons, to the Book of
+Daniel with which, nearly a quarter of a century ago, he began his pulpit
+career. In preaching he was moderate--for half-an-hour; and then,
+warming to his work, he made young Melville shudder and tremble, till he
+could not hold his pen to write. No doubt the prophet was denouncing
+"that last Beast," the Pope, and his allies in Scotland, as he had done
+these many years ago. Ere he had finished his sermon "he was like to
+ding the pulpit to blads and fly out of it." He attended a play, written
+by Davidson, later a famous preacher, on the siege and fall of the
+Castle, exhibiting the hanging of his old ally, Kirkcaldy, "according to
+Mr. Knox's doctrine," says Melville. This cheerful entertainment was
+presented at the marriage of John Colville, destined to be a traitor, a
+double spy, and a renegade from the Kirk to "the Synagogue of Satan."
+{267a}
+
+Knox now collected historical materials from Alexander Hay, Clerk of the
+Privy Council, and heard of the publication of Buchanan's scurrilous
+"Detection" of Queen Mary, in December 1571. {267b}
+
+Knox had denounced the Hamiltons as murderers, so one of that name
+accused our Reformer of having signed a band for the murder of
+Darnley--not the murder at Kirk o' Field, but a sketch for an attempt at
+Perth! He had an interview with Knox, not of the most satisfactory, and
+there was a quarrel with another Hamilton, who later became a Catholic
+and published scurrilous falsehoods about Knox, in Latin. In fact our
+Reformer had quarrels enough on his hands at St. Andrews, and to one
+adversary he writes about what he would do, if he had his old strength of
+body.
+
+Not in the Regency, but mainly under the influence of Morton, bishops
+were reintroduced, at a meeting of the Kirk held at Leith, in January
+1572. The idea was that each bishop should hand over most of his
+revenues to Morton, or some other person in power. Knox, of course,
+objected; he preached at St. Andrews before Morton inducted a primate of
+his clan, but he refused to "inaugurate" the new prelate. The
+Superintendent of Fife did what was to be done, and a bishop (he of
+Caithness) was among the men who imposed their hands on the head of the
+new Archbishop of St. Andrews. Thus the imposition of hands, which Knox
+had abolished in the Book of Discipline, crept back again, and remains in
+Presbyterian usage. {268a}
+
+Had Knox been in vigour he might have summoned the brethren in arms to
+resist; but he was weak of body, and Morton was an ill man to deal with.
+Knox did draw up articles intended to minimise the mischief of these
+bastard and simoniacal bishoprics and abused patronages (August 1572).
+{268b} On May 26, 1572, he describes himself as "lying in St. Andrews,
+half dead." {268c} He was able, however, to preach at a witch, who was
+probably none the better for his distinguished attentions.
+
+On August 17, during a truce between the hostile parties, Knox left St.
+Andrews for Edinburgh, "not without dolour and displeasure of the few
+godly that were in the town, but to the great joy and pleasure of the
+rest;" for, "half dead" as he was, Knox had preached a political sermon
+every Sunday, and he was in the pulpit at St. Giles's on the last Sunday
+of August. {269a} As his colleague, Craig, had disgusted the brethren by
+his moderation and pacific temper, a minister named Lawson was appointed
+as Knox's coadjutor.
+
+Late in August came the news of the St. Bartholomew massacre (August 24).
+Knox rose to the occasion, and, preaching in the presence of du Croc, the
+French ambassador, bade him tell his King that he was a murderer, and
+that God's vengeance should never depart from him or his house. {269b}
+The prophecy was amply fulfilled. Du Croc remonstrated, "but the Lords
+answered they could not stop the mouths of ministers to speak against
+themselves."
+
+There was a convention of Protestants in Edinburgh on October 20, but
+lords did not attend, and few lairds were present. The preachers and
+other brethren in the Assembly proposed that all Catholics in the realm
+should be compelled to recant publicly, to lose their whole property and
+be banished if they were recalcitrant, and, if they remained in the
+country, that all subjects should be permitted, lawfully, to put them to
+death. ("To invade them, and every one of them, to the death.") {269c}
+This was the ideal, embodied in law, of the brethren in 1560. Happily
+they were not permitted to disgrace Scotland by a Bartholomew massacre of
+her own.
+
+Mr. Hume Brown thinks that these detestable proposals "if not actually
+penned by Knox, must have been directly inspired by him." He does not,
+however, mention the demand for massacre, except as "pains and penalties
+for those who _preached_ the old religion." {269d} "Without exception of
+persons, great or small," _all_ were to be obliged to recant, or to be
+ruined and exiled, or to be massacred. Dr. M'Crie does not hint at the
+existence of these articles, "to be given to the Regent and Council."
+They included a very proper demand for the reformation of vice at home.
+Certainly Knox did not pen or dictate the Articles, for none of his
+favourite adjectives occurs in the document.
+
+At this time Elizabeth, Leicester, and Cecil desired to hand over Queen
+Mary to Mar, the Regent, "to proceed with her by way of justice," a
+performance not to be deferred, "either for Parliament or a great
+Session." Very Petty Sessions indeed, if any, were to suffice for the
+trial of the Queen. {270} There are to be no "temporising solemnities,"
+all are to be "stout and resolute _in execution_," Leicester thus writes
+to an unknown correspondent on October 10. Killigrew, who was to arrange
+the business with Mar, was in Scotland by September 19. On October 6,
+Killigrew writes that Knox is very feeble but still preaching, and that
+he says, if he is not a bishop, it is by no fault of Cecil's. "I trust
+to satisfy Morton," says Killigrew, "and as for John Knox, that thing, as
+you may see by my letter to Mr. Secretary, is done and doing daily; the
+people in general well bent to England, abhorring the fact in France, and
+fearing their tyranny."
+
+"That thing" is _not_ the plan for murdering Mary without trial; if
+Killigrew meant that he had obtained Knox's assent to _that_, he would
+not write "that thing is doing daily." Even Morton, more scrupulous than
+Elizabeth and Cecil, said that "there must be some kind of process"
+(trial, proces), attended secretly by the nobles and the ministers. The
+trial would be in Mary's absence, or would be brief indeed, for the
+prisoner was not to live three hours after crossing the Border! Others,
+unnamed, insisted on a trial; the Queen had never been found guilty.
+Killigrew speaks of "two ministers" as eager for the action, but nothing
+proves that Knox was one of them. While Morton and Mar were haggling for
+the price of Mary's blood, Mar died, on October 28, and the whole plot
+fell through. {271} Anxious as Knox had declared himself to be to
+"strike at the root," he could not, surely, be less scrupulous about a
+trial than Morton, though the decision of the Court was foredoomed.
+Sandys, the Bishop of London, advised that Mary's head should be chopped
+off!
+
+On November 9, 1572, Knox inducted Mr. Lawson into his place as minister
+at St. Giles's. On the 13th he could not read the Bible aloud, he paid
+his servants, and gave his man a present, the last, in addition to his
+wages. On the 15th two friends came to see Knox at noon, dinner time. He
+made an effort, and for the last time sat at meat with them, ordering a
+fresh hogshead of wine to be drawn. "He willed Archibald Stewart to send
+for the wine so long as it lasted, for he would never tarry until it were
+drunken." On the 16th the Kirk came to him, by his desire; and he
+protested that he had never hated any man personally, but only their
+errors, nor had he made merchandise of the Word. He sent a message to
+Kirkcaldy bidding him repent, or the threatenings should fall on him and
+the Castle. His exertions increased his illness. There had been a final
+quarrel with the dying Lethington, who complained that Knox, in sermons
+and otherwise, charged him with saying there is "neither heaven nor
+hell," an atheistic position of which (see his eloquent prayer before
+Corrichie fight, wherein Huntly died {272a}) he was incapable. On the
+16th he told "the Kirk" that Lethington's conduct proved that he really
+did disbelieve in God, and a future of rewards and punishments. That was
+not the question. The question was--Did Knox, publicly and privately, as
+Lethington complained, attribute to him words which he denied having
+spoken, asking that the witnesses should be produced. We wish that Knox
+had either produced good evidences, or explained why he could not produce
+them, or had apologised, or had denied that he spoke in the terms
+reported to Lethington.
+
+James Melville says that the Rev. Mr. Lindsay, of Leith, told him that
+Knox bade him carry a message to Kirkcaldy in the Castle. After
+compliments, it ran: "He shall be disgracefully dragged from his nest to
+punishment, and hung on a gallows before the face of the sun, unless he
+speedily amend his life, and flee to the mercy of God." Knox added:
+"That man's soul is dear to me, and I would not have it perish, if I
+could save it." Kirkcaldy consulted Maitland, and returned with a reply
+which contained Lethington's last scoff at the prophet. However, Morton,
+when he had the chance, did hang Kirkcaldy, as in the play acted before
+Knox at St. Andrews, "according to Mr. Knox's doctrine." "The preachers
+clamoured for blood to cleanse blood." {272b}
+
+As to a secret conference with Morton on the 17th, the Earl, before his
+execution, confessed that the dying man asked him, "if he knew anything
+of the King's (Darnley's) murder?" "I answered, indeed, I knew nothing
+of it"--perhaps a pardonable falsehood in the circumstances. Morton said
+that the people who had suffered from Kirkcaldy and the preachers daily
+demanded the soldier's death.
+
+Other sayings of the Reformer are reported. He repressed a lady who, he
+thought, wished to flatter him: "Lady, lady, the black ox has never
+trodden yet upon your foot!" "I have been in heaven and have possession,
+and I have tasted of these heavenly joys where presently I am," he said,
+after long meditation, beholding, as in Bunyan's allegory, the hills of
+Beulah. He said the Creed, which soon vanished from Scottish services;
+and in saying "Our Father," broke off to murmur, "Who can pronounce so
+holy words?" On November 24 he rose and dressed, but soon returned to
+bed. His wife read to him the text, "where I cast my first anchor," St.
+John's Gospel, chapter xvii. About half-past ten he said, "Now it is
+come!" and being asked for a sign of his steadfast faith, he lifted up
+one hand, "and so slept away without any pain." {273}
+
+Knox was buried on November 26 in the churchyard south of St. Giles. A
+flat stone, inscribed J. K., beside the equestrian statue of Charles II.,
+is reported to mark his earthly resting-place. He died as he had lived,
+a poor man; a little money was owed to him; all his debts were paid. His
+widow, two years later, married Andrew Ker of Faldonside, so notorious
+for levelling a pistol at the Queen on the occasion of Riccio's murder.
+Ker appears to have been intimate with the Reformer. Bannatyne speaks of
+a story of Lady Atholl's witchcraft, told by a Mr. Lundie to Knox, at
+dinner, "at Falsyde." This was a way of spelling Faldonside, {274} the
+name of Ker's place, hard by the Tweed, within a mile of Abbotsford.
+Probably Ker and his wife sleep in the family burying-ground, the disused
+kirkyard of Lindean, near a little burn that murmurs under the broad
+burdock leaves on its way to join the Ettrick.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX A: ALLEGED PERFIDY OF MARY OF GUISE
+
+
+The Regent has usually been accused of precipitating, or causing the
+Revolution of 1559, by breaking a pledge given to the Protestants
+assembled at Perth (May 10-11, 1559). Knox's "History" and a letter of
+his are the sources of this charge, and it is difficult to determine the
+amount of truth which it may contain.
+
+Our earliest evidence on the matter is found in a letter to the English
+Privy Council, from Sir James Croft, commanding at Berwick. The letter,
+of May 19, is eight days later than the riots at Perth. It is not always
+accurately informed; Croft corrects one or two statements in later
+despatches, but the points corrected are not those with which we are here
+concerned. {275a} Neither in this nor in other English advices do I note
+any charge of ill faith brought against the Regent on this occasion.
+Croft says that, on Knox's arrival, many nobles and a multitude of others
+repaired to Dundee to hear him and others preach. The Regent then
+summoned these preachers before her to Stirling, {275b} but as they had a
+"train" of 5000 or 6000, she "dismissed the appearance," putting the
+preachers to the horn, and commanding the nobility to appear before her
+in Edinburgh. The "companies" then retired and wrecked monasteries at
+Perth. The Lords and they had _previously_ sent Erskine of Dun to the
+Regent, offering to appear before her with only their household servants,
+to hear the preachers dispute with the clergy, if she would permit. The
+Regent, "taking displeasure with" Erskine of Dun, bade him begone out of
+her sight. He rode off (to Perth), and she had him put to the horn (as a
+fact, he was only fined in his recognisances as bail for one of the
+preachers). The riots followed his arrival in Perth.
+
+Such is our earliest account; there is no mention of a promise broken by
+the Regent.
+
+Knox himself wrote two separate and not always reconcilable accounts of
+the first revolutionary explosion; one in a letter of June 23 to Mrs.
+Locke, the other in a part of Book II. of his "History," composed at some
+date before October 23, 1559. That portion of his "History" is an
+apologia for the proceedings of his party, and was apparently intended
+for contemporary publication. {276a}
+
+This part of the "History," therefore, as the work of an advocate, needs
+to be checked, when possible, by other authorities. We first examine
+Knox's letter of June 23, 1559, to Mrs. Locke. He says that he arrived
+in Edinburgh on May 2, and, after resting for a day, went (on May 4) to
+the brethren assembled at Dundee. They all marched to Perth, meaning
+thence to accompany the preachers to their day of law at Stirling, May
+10. But, lest the proceeding should seem rebellious, they sent a baron
+(Erskine of Dun, in fact) to the Regent, "with declaration of our minds."
+The Regent _and Council_ in reply, bade the multitude "stay, and not come
+to Stirling . . . and so should no extremity be used, but the summons
+should be continued" (deferred) "till further advisement. Which, being
+gladly granted of us, some of the brethren returned to their dwelling-
+places. But the Queen _and her Council_, nothing mindful of her and
+their promise, incontinent did call" (summon) "the preachers, and for
+lack of their appearance, did exile and put them and their assistants to
+the horn. . . . " {276b}
+
+It would be interesting to know who the Regent's Council were on this
+occasion. The Reformer errs when he tells Mrs. Locke that the Regent
+outlawed "the assisters" of the preachers. Dr. M'Crie publishes an
+extract from the "Justiciary Records" of May 10, in which Methuen,
+Christison, Harlaw, and Willock, and no others, are put to the horn, or
+outlawed, in absence, for breach of the Regent's proclamations, and for
+causing "tumults and seditions." No one else is put to the horn, but the
+sureties for the preachers' appearance are fined. {276c}
+
+In his "History," Knox says that the Regent, when Erskine of Dun arrived
+at Stirling as an emissary of the brethren, "began to craft with him,
+soliciting him to stay the multitude, and the preachers also, with
+promise that she would take some better order." Erskine wrote to the
+brethren, "to stay and not to come forward, showing what promise and
+_hope_ he had of the Queen's Grace's favours." Some urged that they
+should go forward till the summons was actually "discharged," otherwise
+the preachers and their companions would be put to the horn. Others said
+that the Regent's promises were "not to be suspected . . . and so did the
+whole multitude with their preachers stay. . . . The Queen, perceiving
+that the preachers did not appear, began to utter her malice, and
+notwithstanding any request made on the contrary, gave command to put
+them to the horn. . . ." Erskine then prudently withdrew, rode to Perth,
+and "did conceal nothing of the Queen's craft and falsehood." {277a}
+
+In this version the Regent bears all the blame, nothing is said of the
+Council. "The whole multitude stay"--at Perth, or it may perhaps be
+meant that they do not come forward towards Stirling. The Regent's
+promise is merely that she would "take some better order." She does not
+here promise to _postpone_ the summons, and refuses "any request made" to
+abstain from putting them to the horn. The account, therefore, is
+somewhat more vague than that in the letter to Mrs. Locke. Prof. Hume
+Brown puts it that the Regent "in her understanding with Erskine of Dun
+_had publicly cancelled_ the summons of the preachers for the 10th of
+May," which rather overstates the case perhaps. That she should
+"publicly cancel" or "discharge" the summons was what a part of the
+brethren desired, and did not get. {277b}
+
+We now turn to a fragmentary and anonymous "Historie of the Estate of
+Scotland," concerning which Prof. Hume Brown says, "Whoever the author
+may have been, he writes as a contemporary, or from information supplied
+by a contemporary . . . what inspires confidence in him is that certain
+of his facts not recorded by other contemporary Scottish historians are
+corroborated by the despatches of d'Oysel and others in Teulet." {277c}
+
+I elsewhere {277d} give reasons for thinking that this "Historie" is
+perhaps the chronicle of Bruce of Earl's Hall, a contemporary gentleman
+of Fife. I also try to show that he writes, on one occasion, as an eye-
+witness.
+
+This author, who is a strong partisan of the Reformers, says nothing of
+the broken promise of the Regent and Council. He mentions the intention
+to march to Stirling, and then writes: "And although the Queen Regent was
+most earnestly requested and persuaded to continue"--that is to defer the
+summons--"nevertheless she remained wilful and obstinate, so that the
+counsel of God must needs take effect. Shortly, the day being come,
+because they appeared not, their sureties were outlawed, and the
+preachers ordered to be put to the horn. The Laird of Dun, who was sent
+from Perth by the brethren, perceiving her obstinacy, they" (who?)
+"turned from Stirling, and coming to Perth, declared to the brethren the
+obstinacy they found in the Queen. . . . "
+
+This sturdy Protestant's version, which does not accuse the Regent of
+breaking troth, is corroborated by a Catholic contemporary, Lesley,
+Bishop of Ross. He says that Erskine of Dun was sent to beg the Regent
+not to impose a penalty on the preachers in their absence. But as soon
+as Dun returned and Knox learned from him that the Regent would not grant
+their request, he preached the sermon which provoked the devastation of
+the monasteries. {278a} Buchanan and Spottiswoode follow Knox, but they
+both use Knox's book, and are not independent witnesses.
+
+The biographers of Knox do not quote "The Historie of the Estate of
+Scotland," where it touches on the beginning of the Revolution, without
+disparaging the Regent's honour. We have another dubious witness, Sir
+James Melville, who arrived on a mission from France to the Regent on
+June 13; he left Paris about June 1. This is the date of a letter {278b}
+in which Henri II. offers the Regent every assistance in the warmest
+terms. Melville writes, however, that in his verbal orders, delivered by
+the Constable in the royal presence, the Constable said, "I have
+intelligence that the Queen Regent has not kept all things promised to
+them." But Melville goes on to say that the Constable quoted d'Elboeuf's
+failure to reach Scotland with his fleet, as a reason for not sending the
+troops which were promised by Henri. As d'Elboeuf's failure occurred
+long after the date of the alleged conversation, the evidence of Melville
+is here incorrect. He wrote his "Memoirs" much later, in old age, but
+Henri may have written to the Regent in one sense, and given Melville
+orders in another. {279a}
+
+We find that Knox's charge against the Regent is not made in our earliest
+information, Croft's letter of May 19: is not made by the Protestant
+(and, we think, contemporary) author of the "Historie," and, of course,
+is not hinted at by Lesley, a Catholic. We have seen throughout that
+Knox vilifies Mary of Guise in cases where she is blameless. On the
+other hand, Knox is our only witness who was at Perth at the time of the
+events, and it cannot be doubted that what he told Mrs. Locke was what he
+believed, whether correctly or erroneously. He could believe anything
+against Mary of Guise. Archbishop Spottiswoode says, "The author of the
+story" ("History") "ascribed to John Knox in his whole discourse showeth
+a bitter and hateful spite against the Regent, forging dishonest things
+which were never so much as suspected by any, setting down his own
+conjectures as certain truths, yea, the least syllable that did escape
+her in passion, he maketh it an argument of her cruel and inhuman
+disposition . . . " {279b} In the MS. used by Bishop Keith, {279c}
+Spottiswoode added, after praising the Regent, "these things I have heard
+my father often affirm"; he had the like testimony "from an honourable
+and religious lady, who had the honour to wait near her person."
+Spottiswoode was, therefore, persuaded that the "History" "was none of
+Mr. Knox his writings." In spite of this opinion, Spottiswoode, writing
+about 1620-35, accepts most of the hard things that Knox says of the
+Regent's conduct in 1559, and indeed exaggerates one or two of them; that
+is, as relates to her political behaviour, for example, in the affair of
+the broken promise of May 10. It may be urged that here Spottiswoode had
+the support of the reminiscences of his father, a Superintendent in the
+Knoxian church.
+
+
+
+
+APPENDIX B: FORGERY PROCURED BY MARY OF GUISE
+
+
+In the writer's opinion several of Knox's accusations of perfidy against
+the Regent, in 1559, are not proved, and the attempts to prove them are
+of a nature which need not be qualified. But it is necessary to state
+the following facts as tending to show that the Regent was capable of
+procuring a forgery against the Duke of Chatelherault. A letter
+attributed to him exists in the French Archives, {280a} dated Glasgow,
+January 25, 1560, in which the Duke curries favour with Francis II., and
+encloses his blank bond, un blanc scelle, offering to send his children
+to France. {280b} _On January_ 28, the Regent writes from Scotland to de
+Noailles, then the French Ambassador to England, bidding him to mention
+this submission to Elizabeth, and even show the Duke's letter and blank
+bond, that Elizabeth may see how little he is to be trusted. Now how
+could the Regent, on January 28, have a letter sent by the Duke to France
+on January 25? She must have intercepted it in Scotland. {280c} Next,
+on March 15, 1560, the Duke, writing to Norfolk, denies the letter
+attributed to him by the French. {280d} He said that any one of a
+hundred Hamiltons would fight M. de Seurre (the French Ambassador who, in
+February, succeeded de Noailles) on this quarrel. {280e}
+
+There exists a document, in the cipher of Throckmorton, English
+Ambassador in France, purporting to be a copy of a letter from the Regent
+to the Duc and Cardinal de Guise, dated Edinburgh, March 27, 1560. {280f}
+The Regent, at that date, was in Leith, not in Edinburgh Castle, where
+she went on April 1. In that letter she is made to say that de Seurre
+has "very evil misunderstood" the affair of the letter attributed to
+Chatelherault. She had procured "blanks" of his "by one of her servants
+here" (at Leith) "to the late Bishop of Ross"; the Duke's alleged letter
+and submission of January 25 had been "filled up" on a "blank," the Duke
+knowing nothing of the matter.
+
+This letter of the Regent, then, must also, if authentic, have been
+somehow intercepted or procured by Throckmorton, in France. It is
+certain that Throckmorton sometimes, by bribery, did obtain copies of
+secret French papers, but I have not found him reporting to Cecil or
+Queen Elizabeth this letter of the Regent's. The reader must estimate
+for himself the value of that document. I have stated the case as fairly
+as I can, and though the evidence against the Regent, as it stands, would
+scarcely satisfy a jury, I believe that, corrupted by the evil example of
+the Congregation, the Regent, in January 1560, did procure a forgery
+intended to bring suspicion on Chatelherault. But how could she be
+surprised that de Seurre did not understand the real state of the case?
+The Regent may have explained the true nature of the affair to de
+Noailles, but it may have been unknown to de Seurre, who succeeded that
+ambassador. Yet, how could she ask any ambassador to produce a confessed
+forgery as genuine?
+
+
+
+
+Footnotes
+
+
+{0a} Inventories of Mary, Queen of Scots, p. cxxii., note 7.
+
+{0b} Hume Brown, John Knox, ii. 320-324.
+
+{2a} Probably Mrs. Knox died in her son's youth, and his father married
+again. Catholic writers of the period are unanimous in declaring that
+Knox had a stepmother.
+
+{2b} Knox, Laing's edition, iv. 78.
+
+{4} See Young's letter, first published by Professor Hume Brown, John
+Knox, vol. ii. Appendix, 320-324.
+
+{5} Laing, in his Knox, vi. xxi. xxii.
+
+{6} Knox, i. 36-40. The facts are pointed out by Professor Cowan in The
+Athenaeum, December 3, 1904, and had been recognised by Dr. Hay Fleming.
+
+{7} Beza, writing in 1580, says that study of St. Jerome and St.
+Augustine suggested his doubts. Icones Virorum Doctrina Simul ac Pietate
+Illustrium.
+
+{9} Pollen, Papal Negotiations with Mary Stuart, 428-430, 522, 524, 528.
+
+{10} Knox, vi. 172, 173.
+
+{12} Letter of Young to Beza. Hume Brown, John Knox, ii. 322-24.
+
+{15a} Cf. Life of George Wishart, by the Rev. Charles Rodger, 7-12
+(1876).
+
+{15b} Maxwell, Old Dundee, 83, 84.
+
+{17} M'Crie's Knox, 24 (1855).
+
+{18a} "Letter to the Faithful," cf. M'Crie, Life of John Knox, 292.
+
+{18b} Knox, vi. 229.
+
+{19} M'Crie, 292.
+
+{20} Dr. Hay Fleming has impugned this opinion, but I am convinced by
+the internal evidence of tone and style in the tract; indeed, an earlier
+student has anticipated my idea. The tract is described by Dr. M'Crie in
+his Life of Knox, 326-327 (1855).
+
+{22} Most of the gentry of Fife were in the murder or approved of it,
+and the castle seems to have contained quite a pleasant country-house
+party. They were cheered by the smiles of beauty, and in the treasurer's
+accounts we learn that Janet Monypenny of Pitmilly (an estate still in
+the possession of her family), was "summoned for remaining in the castle,
+and assisting" the murderers. Dr. M'Crie cites Janet in his list of
+"Scottish Martyrs and Prosecutions for Heresy" (Life of Knox, 315). This
+martyr was a cousin, once removed, of the murdered ecclesiastic.
+
+{23a} Knox, Laing's edition, i. 180.
+
+{23b} Knox, i. 182. "The siege continued to near the end of January."
+"The truce was of treacherous purpose," i. 183.
+
+{24} Knox, i. 203-205.
+
+{25a} Thorpe's Calendar, i. 60; Register Privy Council, i. 57, 58;
+Tytler, vi. 8 (1837).
+
+{25b} State Papers, Scotland, Thorpe, i. 61.
+
+{25c} Bain, Calendar of Scottish Papers, 1547-69, i. I; Tytler, iii. 51
+(1864).
+
+{26a} Bain i. 2; Knox, i. 182, 183.
+
+{26b} For the offering of the papal remission to the garrison of the
+castle before April 2, 1547, see Stewart of Cardonald's letter of that
+date to Wharton, in Bain's Calendar of Scottish Papers, 1547-69, i. 4-5.
+
+{27a} John Knox, i. 80.
+
+{27b} State Papers, Domestic. Addenda, Edward VI., p. 327. Lord Eure
+says there were twenty galleys.
+
+{27c} Odet De Selve, Correspondence Politique, pp. 170-178.
+
+{28} Knox, i. 201.
+
+{30a} Leonti Strozzio, incolumitatem modo pacti, se dediderunt, writes
+Buchanan. Professor Hume Brown says that Buchanan evidently confirms
+Knox; but incolumitas means security for bare life, and nothing more.
+Lesley says that the terms _asked_ were life and fortune, salvi cum
+fortunis, but the terms _granted_ were but safety in life and limb, and,
+it seems, freedom to depart, ut soli homines integri discederent. If
+Lesley, a Catholic historian, is right, and if by discederent he means
+"go freely away," the French broke the terms of surrender.
+
+{30b} Knox, i. 206, 228.
+
+{33a} Lorimer, John Knox and the Church of England, 261.
+
+{33b} Ibid., 158.
+
+{33c} Ibid., 156, 157.
+
+{35} Compare the preface, under the Restoration, to our existing prayer
+book.
+
+{36a} Lorimer, John Knox and the Church of England, 98-136.
+
+{36b} Knox, iii. 122.
+
+{37a} Knox, iii. 297.
+
+{37b} Ibid., iii. 122.
+
+{38a} Knox, iii. 280-282.
+
+{38b} Lorimer, i. 162-176.
+
+{39} But, for the date, cf. Hume Brown, John Knox, i. 148; and M'Crie,
+65, note 5; Knox, iii. 156.
+
+{40a} Knox, iii. 120.
+
+{40b} Laing, Knox, vi. pp. lxxx., lxxxi.
+
+{40c} Pollen, The Month, September 1897.
+
+{43} Knox, iii. 366.
+
+{45} Lorimer, John Knox and the Church of England, 259.
+
+{47a} Original Letters, Parker Society, 745-747; Knox, iii. 221-226.
+
+{47b} M'Crie, 65 (1855); Knox, iii. 235.
+
+{48} Knox, iii. 184.
+
+{49a} Knox, iii. 309.
+
+{49b} Ibid., iii. 328, 329.
+
+{49c} Ibid., iii. 194.
+
+{54} cf. Hume Brown, ii. 299, for the terms.
+
+{56} John Knox, i. 174, 175; Corp. Ref., xliii. 337-344.
+
+{58} For the Frankfort affair, see Laing's Knox, iv. 1-40, with Knox's
+own narrative, 41-49; the letters to and from Calvin, 51-68. Calvin, in
+his letter to the Puritans at Frankfort, writes: "In the Anglican
+Liturgy, _as you describe it_, I see many trifles that may be put up
+with," Prof. Hume Brown's rendering of tolerabiles ineptias. The author
+of the "Troubles at Frankfort" (1575) leaves out "as you describe it,"
+and renders "In the Liturgie of Englande I see that there were manye
+tollerable foolishe thinges." But Calvin, though he boasts him "easy and
+flexible in mediis rebus, such as external rites," is decidedly in favour
+of the Puritans.
+
+{60} Knox i. 244.
+
+{62a} Knox, i. 245, note I.
+
+{62b} Ibid., iv. 245.
+
+{66} I conceive these to have been the arguments of the party of
+compromise, judging from the biblical texts which they adduced.
+
+{67} Knox, i. 247-249.
+
+{71a} Knox, i. 92.
+
+{71b} Ibid., iv. 75-84.
+
+{73} Knox; iv. 238-240.
+
+{74} We shall see that reformers like Lord James and Glencairn seem, at
+this moment, to have sided with Mary of Guise.
+
+{76a} Knox, i. 267-270.
+
+{76b} Corpus Reformatorum, xlvi. 426.
+
+{77a} More probably by Calvin's opinion.
+
+{77b} Knox, iv. 248-253; i. 267-273.
+
+{78} Stevenson, Selected MSS., pp. 69, 70 (1827); Bain, i. 585; Randolph
+to Cecil, January 2, 1561.
+
+{80a} Knox, iv. 255-276.
+
+{80b} Ibid., i. 273, 274.
+
+{81a} Knox, i. 275, 276.
+
+{81b} Ibid., i. 273, 274.
+
+{83} Knox, iv. 501, 502.
+
+{84} Knox, iv. 358. Zurich Letters, 34-36.
+
+{85} Knox, iv. 486, 488.
+
+{87a} Wodrow Miscellany, vol. i.
+
+{87b} Here the "Historie of the Estate" is corroborated by the
+Treasurer's Accounts, recording payment to Rothesay Herald. He is
+summoning George Lovell, David Ferguson (a preacher, later minister of
+Dunfermline), and others unnamed to appear at Edinburgh on July 28, to
+answer for "wrongous using and wresting of the Scriptures, disputing upon
+erroneous opinions, and eating flesh in Lent," and at other times
+forbidden by Acts of Parliament (M'Crie, 359, note G). Nothing is here
+said about riotous iconoclasm, but Lovell had been at the hanging of an
+image of St. Francis as early as 1543, and in many such godly exercises,
+or was accused of these acts of zeal.
+
+{87c} "Historie of the Estate of Scotland," Wodrow Miscellany, i. 53-55.
+
+{88a} Knox, i. 301.
+
+{88b} Knox appears (he is very vague) to date Calder's petition _after_
+Willock's second visit, which the "Historie of the Estate of Scotland"
+places in October 1558. Dr. M'Crie accepts that date, but finds that
+Knox places Calder's petition before the burning of Myln, in April 1559.
+Dr. M'Crie suggests that perhaps Calder petitioned twice, but deems Knox
+in the right. As the Reformer contradicts himself, unless there were two
+Calder petitions (i. 301, i. 307), he must have made an oversight.
+
+{88c} Hume Brown, John Knox, ii. Appendix, 301-303.
+
+{88d} Knox, i. 301-306
+
+{89a} Knox, i. 294, 301-312. On p. 294 Knox dates the Parliament in
+October.
+
+{89b} Knox, i. 309-312.
+
+{90a} Knox, i. 312-314.
+
+{90b} See Laing's edition, i. 320, 321.
+
+{91} Wodrow Miscellany, i. 55.
+
+{92a} M'Crie, Knox, 359, 360.
+
+{92b} Knox, i. 306, 307.
+
+{93a} Knox, i. 307.
+
+{93b} "Historie," Wodrow Miscellany, i. 55, 56.
+
+{93c} Knox, i. 312-314.
+
+{94a} "Historie," Wodrow Miscellany, 56.
+
+{94b} Melville, 76, 77 (1827).
+
+But Professor Hume Brown appears to be misled in saying that Bettencourt,
+or Bethencourt, did not reach Scotland till June (John Knox, i. 344i note
+i), citing Forbes, i. 141. Bethencourt "passed Berwick on April 13"
+(For. Cal. Eliz., 1558-59, 214) to negotiate the Scottish part in the
+peace, signed at Upsettlington (May 31). Bethencourt would be with the
+Regent by April 15, and he may have confirmed her in summoning the
+preachers who defied her proclamations, though, with or without his
+advice, she could do no less.
+
+{95a} Pitscottie, ii. 523.
+
+{95b} State Papers, Borders, vol. i. No. 421 MS.
+
+{96a} Affaires Etrangeres, Angleterre, vol. xv. MS.
+
+{96b} Forbes, 97; Throckmorton to Cecil, May 18.
+
+{96c} For. Cal. Eliz., 1558-59, 272.
+
+{97} Melville, 80.
+
+{98a} Statuta, &c. Robertson, vol. i. clv-clxii.
+
+{98b} Book of Discipline. Knox, ii. 253, 254.
+
+{99a} M'Crie, 360.
+
+{99b} The Regent's account of the whole affair, as given by Francis and
+Mary to the Pope, is vague and mistily apologetic. (Published in French
+by Prof. Hume Brown, ii. 300-302.) The Regent wrote from Dunbar, July
+1559, that she had in vain implored the Pope to aid her in reforming the
+lives of the clergy (as in 1556-57). Their negligence had favoured,
+though she did not know it (and she says nothing about it in 1556-57),
+the secret growth of heresy. Next, a public preacher arose in one town
+(probably Paul Methuen in Dundee) introducing the Genevan Church. The
+Regent next caused the bishops to assemble the clergy, bidding them
+reform their lives, and then repress heresy. She also called an assembly
+of the Estates, when most of the Lords, hors du conseil et a part,
+demanded "a partial establishment of the new religion." This was
+refused, and the Provincial Council (of March 1559) was called for reform
+of the clergy. Nothing resulted but scandal and popular agitation.
+Public preachers arose in the towns. The Regent assembled her forces,
+and the Lords and Congregation began their career of violence.
+
+{100} As to Knox's account of this reforming Provincial Council (Knox,
+i. 291, 292), Lord Hailes calls it "exceedingly partial and erroneous . .
+. no zeal can justify a man for misrepresenting an adversary." Bold
+language for a judge to use in 1769! Cf. Robertson, Statuta, i. clxii,
+note I.
+
+{101} Knox, v. 15-17.
+
+{102a} Knox, v. 207, 208.
+
+{102b} Ibid., v. 229.
+
+{102c} Ibid., v. 420, 421.
+
+{102d} Ibid., v. 495-523. [This footnote is provided in the original
+book but isn't referenced in the text. DP.]
+
+{104} John Knox and the Church of England, 215-218.
+
+{105} Knox, ii. 460, 461. We return to this point.
+
+{107} Bale, Scriptorum Illustrium Majoris Brit. Catalogus Poster., p.
+219 (1559). Knox, i. 258-261.
+
+{108a} Dieppe, April 10-April 22, 1559. Knox, vi. 15-21.
+
+{108b} Desmarquets, Mem. Chronol. Jour. l'Hist, de Dieppe, i. 210.
+
+{109a} Corp. Ref., xlv. (Calv., xvii.) 541.
+
+{109b} Naissance de l'Heresie a Dieppe, Rouen, 1877, ed. Lesens.
+
+{111} Knox, i. 321-323.
+
+{112} Knox, vi. 23.
+
+{113a} Corpus Reformatorum, xlvi. 609, xlvii. 409-411, August 13, 1561.
+
+{113b} The learned Dr. M'Crie does not refer to this letter to Mrs.
+Locke, but observes: "None of the gentry or sober part of the
+congregation were concerned in this unpremeditated tumult; it was wholly
+confined to the lowest of the inhabitants" (M'Crie's Life of Knox, 127,
+1855). Yet an authority dear to Dr. M'Crie, "The Historie of the Estate
+of Scotland," gives the glory, not to the lowest of the inhabitants, but
+to "the brethren." Professor Hume Brown blames "the Perth mob," and says
+nothing of the action of the "brethren," as described to Mrs. Locke by
+Knox. John Knox, ii. 8.
+
+{117} Theses of Erastus. Rev. Robert Lee. Edinburgh, 1844.
+
+{120} Knox, i. 341,342; vi. 24. Did the brethren promise nothing but
+the evacuation of Perth?
+
+{121a} "Historie," Wodrow Miscellany, i. 58.
+
+{121b} Knox, i. 343, 344. The Congregation are said to have left Perth
+on May 29. They assert their presence there on May 31, in their Band.
+
+{122} Edinburgh Burgh Records.
+
+{123a} But see Knox, i. 347-349. Is a week (June 4 to June 11)
+accidentally omitted?
+
+{123b} Writing on June 23, Knox dates the "Reformation" "June 14." His
+dates, at this point, though recorded within three weeks, are to me
+inexplicable. Knox, vi. 25.
+
+{124} Keith, i. 265, note.
+
+{125a} Lesley, ii. 443, Scottish Text Society.
+
+{125b} For. Cal. Eliz., 1558-59, 367.
+
+{126a} Knox, vi. 26.
+
+{126b} Ibid., i. 355.
+
+{126c} Wodrow Miscellany, i. 60.
+
+{127a} Knox, vi. 26.
+
+{127b} See Scottish Historical Review, January 1905, 121-122, 128-130.
+
+{131} Bain, i. 215.
+
+{133a} For. Cal. Eliz., 1558-59, 278. Erroneously dated "May 24" (?).
+
+{133b} Bain, i. 216-218; For. Cal. Eliz., ut supra, 335, 336.
+
+{133c} Archives Etrangeres, Angleterre, vol. xv. MS.
+
+{133d} For. Cal. Eliz., 336; Knox, i. 359, 360.
+
+{134} Knox, i. 360-362.
+
+{135a} Knox dates the entry of the Reformers into Edinburgh on June 29.
+But he wrote to Mrs. Locke from Edinburgh on June 25, probably a
+misprint. The date June 29 is given in the "Historie." Knox dates a
+letter to Cecil, "Edinburgh, June 28." The Diurnal of Occurrents dates
+the sack of monasteries in Edinburgh June 28.
+
+{135b} Wodrow Miscellany, i. 62; Knox, i. 366, 367, 370.
+
+{135c} Knox, i. 363; cf. Keith, i. 213, 214; Spottiswoode, i. 280, 281.
+
+{136a} Knox, i. 363-365; For. Cal. Eliz., 337.
+
+{136b} Teulet, i. 338-340.
+
+{137a} Bain, i. 218; For. Cal. Eliz., 1558-59, 339. 340.
+
+{137b} Knox, vi. 45.
+
+{138} In Dr. Hay Fleming's The Scottish Reformation (p. 57), he dates
+the Regent's proclamation July 1. He omits the charge that, as proof of
+their disloyalty, "they daily receive Englishmen with messages, and send
+the like into England" (Knox, i. p. 364). "The narrative of the
+proclamation, Knox says, is untrue," Dr. Hay Fleming remarks; but as to
+the dealing with England, the Reformer confessed to it in his "History,"
+Book III., when he could do so with safety.
+
+{139a} Knox, i. 365.
+
+{139b} Spottiswoode, i. 282.
+
+{139c} Teulet, i. 331. The Regent's instructions to Du Fresnoy.
+
+{141} Teulet, i. 334, 335, citing Archives Etrangeres, Angleterre, xiv.
+(xv.?), f. 221 (see the English translation), For. Cal. Eliz., 1558-59,
+406, 407; Keith, i. 220, 221; Spottiswoode, i. 285, 286.
+
+{142a} Extracts from Edinburgh Town Council Records, July 29, 1559;
+Keith, i. 487-489.
+
+{142b} Cf. Hume Brown, John Knox, ii. 30.
+
+{143a} Knox, i. 376-379. The italicised articles are not in the other
+versions of the terms as finally settled; cf. "Historie," Wodrow
+Miscellany, i. 55-57.
+
+{143b} Ibid., i. 379.
+
+{144a} Knox, i. 380.
+
+{144b} Sloane MSS., British Museum, 4144, 177b, 4737f, 100b. For. Cal.
+Eliz. 1558-59, 411.
+
+{145a} Knox, i. 381.
+
+{145b} My italics.
+
+{146} (Kyrkcaldy to Croft.)
+
+"Theis salbe to certiffy you vpon monday the xxiii of Jully the quene and
+the lordis of the congregation are agreit on this maner as followeth. The
+armies beying boythe in Syghte betuix Eddingburght and Lietht or partye
+adversaire send mediatoris desyring that we sall agree and cease frome
+sheddinge of blude yf we wer men quhilkis wold fulfill in deid that thing
+quhilk we proffessit, that is the preachyng of godis worde and furth
+settyng of his glorye. Me lordis of the congregation movet by thare
+offres wer content to here commonyng. So fynallye after long talke, It
+is appointted on this maner. That the Religion here begoon sall proceid
+and contenew in all places wt owt impedement of the quenes authoretie,
+thare minesters sall neyther be trubillit nor stopped and in all places
+whare ydolletre is put downe sall not be cett vp agane. And whill the
+parlement be haldin to consele vpon all materes wch is fixit the x day of
+Januarye nixt, every man sall leive to his conscience not compellit be
+authoretye to do any thyng in religion yt his conscience repugnes to. And
+to this said parlement ther sall no man of or congregation be molested or
+trobillit in thair bodeis landis goodis possessions what someevir.
+Further wt all dilligent spede ther frenche men here present salbe send
+awaye. And sall no other cum in this Realme w owt consent of the hole
+nobilite. The towne of Eddingburght salbe keipit fre by the inhabitantes
+thairof and no maner of garnission laid or keip thair In, neyther of
+frenche nor scottis. For our part we sall remove of Eddingburght to or
+awne houssis, yt the quene may come to hir awne palyce, wch we tuke of
+before and hathe left it voyde to hir G. We have delyvered the prentyng
+yrunes of the coyne agayne wch we tuke becaus of the corruption of monye
+agaynst our laws and commonwealthe. Off truthe we believe nevir worde to
+be keipit of thir promises of her syde. And therfore hath tane me lord
+duke the erll of Huntlye and the rest of the nobillitye beying vpon hir
+syde bound to the performance hereof wt this condition yf sche brekkes
+any point heirof they sall renunce hir obeysance and joyne them selfis wt
+vs. In this meane-tyme we contenew or men of warr to gydder wt in or
+boundis of Fyfe, Angus, Stretherin and Westland, in aduenture the
+appointtment be broken, and dowtes not to mak vs daily stronger for by
+the furthe settying of religion and haittred of the frenche men we gett
+the hartis of the hole commonalties. Nowe to conclude yf it had not bene
+for some nobillmens causis who hes promised to be owres we hade not
+appointted wt the quene at this tyme. From hens forwardis send to the
+lard of Ormiston who will se all saifly conveyed to me. Thvs I commit
+you to god from Eddingburght the xxiiii of Jully
+
+yoris at power
+
+(W. KYRKCALDY)." {147}
+
+{147} MS. Record Office; cf. For. Cal. Eliz., 1558 59, 408, 409.
+
+{148a} Knox, i. 379, 380.
+
+{148b} Ibid., i. 381.
+
+{149a} Knox, vi. 53.
+
+{149b} Ibid., i. 397-412. The Proclamation, and two Replies.
+
+{149c} My italics.
+
+{150} Knox, i. xxvi.; vi. 87.
+
+{151a} Knox, i. 392, 393.
+
+{151b} Ibid., i. 382.
+
+{152a} Knox, ii. 15-38.
+
+{152b} Ibid., vi. 56-59.
+
+{153} S. P. Scotland, Elizabeth, MS. vol. i. No. 80; cf. Bain, i. 236,
+237. Croft to Cecil, Berwick, August 3, 1559.
+
+{154a} For. Cal. Eliz., 470.
+
+{154b} I assume that he was the preacher at Edinburgh in d'Oysel's
+letter of June 30-July 2, 1559. Teulet, i. 325.
+
+{155} Sadleir to Cecil, September 8, 1559. For. Cal. Eliz., 543, 1558-
+1559. The fortification, says Professor Hume Brown, "was a distinct
+breach of the late agreement" (of July 24), "and they weir not slow to
+remind her" (the Regent) "of her bad faith." The agreement of July 24
+says nothing about fortifying. The ingenious brethren argued that to
+fortify Leith entailed "oppression of our poor brethren, indwellers of
+the same." Now the agreement forbade "oppression of any of the
+Congregation." But the people of Leith had "rendered themselves" to the
+Regent on July 24, and the breach of treaty, if any, was "constructive."
+(John Knox, ii. 47; Knox, i. 413, 424-433.)
+
+{158a} The evidence as to these proceedings of the brethren is preserved
+in the French archives, and consists of testimonies given on oath in
+answer to inquiries made by Francis and Mary in November 1559.
+
+{158b} We have dated Lethington's desertion of the Regent about October
+25, because Knox says it was a "few days before our first defeat" on the
+last day in October. M. Teulet dates in the beginning of October a Latin
+manifesto by the Congregation to all the princes of Christendom. This
+document is a long arraignment of the Regent's policy; her very
+concessions as to religion are declared to be tricks, meant to bring the
+Protestant lords under the letter of the law. The paper may be thought
+to show the hand of Lethington, not of Knox. But, in point of fact, I
+incline to think that the real author of this manifesto was Cecil. He
+sketches it in a letter sent from the English Privy Council in November
+15, 1559. This draft was to be used by the rebels in an appeal to
+Elizabeth.
+
+{159} Knox, vi, 89, 90; M'Crie, 143.
+
+{160a} Bothwell states the amount at 3000 ecus de soleil. French
+Archives MS.
+
+{160b} Knox, i. 472.
+
+{161a} Sadleir to Cecil, Nov. 15, 1559. For. Cal. Eliz., 1559-60, 115.
+
+{161b} Labanoff, vii. 283.
+
+{163} Knox, vi. 105-107.
+
+{164} See Appendix B.
+
+{165a} Corp. Ref., xlv. 645 (3118, note I).
+
+{165b} Calvinus Sturmio, Corp. Ref., xlvi. 38, 39, March 23, 1560.
+Sturmius Calvino, ibid., 53-56, April 15.
+
+{166a} Bain, i. 389, 390; For. Cal. Eliz., 1559-60, 604.
+
+{166b} Knox, ii. 68; cf. the Regent's letter. Bain, i. 389.
+
+{167a} The date may be part of an interpolation.
+
+{167b} This account is from the French Archives MS., Angleterre, vol.
+xv.
+
+{168} Knox, ii. 72.
+
+{169} It is an inexplicable fact that, less than a month before
+Glencairn and Lord James signed the first godly Band (December 3, 1557),
+these two, with Kirkcaldy of Grange, "were acting with the Queen-Dowager
+against Huntly, Chatelherault, and Argyll," who in December signed with
+them the godly Band. The case is thus stated by Mr. Tytler, perhaps too
+vigorously. It appears that, after the refusal of the Lords to cross
+Tweed and attack England, in the autumn of 1557, the Regent, with the
+concurrence of Glencairn, Lord James, and Kirkcaldy of Grange, proposed
+to recall from exile in England the Earl of Lennox, father of Darnley.
+He, like the chief of the Hamiltons, had a claim to the crown of
+Scotland, failing heirs born of Mary Stuart. Lennox, therefore, would be
+a counterpoise to Hamilton and his ally in mutiny, Argyll. Thus Lord
+James and Glencairn, in November 1557; support the Regent against the
+Hamiltons and Argyll, but in December Glencairn, reconciled to Argyll,
+signs with him the godly Band. We descry the old Stewart versus Hamilton
+feud in these proceedings.
+
+{170} Knox, ii. 87, note.
+
+{172} Knox, ii. 89-127.
+
+{174a} Randolph to Cecil, September 7; Bain, i. 477, 478.
+
+{174b} Knox, vi. 83, 84.
+
+{174c} Knox, vi. lxxxii.
+
+{175} M'Crie, Life of John Knox, 162 (1855).
+
+{177a} Keith, iii. 4-7.
+
+{177b} Bain, i. 461.
+
+{177c} Cf. Edinburgh Burgh Records.
+
+{182} Knox, ii. 193.
+
+{186} Queen Mary's Letter to Guise, p. xlii., Scottish History Society,
+1904.
+
+{191a} Lesley, ii. 454 (1895).
+
+{191b} See Lord James to Throckmorton, London, May 20, a passage quoted
+by Mr. Murray Rose, Scot. Hist. Review, No. 6, 154. Additional MSS.
+Brit. Mus., 358, 30, f. 117, 121. Lord James to Throckmorton, May 20-
+June 3, 1561.
+
+{191c} Bain, i. 540, 541.
+
+{191d} Lord James to Dudley, October 7, 1561, Bain, i. 557.
+
+{192} Pollen, Papal Negotiations, 62.
+
+{193a} Knox, ii, 266.
+
+{193b} Bain, ii. 543.
+
+{194} Bain, ii. 547.
+
+{195} Knox, ii. 276, 277.
+
+{196} Knox, vi. 131.
+
+{197} Knox, ii. 279, 280.
+
+{199} Tracts by David Fergusson, Bannatyne Club, 1860.
+
+{200a} Bain, i. 551, 552.
+
+{200b} Lord James to Lord Robert Dudley, October 7, 1561. Bain, i. 557,
+558. Lethington's account of his reasonings with Elizabeth is not very
+hopeful. Pollen, "Queen Mary's Letter to Guise," Scot. Hist. Soc., 38-
+45.
+
+{201a} Bain, i. 565.
+
+{201b} Knox, vi. 131, 132; ii. 289.
+
+{201c} The proclamation against "all monks, friars, priests, nuns,
+adulterers, fornicators, and all such filthy persons," was of October 2.
+On October 5 the Queen bade the council and community of the town to meet
+in the Tolbooth, depose the Provost and Bailies, and elect others. On
+October 8 the order was carried out, and protests were put in. A note
+from Lethington was received, containing three names, out of which the
+Queen commanded that one must be Provost. The Council "thought good to
+pass to her Grace," show that they had already made their election, and
+await her pleasure. "Jezebel's letter and wicked will is obeyed as law,"
+says Knox.--Extracts from Records of the Burgh of Edinburgh, 126, 127.
+
+{202} Knox, vi. 133-135. Corp. Refor., xlvii. 74.
+
+{203a} Corp. Refor., xlvii. 114, 115.
+
+{203b} Bain, i. 582, 583.
+
+{203c} Ibid., i. 491. Randolph to Cecil.
+
+{205} Bain, i. 565, 566.
+
+{206a} Froude, iii. 265-270 (1866).
+
+{206b} Knox, vi. 83.
+
+{207a} Knox, vi. 11-14.
+
+{207b} Bain, i. 569. Randolph to Cecil, November 11.
+
+{207c} Ibid., i. 568-570.
+
+{208a} There was a small guard, but no powerful guard existed till after
+Riccio's murder.
+
+{208b} Bain, i. 575. Randolph to Cecil, December 7.
+
+{208c} Ibid., i. 571.
+
+{209} It is plain from Randolph (Bain, i. 575) that the precise feared
+that Mary, if secured by the English alliance, would be severe with "true
+professors of Christ."
+
+{210} Keith, iii. 384, 385.
+
+{211a} Knox, ii. 300-313. Pollen, "Mary's Letter to the Duc de Guise,"
+xli.-xlvii.
+
+{211b} Bain, i. 568, 569.
+
+{211c} Ibid., i. 585. Randolph to Cecil, January 2, 1562.
+
+{212a} There is an air of secrecy in these transactions. In the
+Register of the Privy Seal, vol. xxxi. fol. 45 (MS.), is a "Precept for a
+Charter under the Great Seal," a charter to Lord James for the Earldom of
+Moray. The date is January 31, 1560-61. On February 7, 1560-61, Lord
+James receives the Earldom of Mar, having to pay a pair of gilded spurs
+on the feast of St. John (Register of Privy Seal, vol. xxx. fol. 2). Lord
+James now bore the title of Earl of Mar, not, as yet--not till Huntly was
+put at--of Moray.
+
+{212b} Dr. Hay Fleming quotes Randolph thus: "The Papists mistrust
+greatly the meeting; the Protestants as greatly desire it. The preachers
+are more vehement than discreet or learned." (Mary Queen of Scots, p.
+292, note 35, citing For. Cal. Eliz., iv. 523.) The Calendar is at fault
+and gives the impression that the ministers vehemently preached in favour
+of the meeting of the Queen. This was not so, Randolph goes on, "which I
+heartily lament." He uses the whole phrase, more than is here given, not
+only on January 30, but on February 12. Now Randolph desired the
+meeting, so the preachers must have "thundered" against it! They feared
+that Mary would become a member of the Church of England, "of which they
+both say and preach that it is little better than when it was at the
+worst" (Bain, i. 603).
+
+{212c} Keith, ii. 139.
+
+{213} The Teviotdale Ormistouns of that ilk.
+
+{214a} In Pitcairn's Criminal Trials is Arran's report of Bothwell's
+very words, vol. i., part 2, pp. 462-465.
+
+{214b} Bain, i. 613, 614.
+
+{215a} Bain, i. 618, 619.
+
+{215b} Knox, ii. 330.
+
+{215c} Ibid., ii. 330, 331.
+
+{215d} Cf. Baird, The Rise of the Huguenots, ii. 21 et seq.
+
+{216a} Bain, i. 627. Randolph to Cecil, May 29.
+
+{216b} Cf. Froude, vi. 547-565.
+
+{216c} "Book of Discipline," Knox, ii. 228.
+
+{216d} M'Crie, 187.
+
+{217a} Knox, ii. 330-335.
+
+{217b} Bain, i. 673.
+
+{217c} Randolph mentions the joy of the Court over some Guisian
+successes against the Huguenots, then up in arms, while Mary was on her
+expedition against Huntly, in October 1562. On December 30 he says that
+there is little dancing, less because of Knox's sermons than on account
+of bad news from France. Bain, i. 658, 674.
+
+Dr. Hay Fleming dates the wicked dance in December 1562, but of course
+that date was not the moment when "persecution was begun again in
+France," nor would Mary be skipping in December for joy over letters of
+the previous March. Mary Queen of Scots, 275.
+
+{218} Knox, vi. 140, 141.
+
+{219a} Keith, iii. 50, 51.
+
+{219b} Bain, i. 630.
+
+{219c} Lesley, ii. 468.
+
+{219d} Knox, vi. 193.
+
+{220a} Knox, ii. 337-345.
+
+{220b} Hay Fleming, Mary Queen of Scots, 301.
+
+{221a} Knox, ii. 347.
+
+{221b} Act Parl. Scot., ii. 572.
+
+{221c} Bain, i. 665.
+
+{221d} Bain, i. 668.
+
+{222a} Chalmers, in his Life of Queen Mary, vol. i. 78-96 (1818), takes
+the view of the Huntly affair which we adopt, but, observing the quietly
+obtained title of Moray under the Privy Seal (January 30, 1561-62) and
+the publicly assumed title of Mar, granted on February 7, 1561-62,
+Chalmers (mistaking Huntly for a loyal man) denounces the treachery of
+Lord James and the "credulity" of the Queen. To myself it appears that
+brother and sister were equally deep in the scheme for exalting Moray and
+destroying Huntly.
+
+{222b} Cf. Pollen, Papal Negotiations, 163, 164.
+
+{222c} Knox, ii. 346.
+
+{222d} Ibid., ii. 358.
+
+{223a} Bain, i. 675.
+
+{223b} Froude, ii. 144 (1863).
+
+{224a} Registrum de Panmure, i.-xxxii., cited by Maxwell; Old Dundee,
+162. Book of the Universal Kirk, 26.
+
+{225a} Knox, ii. 364-367; ii. 531, 532; Keith, iii. 140, 141.
+
+{225b} Spanish Calendar, i. 314.
+
+{225c} Bain, i. 684-686.
+
+{225d} Knox, ii. 367-369.
+
+{226a} Knox, ii, 370.
+
+{226b} Bain, i. 686.
+
+{226c} Ibid., i. 687.
+
+{226d} Knox, li. 361; Bain, i. 693. Lethington's argument against
+Lennox's claim, March 28, 1563.
+
+{227a} Knox, ii. 371.
+
+{227b} Bain, ii. 7.
+
+{228a} Knox, ii. 370-377.
+
+{228b} Ibid., ii. 377-379.
+
+{228c} Bain, ii. 9, 10.
+
+{229a} Knox, ii. 381.
+
+{229b} Ibid., ii. 387-389.
+
+{231a} Bain, ii. 24.
+
+{231b} Ibid., ii. 25.
+
+{231c} Spanish Calendar, i. 338.
+
+{231d} Bain, ii. 19, 20.
+
+{232a} Bain, ii. 26; Knox, ii. 393, 394.
+
+{232b} Hume Brown, Scotland under Queen Mary, p. 99.
+
+{232c} Pitcairn, Criminal Trials, i. 434.
+
+{232d} Dr. M'Crie accepts, like Keith, a story of Spottiswoode's not
+elsewhere found (M'Crie, 204), but innocently remarks that, as to the
+brawl in chapel, Spottiswoode could not know the facts so well as Knox!
+(p. 210). Certainly twenty-two attendants on the Mass were "impanelled"
+for trial for their religious misdemeanour. Knox, ii. 394, note I.
+
+{233a} Knox, ii. 397.
+
+{233b} Randolph to Cecil; Bain, ii. 28, 29.
+
+{233c} Knox, ii. 399-401.
+
+{234a} Keith, ii. 210. The version in Bain, ii. 30, is differently
+worded.
+
+{234b} Knox, ii. 403.
+
+{235} Knox, ii. 399-415.
+
+{236} Pitcairn, Criminal Trials, i. 434, 435.
+
+{237a} Randolph, December 31; Bain, ii. 33; Knox, ii. 415.
+
+{237b} Randolph, February 19, 1564; Bain, i. 113, 125.
+
+{237c} Knox, ii. 415, note 3.
+
+{238} Knox, ii. 417-419.
+
+{239} Bain, i. 680; ii. 54.
+
+{240} Knox, ii. 291, 292.
+
+{241a} Lethington spoke merely of "controversies" (Knox, ii. 460). I
+give the confessed meaning of the controversy.
+
+{241b} Compare Knox, ii. 291, as to the discussion at Makgill's house in
+November 1561.
+
+{241c} Knox, ii. 460, 461.
+
+{242a} Original Letters, Parker Society, Bullinger to Calvin, March 26,
+1554, pp. 744-747.
+
+{242b} Knox, ii. 441, 442.
+
+{243a} The very programme of the General Assembly for the treatment of
+Catholics, in November 1572. See p. 269 infra.
+
+{243b} Knox, v. 462-464.
+
+{244a} Knox, ii. 441.
+
+{244b} Ibid., ii. 442, 443.
+
+{246} Randolph to Cecil, February 27, 1565; Bain, ii. 128.
+
+{247a} Knox, ii. 497.
+
+{247b} Ibid., vi. 224, 225.
+
+{248a} Knox, vi. 273; ii. 499.
+
+{248b} Ibid., ii. 514.
+
+{248c} Ibid., vi. 402.
+
+{249a} Book of the Universal Kirk, 34.
+
+{249b} Knox, vi. 416.
+
+{249c} Bain, ii. 254, 255.
+
+{249d} Stevenson, Selections, 153-159.
+
+{250a} Papal Negotiations, xxxviii.-xliii.
+
+{250b} Keith, ii. 412-413.
+
+{250c} Knox, ii. 524.
+
+{251a} Knox, i. 235.
+
+{251b} Hume Brown, John Knox, ii. 231.
+
+{252a} Randolph to Cecil, March 21, 1566. Bain, ii. 269, 270. Diurnal,
+March 17, 1566. Knox's prayer, Knox, vi. 483, 484.
+
+{252b} Bain, ii. 269, 270.
+
+{252c} See Calvin's letter of January 24 or April 1, 1564, Corpus
+Reformatorum, xlviii. 244-249.
+
+{253a} Life of Knox, 235, note 3; cf. Knox, ii. 533.
+
+{253b} Burnet, History of the Reformation, iii. 360.
+
+{253c} Knox, ii. 544-560.
+
+{254a} Knox, vi. 545-547.
+
+{254b} State Papers, Mary, Queen of Scots, vol. xiii., No. 20, MS.
+
+{256a} Book of the Universal Kirk, 61-67.
+
+{256b} Stevenson, Illustrations of the Reign of Queen Mary, 208.
+
+{256c} Knox, ii. 563.
+
+{257a} Stevenson, 221.
+
+{257b} Ibid., 240, July 21.
+
+{257c} Chalmers's "Life of Mary," ii. 487.
+
+{258a} Knox, vi. 558-561.
+
+{258b} If born in 1513-15, he was only about fifty-three to fifty-five.
+
+{259a} Knox, vi. 567.
+
+{259b} Knox and the Church of England, 230.
+
+{259c} Strype's Grindal, 168-179 (1821).
+
+{260a} Corp. Ref., xlvii. 417, 418.
+
+{260b} Strype's Grindal, 507-516.
+
+{261a} Zurich Letters. 1558-1602, pp. 152-155.
+
+{261b} Strype's Grindal, 180. Also the letter of Grindal in Ellis, iii.
+iii. 304
+
+{262a} Knox, ii. 247-249.
+
+{262b} Knox and the Church of England, 298-301.
+
+{263a} Knox, vi. 559.
+
+{263b} Ibid., vi. 568.
+
+{263c} M'Crie, 248.
+
+{264a} Bannatyne's Memorials, 5-13 (1836).
+
+{264b} Calderwood, ii. 515-525.
+
+{266} Bannatyne's Transactions, 70-82. Bannatyne was Knox's secretary,
+and fragments dictated by the Reformer appear in his pages.
+
+{267a} Melville's "Diary," 20-26.
+
+{267b} Knox, vi. 606-612.
+
+{268a} Bannatyne, 223, 224 (1836).
+
+{268b} Knox, vi. 620-622.
+
+{268c} Ibid., 236
+
+{269a} Bannatyne, 268.
+
+{269b} Ibid., 273.
+
+{269c} Ibid., 278.
+
+{269d} John Knox, ii. 282, 283.
+
+{270} Cf. Leicester's letter of October 10, 1574, in Tytler, vii. chap,
+iv., and Appendix.
+
+{271} Tytler, vii. chap. iv.; Appendix xi, with letters.
+
+{272a} Knox, ii. 356; Bannatyne, 281, 282.
+
+{272b} Morton to Killigrew, August 5, 1573.
+
+{273} Bannatyne, 283-290.
+
+{274} There was another Falsyde.
+
+{275a} See the letter in Maxwell's Old Dundee, 399-401.
+
+{275b} Bain's Calendar is misleading here (vol. i. 202). Why Mr. Bain
+summarised wrongly in 1898, what Father Stevenson had done correctly in
+1863 (For. Cal. Eliz,, p. 263) is a mystery.
+
+{276a} See the "Prefatio," Knox, i. 297, 298. In this preface Knox
+represents the brethren as still being "unjustly persecuted by France and
+their faction." The book ends with the distresses of the Protestants in
+November 1559, with the words, "Look upon us, O Lord, in the multitude of
+Thy mercies; for we are brought even to the deep of the dungeon."--Knox,
+i. 473.
+
+{276b} Knox, vi. 22, 23.
+
+{276c} M'Crie's Knox, 360.
+
+{277a} Knox, i. 317-319.
+
+{277b} Hume Brown, John Knox, ii. 6.
+
+{277c} John Knox, ii. 4.
+
+{277d} Scot. Hist. Review, January 1905.
+
+{278a} Lesley, ii. 40, Scottish Text Society, 1895.
+
+{278b} In the French Archives MS., Angleterre, vol. xv.
+
+{279a} Melville, 79 (1827).
+
+{279b} Spottiswoode, i. 320.
+
+{279c} Keith, i. 493, 494 (1835).
+
+{280a} Angl. Reg., xvi., fol. 346.
+
+{280b} Teulet, i. 407.
+
+{280c} Ibid., i. 410.
+
+{280d} For. Cal. Eliz., 1559-60, p. 453.
+
+{280e} Ibid., p. 469.
+
+{280f} Ibid., p. 480.
+
+
+
+
+
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